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Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka's French Open final

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Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka's French Open final

ROLAND GARROS, PARIS — Only in sports, and probably only in tennis, would a Black girl raised in Florida and a White girl raised in 5,500 miles away in Minsk grow up to collide in Paris, chasing one another’s dreams.

And here they are, Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka, coming into Saturday’s French Open final as the two best players in the world. Both are the hunter and the hunted. Both have a hammer lock on what the other one wants a piece of. And roughly two hours of tennis between the most aggressive force and the most premier counterweight in the women’s game will serve as the next marker for whether either one can make any headway on their missions.

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“Too good” was how Gauff described the world No. 1 last month, after Sabalenka beat Gauff in straight sets to win the Madrid Open. She found similar praise Thursday evening, after booking her appointment with Sabalenka in a clinical, straight-sets defeat of Loïs Boisson. It ended the French wild card’s fairytale ride through the draw.

“She’s someone who has great big shots, and she’s going to come out aggressive,” Gauff said of Sabalenka.

“I just have to expect that and do my best to counter that.”

Sabalenka used similar words with a different timbre when discussing the prospect of another tussle with Gauff, their first in a Grand Slam final since 2023, when Gauff got the better of her at the U.S. Open. Sabalenka led that match by a set and 15-40 on Gauff’s serve, before the American — and 24,000 fans inside Arthur Ashe Stadium — put Sabalenka through the wringer.

“I have to work for that title, especially if it’s going to be Coco,” Sabalenka said after ending Iga Świątek’s three-year reign as the queen of Roland Garros Thursday afternoon.

“I’m ready to go out, and I’m ready to fight. And I’m ready to do everything it’s going to take.”

Sabalenka has her reasons for that, beyond jumping at her first chance to win a Grand Slam win not on a hard court.

Gauff’s mission may be more straightforward. Winning this tennis match and the French Open is an end in itself. Sabalenka is No. 1; Gauff would like to be there. Winning Saturday would be a start in closing the roughly 4,000-point gap between her and Sabalenka’s perch at the top of the mountain.

Sabalenka has three Grand Slam titles to one for Gauff. Sabalenka has become a force of nature, landing in the final of six tournaments this year and winning half of them. That is a consistency and an efficiency that Gauff has only begun to approach for this year in the past two months, making the final at the Italian Open to go with the one in Madrid and the one she will play Sunday in Paris.

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Sabalenka’s mission is more complicated, because a win could push her toward something less tangible: Gauff’s level of stardom. In that arena, the gap between the players is as wide, if not wider, than the chasm atop the WTA rankings.

Understanding that requires understanding the alchemy that causes someone to become not only an all-time great tennis player, but also a star beyond the 2,800 square feet of the court court. It means capturing the love and adoration of fans of tennis and sports and popular culture, in ways that are often hard to explain.

Gauff accomplished that almost as soon as she beat Venus Williams on Centre Court at Wimbledon six summers ago, when she was 15. Life has been a series of billboards, magazine covers and walks on red carpets, including at the Oscars in March, ever since.

Being an American helps, but is hardly a guarantee. Being from Belarus, which has helped Russia and Vladimir Putin in its invasion of Ukraine, presents a serious obstacle. Sabalenka has been trying to overcome that — and the others that are far less concrete and explicable — for several years now, as she has scaled the rankings and worked her way into the hearts and minds of fans and non-fans alike.

It’s the battle Novak Djokovic spent nearly his entire career fighting as he tried to gain the same level of adulation that Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal received. In some ways, he still fighting it now, as Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner try to make the sport their own and gather a new generation of eyeballs and suck up its oxygen.

Sabalenka let cameras follow her for an episode of the since-cancelled Netflix tennis series “Break Point.” She regularly posts Tik Tok videos of herself dancing in stadium corridors and hotel rooms. She fired her long-term representatives at IMG, the sports and entertainment conglomerate, because, as two people briefed on Sabalenka’s departure from the agency told The Athletic, Sabalenka grew frustrated with the disconnect between her standing in the sporting world and how potential deals were limited because of her nationality. The sources spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect their relationships in tennis.

“I was looking to build my brand, wanted a little bit more,” Sabalenka said at the Australian Open, shortly after she made the shift. According to Forbes, Sabalenka took home $9million (£7.2m) from endorsements in 2024. Świątek picked up $15m in the same period.

Gauff brought in $25m. She is, also according to Forbes, the highest-paid female athlete in the world. She recently fired her longtime agents, at Team8, to partner with IMG on Coco Gauff Enterprises, modeled on the kingdoms that Lebron James and Roger Federer have built.

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The intangibles of renown and the tangibles of racket, ball and court necessarily interact, fuzzing into one another in an athlete’s mind. One of the challenges for Sabalenka and her coaches, Anton Dubrov and Jason Stacy, is focusing on the small things on the court, rather than big ones off it. They know what she is shooting for.

One of their mantras is “don’t fight it, don’t feed it.” In a news conference on Friday, Dubrov said he will remind her that the trajectory of her career and her life is composed of all the steps she takes on the court.

“Try to use it as fuel for you so it motivates you to do better,” he explained.

Stacy said they talk about how these big thoughts will pass through her mind during the tournament and the biggest matches.

“You’ll start thinking about, ‘Oh, you’re so close,” he said. “Just continue to be consistent in the way we act and how we speak and our mannerisms” is their formula for surviving it.

Gauff has her own techniques for keeping things small, something she learned from losing her first Grand Slam final here three years ago. It crushed her in the moment. Then she went out in Paris the next day and found most people barely acknowledged her as they went about her business.

“Everybody is dealing with way bigger things,” she said after beating Boisson.


Gauff came from a set down to beat Sabalenka in the 2023 U.S. Open final. (Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images)

In their own ways, both players are telling themselves that this is just another tennis match. It happens to take place on the red clay of Roland Garros, a surface that wasn’t supposed to be all that friendly to the girl from Florida and the girl from Minsk. Americans don’t generally have a natural affinity for the patient, grinding style that clay generally imposes. But at 10, Gauff started training at Patrick Mouratoglou’s academy in the south of France for long stretches. The higher, slower bounce on clay is very friendly to her forehand; it helps her use her speed and her endurance to run down more balls.

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Sabalenka has benefited from the patterns of the clay as well. That bounce and the extra time allows her to unload the most powerful forehand in the sport. Sure, it’s harder to get the ball through the court, but she has shown her power can overcome it, at least against players without Gauff’s athleticism.

She couldn’t overcome her at the U.S. Open two years ago, when she was taking on Gauff and her 24,000-strong crew in Arthur Ashe Stadium. The atmosphere shouldn’t be nearly that partisan on Saturday, though unless Gauff is playing an opponent on their home soil, she’s usually got a big chunk of the crowd behind her.

As the underdog, she should have that on Saturday, even when that underdog status only explains part of what makes some players draw more hearts and minds than others.

Gauff said she remembers very little of her last Grand Slam final showdown with Sabalenka. She described it as an “out of body experience.”

She has a vague memory of turning the match with a backhand cross-court passing shot in the second set. And she remembers running a lot. She also remembers somehow not being nervous.

“I woke up that day and I just felt like regardless of what was going to happen, I was going to come out with the win,” she said.

“You don’t always get that feeling when you go on the court, but I did that day.”

(Top photo: Julian Finney / Getty Images)

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Better rookie season

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Better rookie season

As the clock wound down in a recent contest, the Golden State Valkyries’ Veronica Burton and Kaila Charles swarmed Paige Bueckers on the perimeter to deny the Dallas Wings rookie from even getting off a shot. The 3.2 remaining seconds ticked away, and the ball remained in Bueckers’ hands as the buzzer sounded.

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That type of attention has become common for Bueckers in her debut WNBA season, especially as the firepower in the Wings rotation has thinned because of injury — eight of 12 players on the opening-night roster have missed seven or more games — putting more offensive burden on her. Bueckers has also proven increasingly capable of dissecting single coverage and has demanded star-level defense.

“She lets the game come to her, and she takes what the defense is giving her all over the floor,” Wings coach Chris Koclanes said. “She doesn’t get sped up, and it’s really impressive for a rookie in this league to be able to maintain her own speed and tempo.”

But the game was already in hand when the Valkyries corralled Bueckers at the 3-point line. Golden State led by nine and the heightened defense wasn’t because the game was in balance; it was because Bueckers needed one more point to reach double digits, as she had done in every prior game of her rookie year.

With Dallas long since removed from postseason contention and playing out the string over the second half of the season, these are the stakes for Bueckers. She hasn’t been put in position to chase wins; she can only pursue individual accolades while the Wings build for the future. Nevertheless, despite a constantly changing supporting cast, Bueckers has thrived, putting herself in conversation for one of the best debuts in league history.

Bueckers has been the leading rookie scorer every month of the 2025 season, and her average of 18.9 points is seventh in WNBA history among rookies. With three games left, a late surge could move Bueckers past her teammate Arike Ogunbowale, who is sixth on the list at 19.1.

As was the case during her college career that culminated in a national championship at UConn, Bueckers has been efficient in the process of scoring at a high volume. Among rookies who have averaged at least 17 points per game, Bueckers is sixth in field-goal percentage at 46.7. The only two guards in front of her are Chennedy Carter, whose first season came in the friendly offensive environment of the WNBA bubble, and Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, who was a 34-year-old rookie during the league’s inaugural season.

Bueckers has been an elite playmaker as well. She is on pace to finish the season as one of 12 rookies to ever average five assists per game, and one of two to pair that with 15 points, joining Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark.

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Clark became the standard-bearer for rookie guards during her historic 2024 season, and her production is the only realistic point of comparison for Bueckers. Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi were also first-year All-Stars, but neither displayed the same combination of elite scoring and creation as Clark and Bueckers. The new generation of rookies has the advantage of playing in a more offensive-minded league. Still, their numbers relative to the rest of the league stand out.

The last two No. 1 picks both delivered individual historic moments. Bueckers tied a rookie record last month with 44 points against the Los Angeles Sparks, on a night when she started alongside two players who were signed midseason to hardship contracts. Clark set the single-game assist record of 19 about midway through last season.

But Bueckers trails Clark in most of the counting stats: 18.9 to 19.2 in points, 3.7 to 5.7 in rebounds, and 5.3 to 8.4 in assists. Other than points, those differences cannot be explained by the extra two minutes Clark averaged as a rookie. The major advantage Bueckers possesses is in turnovers, where her 2.1 per game is significantly better than Clark’s 2.8.

Bueckers has a better overall field-goal percentage, but since so many of Clark’s shots came from 3-point range, the Fever guard’s effective field-goal percentage (which weights the point value of each field goal) of 52.2 percent bests Bueckers’ mark of 50.4. Clark also shot better from 3-point range (34.4 percent to 33 percent) despite attempting them three times as frequently.

Those box-score numbers don’t fully account for the surrounding situation of each rookie. Clark’s assists, for example, were easier to come by with All-Star Aliyah Boston in the middle of the floor; the 2023 No. 1 pick was the recipient of 105 of Clark’s helpers, or 2.6 per game. Both Clark and Bueckers had an All-Star guard sharing the backcourt in Kelsey Mitchell and Ogunbowale and a relatively similar level of talent on the rest of the roster, at least to start the season, but Dallas didn’t have anyone resembling Boston.

Although Bueckers had a worse net rating than Clark (minus-5.0 compared to minus-2.4), her on-off differential has been better in her rookie season. The Wings are 8.1 points per 100 possessions better with Bueckers on the court, demonstrating her impact, even if it hasn’t translated to victories. Win shares favor Bueckers as well, and she can build on her 3.5-3.0 lead in the final three games.

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However one chooses to assess the statistical impact of Bueckers and Clark in their first years, there is one point of comparison that works in Clark’s favor. Bueckers’ production has come in the context of a largely meaningless season, as Dallas hasn’t even spent one day in playoff position. Clark and the Fever, on the other hand, rallied from a 2-9 start to pursue a postseason berth.

That is the next frontier for Bueckers: not be a spoiler, but to play in games of real consequence. Clark’s rookie season ended with a big chasing her on the perimeter as she launched a 3-pointer because a playoff win was on the line. Bueckers’ rookie season could be lost to history if Dallas doesn’t put her in that position sooner than later.

(Photo of Paige Bueckers: Ron Jenkins / Getty Images)

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Christian Gonzalez misses Patriots practice, 'working' to return from injury

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Christian Gonzalez misses Patriots practice, 'working' to return from injury

FOXBORO — Christian Gonzalez quietly folded and put away some of the clothing in his locker at Gillette Stadium.

While his Patriots teammates prepared for a fully-padded practice just four days before their season opener, the third-year corner did not. He understood the plan for him on Wednesday was to do some conditioning work on the side and not much more.

“I’m working,” he said softly.

Gonzalez is inarguably his team’s best player. He was named a Second-Team All-Pro last season after routinely matching up with and shutting down opposing No. 1 receivers. He was expected to be one of the linchpins of Mike Vrabel’s defense in 2025, allowing for extensive man-to-man looks and aggressive calls for pressure because of his lock-down coverage skills.

But after Gonzalez missed Wednesday’s practice, his status for Sunday’s game is in doubt, despite Vrabel not ruling him out. Gonzalez hasn’t practiced since injuring his hamstring on July 28.

“He’s continuing to work,” Vrabel said prior to the practice, “and he’ll do some stuff on the side, but I’m not going to rule anybody out. … We’ll continue to work and treat and make sure that we’re doing everything that we can to help him, and he’s doing everything he can to get back out on the field. That’s the only update I have right now.”

Gonzalez rode a stationary air bike on the upper fields behind Gillette Stadium while his teammates practiced on the lower field. He pedaled under the watchful eye of assistant strength and conditioning coach Brian McDonough before pausing and watching the action on the fields below.

“I mean, I do like where he’s at from an engagement standpoint,” Vrabel said. “We’ve been through this with other players, and I like where he’s at from that standpoint. In the meetings, locked in, following along at practice, which is difficult. To think that a player that’s not in there can follow along, I’ve been through that as a player and a coach, and I think he’s done a nice job of being able to do that.”

While Vrabel surely would like to have Gonzalez for Week 1 against a Raiders offense that features second-year standout tight end Brock Bowers and former Patriots wideout Jakobi Meyers, he didn’t indicate that he would be rushing Gonzalez back onto the field, either.

When asked if it was important for him to allow players to get back to “100 percent” before returning to the field, Vrabel shed some light on his thought process.

“I mean, I don’t use percentages,” Vrabel said, “but, again, I’ll remind you what we talked about as far as, when I try to make decisions about players and returning, one, can they make it worse? Can they, two, protect themselves? 

“We can all say what we want about this game, but it’s violent, and can you protect yourself? And can you do your job up to the standard that we expect and that the player is used to? So, those are the things that I’ve tried to use when making decisions. Maybe I’ll add some to that, but that’s what I’ve tried to use in my other experience in this position.”

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Steve Smith Moves His Podcast, 'The 89 Show,' to Blue Wire

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Steve Smith Moves His Podcast, 'The 89 Show,' to Blue Wire





Steve Smith Moves His Podcast to Blue Wire




























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Andy Roddick returns to tennis on own terms with successful 'Served' podcast

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Andy Roddick returns to tennis on own terms with successful 'Served' podcast

Andy Roddick’s journey back to tennis began during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Tennis Channel asked him to remotely appear on studio programming while the sports world was shut down.

“I didn’t really play. I would come [to the U.S. Open] to do corporate work once a year, and that was it,” Roddick recently told Sports Business Journal. “Tennis Channel was great because I could do it from home. My one thing was, I never wanted the game to control my geography ever again.”

Five years later — and 13 after announcing his retirement from play on his 30th birthday — Roddick has established a pillar of the tennis media ecosystem on his own terms with his “Served” podcast.

Launched in January 2024 with veteran producer Mike Hayden and journalist Jon Wertheim, the show began with ambitions as simple as “a fun side project that I thought no one would listen to,” in Roddick’s words. But since its debut, the show has garnered more than 150,000 YouTube subscribers, 185,000 social media followers and 3.5 million audio downloads while attracting marquee sponsors such as Amazon Prime (2025 French Open, U.S. Open), Mercury Financial (2025 Wimbledon) and ServiceNow (live shows at the upcoming Laver Cup) for events. It also joined Vox Media’s network of sports podcasts last year.

As it’s grown, “Served” has earned bona fides with tennis diehards for long-form interviews with Rafael Nadal and Andre Agassi; laid-back but incisive analysis of tennis’ entire calendar of events (not just the Grand Slams); and the versatility to dig deep into topics such as, in an early sitdown with longtime IMG Tennis agent/executive Max Eisenbud, the economics of tennis player development.

“What makes him special, specific to his podcast, is his ability to transcend the deep tennis insiders, but also the casual tennis fans,” said Eric Butorac, a former doubles player on the ATP Tour and the USTA’s senior director of player relations and business development.

“He’s [Roddick] exactly like he was on tour. You walk into the locker room, and you just hope he’s sitting there, because he’s going to be jabbering away, super engaged, super competitive. … It’s the same way when I turn on ‘Served.’”

Served Media — the media company atop “Served” co-founded by Roddick and Hayden — is now a seven-figure revenue business. Since the debut of its eponymous podcast, it has launched a women’s tennis-focused show hosted by Kim Clijsters, daily recap program hosted by Hayden, active social and newsletter channels, and a merchandise line, with yet-to-be disclosed plans for further content expansion.

“We thought there would be a lane for it for, like, super nerds,” Roddick said. “But I don’t know that we thought it would grow like this.”

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Postgame Podcast

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Postgame Podcast

RALEIGH, N.C. — NC State needed a fourth-down stop in the red zone to survive, but came away with a 24-17 win over ECU to start the season. The Wolfpack (1-0) finished with 423 total yards behind CJ Bailey’s 318 yards passing with one touchdown through the air and one on the ground.

Cory Smith and Michael Clark share their thoughts after the game, including Bailey’s performance, Wesley Grimes’ career night, Hollywood Smothers’ solid outing, and the defense’s up-and-down night. Get all of that and more on the latest Postgame Podcast.

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Cam Newton Expands 'First Take' Role Post

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