During the defeat, the 2021 US Open champion smashed his racket, and is set to incur a $50,000 (£41,000) fine in the process. The incident raises his total fine amount for the tournament to $ ...
Daniil Medvedev threw his tennis racket along the floor and into the advertising hoardings in a second meltdown this week at the Australian Open. Last year's finalist found himself in a tricky ...
In a significant step toward promoting fairness and integrity in table tennis, the ITTF has announced an updated Racket Control process, set to be implemented progressively from 2025. Approved by the ...
After a particularly demoralising point, the Russian started hacking at the net with his racquet. Watch the moment ... at least in his tennis game, in the following set after the outburst, sinking ...
Daniil Medvedev faces a hefty fine after mangling his racquet and a net camera in an epic temper tantrum before battling through a five-set roller coaster to start his Australian Open on Tuesday.
The world No.5 will come under scrutiny from tournament officials for repeatedly slamming his racquet into the net ... I know I play better when I play more tennis ... [with] a minimum three ...
Medevdev is no stranger to marathons in Melbourne, the World No.5 played 24 hours and 17 minutes of tennis at the 2024 ... 5 erupted on court to smash his racket and destroyed an unfortunately ...
Top-ranked tennis pro Daniil Medvedev destroyed a camera and his tennis racket as he faced what could have been a monumental upset in the Australian Open by a wild-card entry ranked 418th in the ...
Born in Houston, Texas, Habib says he lived in Lebanon between the ages of six and 12 and it was there that he first picked up a tennis racket. He has been representing Lebanon since the age of 15 ...
MELBOURNE, Australia -- Daniil Medvedev used his racket to smash a tiny camera attached ... "I know I play better when I play more tennis," Medvedev joked afterward. "So I was like, 'Why play ...
Well into the 1990s, the top of men’s tennis was pretty much a serving contest. Serving big meant winning big, so pretty much everybody had to serve big to win. Then, racket and string ...