Saudi Al Hilal Will Fight to the End to Defend Title, Says Defiant Diaz

Football - AFC Champions League - Final - First Leg - Al-Hilal v Urawa Red Diamonds - King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - April 29, 2023 Al-Hilal's Salem Al Dawsari in action. (Reuters)
Football - AFC Champions League - Final - First Leg - Al-Hilal v Urawa Red Diamonds - King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - April 29, 2023 Al-Hilal's Salem Al Dawsari in action. (Reuters)
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Saudi Al Hilal Will Fight to the End to Defend Title, Says Defiant Diaz

Football - AFC Champions League - Final - First Leg - Al-Hilal v Urawa Red Diamonds - King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - April 29, 2023 Al-Hilal's Salem Al Dawsari in action. (Reuters)
Football - AFC Champions League - Final - First Leg - Al-Hilal v Urawa Red Diamonds - King Fahd International Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - April 29, 2023 Al-Hilal's Salem Al Dawsari in action. (Reuters)

Al Hilal coach Ramon Diaz vowed his side will not give up on the defense of the Asian Champions League title despite surrendering an early lead and seeing Salem Al Dawsari sent off in their 1-1 draw with Urawa Red Diamonds in the final's first leg.

Al Dawsari displayed the best and worst of his game at Riyadh's King Fahad International Stadium on Saturday, putting Al Hilal in front in the 13th minute only to be sent off with four minutes remaining for kicking out at Urawa's Ken Iwao.

The red card came after Shinzo Koroki had leveled for the Japanese club eight minutes into the second half to leave the tie finely balanced going into the return leg at Saitama Stadium outside Tokyo next Saturday.

"We started the match very well, we were good offensively and deservingly scored," Diaz said. "However, this is the nature of a final and mistakes can complicate matters.

"The final isn't over yet. This final is over two matches and we will fight till the end."

Al Dawsari, a talismanic figure for Al Hilal who scored the winner in Saudi Arabia's historic shock 2-1 victory over Argentina at the World Cup last year, will not be available for the second leg as the Riyadh club chase a record-extending fifth Asian crown.

"There was some confusion after Urawa equalized and then came Al Dawsari's red card but we still had chances to score," Diaz said.

"We haven't given up hope and will do our best to be Asian champions again."

Urawa go into the second leg holding a slender advantage due to Koroki's away goal. Coach Maciej Skorza, leading his team in the competition for the first time, praised his players' battling performance.

"It is a very good result for us and I have great respect for the Urawa players as they fought till the end despite it being such a tough match," said the Polish coach, who was appointed to lead Urawa in December.

"This experience was crucial for the players and it was also a learning experience for me as well. We have learnt so much from this for the second leg and we are very hopeful of getting a result at Saitama next week."



Gauff Drops Set but Beats Belinda Bencic to Reach Australian Open Quarterfinals

 Coco Gauff of the US serves the ball to Belinda Bencic of Switzerland during their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025. (AP)
Coco Gauff of the US serves the ball to Belinda Bencic of Switzerland during their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025. (AP)
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Gauff Drops Set but Beats Belinda Bencic to Reach Australian Open Quarterfinals

 Coco Gauff of the US serves the ball to Belinda Bencic of Switzerland during their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025. (AP)
Coco Gauff of the US serves the ball to Belinda Bencic of Switzerland during their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025. (AP)

Coco Gauff's consecutive-set streak ended at the Australian Open. Her bid for a second Grand Slam title continued on Sunday with a 5-7, 6-2, 6-1 comeback victory over Belinda Bencic in the fourth round.

Afterward, Gauff drew a broken heart on the lens of a courtside TV camera with the message, “RIP TikTok USA,” a reference to the ban of the popular app back home.

Until Sunday, Gauff — a 20-year-old from Florida who won the 2023 US Open as a teenager — had collected all 16 sets she'd played this year and 24 of her past 25 dating to the end of last season, which included a title at the WTA Finals.

“In the first set, she played great tennis, and it was tough for me to be on the offense,” Gauff said after grabbing the last five games against Bencic. “I just played more aggressively in the second set and then also the third set.”

The tournament's No. 3 seed was unable to control her shots well enough at the start against Bencic on a steamy early afternoon in Rod Laver Arena, where the temperature hit 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) and the blue playing surface was bathed in sunlight.

Spectators seated along the sides of the court fanned themselves; Gauff sought relief from cool air provided at the players' sideline benches and pressed an ice pack against her face during one break in the action.

As trouble mounted late in the first set, in which Bencic broke in each of Gauff's last two service games — one of which ended with a pair of double-faults — the American kept missing the mark, compiling a whopping 20 unforced errors.

When her shots would land into the net or too long or too wide, or Bencic's would fall beyond her reach, Gauff repeatedly turned toward her coaches' box and put her arms wide with palms up, as if to ask, “What am I supposed to do?” After some of her nine double-faults, Gauff slapped her leg.

But Gauff recalibrated after the hour-plus first set, accumulating points in bunches, repeatedly hammering returns of serve and doing a much better job of targeting spots from the baseline. In sum, she was very much back to her best self. Not only did Gauff cut her unforced errors in half in the second set, but she also put together a 17-2 edge in winners over that span.

By the end, Gauff was in total control, and she motioned to the crowd for more noise after a reflex volley to win a point in the final game.

“Obviously there’s still a lot to go for me to accomplish my goal,” Gauff said, “but I can say that I’m proud of myself and happy with how I performed.”

Part of the problem in the early going, to be sure, was that Bencic is a terrific ball-striker. Her current ranking of No. 294 is misleading: The 27-year-old from Switzerland, who reached a career best of No. 4, only returned to action in October from maternity leave.

Her best past results have arrived on hard courts, including a run to the semifinals of the US Open in 2019 and a singles gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. She's now 0-3 in fourth-round matches at Melbourne Park, though, losing previously to International Tennis Hall of Fame member Maria Sharapova in 2016 and to eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka two years ago.

Gauff now faces No. 11 Paula Badosa in the quarterfinals on Tuesday. Badosa defeated Olga Danilovic 6-1, 7-6 (2) to get to the final eight in Melbourne for the first time.

The winner of Gauff vs. Badosa will play either No. 1 Sabalenka, who is seeking a third consecutive Australian Open title, or No. 27 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, the 2021 French Open runner-up.

Sabalenka stretched her winning streak in Melbourne to 18 matches by defeating 14th-seeded Mirra Andreeva 6-1, 6-2, and Pavlyuchenkova beat No. 18 Donna Vekic 7-6 (0), 6-0.

Martina Hingis, from 1997 to 1999, was the last woman with three straight championships in Australia.

A year ago, Gauff reached the semifinals at Melbourne Park for the first time, before losing to Sabalenka.

One more win for each and they'll have a rematch in that round. They also met in the US Open final that Gauff won two seasons ago.

“For me, every match is a new opportunity. It’s a new game. You know, it doesn’t matter what happened in the past,” Sabalenka said. “For me, it’s about staying in the moment and focusing on myself and on bringing my best game, because I know that if I’ll be able to bring my best game, I know that I can get the win. So I’m trying to focus on myself.”

The first man into the quarterfinals was No. 12 Tommy Paul of the US, who beat Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-1, 6-1, 6-1. Paul, a semifinalist in Australia in 2023, will face No. 2 Alexander Zverev or No. 14 Ugo Humbert on Tuesday.