France’s Marathon Man Mahut Calls Time on Tennis Career 

Nicolas Mahut. (Reuters)
Nicolas Mahut. (Reuters)
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France’s Marathon Man Mahut Calls Time on Tennis Career 

Nicolas Mahut. (Reuters)
Nicolas Mahut. (Reuters)

Frenchman Nicolas Mahut delivered an emotional farewell to professional tennis after his doubles defeat at the Paris Masters.

Mahut, 43, won five Grand Slam doubles titles in a career spanning 25 years, but he is best known for losing the longest professional tennis match in history against American John Isner at Wimbledon in 2010.

The match lasted 11 hours and five minutes and took place over three days, with the last set alone - eight hours and 11 minutes - being long enough to have broken the previous longest-match record.

Mahut bid adieu to the sport on home soil alongside Grigor Dimitrov on Tuesday, losing 6-4, 5-7, 10-4 to Hugo Nys and Edouard Roger-Vasselin.

"Being able to win Grand Slams was for me one of the best memories," an emotional Mahut said after the match.

"That's what I will remember," he said. "Beyond the titles, the trophies that I may have, it's also ultimately everything that happened in order for me to achieve those trophies and victories."

"It's all the doubts, the questioning, the mistakes I made. That is ultimately what makes a career rich and mine is very rich in that regard."

Asked about his record-setting match with Isner, Mahut said: "I now enjoy talking about that match because it was a crazy experience. It brought me a lot as a player and as a man."



Jordan Dream of Morocco-Style Run as World Cup Debut Nears

Football - International Friendly - Jordan Training - Regnum Carya Golf & Spa Resort, Antalya, Türkiye - March 26, 2026 Jordan head coach Jamal Sellami speaks to the media during training. (Reuters)
Football - International Friendly - Jordan Training - Regnum Carya Golf & Spa Resort, Antalya, Türkiye - March 26, 2026 Jordan head coach Jamal Sellami speaks to the media during training. (Reuters)
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Jordan Dream of Morocco-Style Run as World Cup Debut Nears

Football - International Friendly - Jordan Training - Regnum Carya Golf & Spa Resort, Antalya, Türkiye - March 26, 2026 Jordan head coach Jamal Sellami speaks to the media during training. (Reuters)
Football - International Friendly - Jordan Training - Regnum Carya Golf & Spa Resort, Antalya, Türkiye - March 26, 2026 Jordan head coach Jamal Sellami speaks to the media during training. (Reuters)

Jordan head coach Jamal Sellami has called on his players to emulate Morocco's shock run to the World Cup semi-finals four years ago as they prepare for their first appearance at the global football showpiece in North America.

Jordan will face Austria, Algeria and Argentina in Group J at the June 11 to July 19 World Cup and are holding their final training camp in Antalya this week.

Media access to training sessions has been tightly restricted as the team fine-tuned tactics.

Some players say they can barely sleep in anticipation of the tournament, but Sellami wants them ‌to draw confidence ‌from Morocco's achievement at the last World Cup, where ‌they ⁠lost 2-0 to ⁠France in the last four.

"In big competitions, many teams can surprise. My country Morocco reached the semi-finals in the last World Cup," he said. "That gives us belief."

Jordan will play Costa Rica later on Friday and Nigeria on Tuesday as part of a four-team regional tournament that also includes Iran and was relocated from Jordan to Türkiye due to the war in the Middle ⁠East.

"Of course we feel sad about what is happening. ‌I hope there will be peace," midfielder ‌Noor Al-Rawabdeh said at the camp.

"But this is football — we moved here and ‌we need to adapt. In the World Cup you face the unknown, ‌so we must be ready for everything."

Despite their underdog status, the players say they are not going to the World Cup just to make up the numbers. "For us, we are not going just for participation," Al-Rawabdeh added. "We are aiming to go ‌as far as we can in the tournament.

"To be honest, sometimes we don't sleep when we think about ⁠it," he ⁠added. "It’s a dream come true for us."

Jordan secured an automatic berth at the World Cup after finishing second behind South Korea in their Asian qualifying group. Defender Mohammad Abu Alnadi said the squad were relishing the opportunity to compete on football's biggest stage.

"It's truly amazing. All of us are excited. It's one of the highest levels any player can play," he said.

"We want to go as far as possible — like any other team — and make history again."

Sellami said the Antalya camp was a key stage in building experience ahead of facing elite opposition.

"We are preparing step by step. We've played against different football cultures," he said.

"We are collecting experience and, Inshallah (God Willing), we will surprise many people."


Kosovo One Game Away from Fairy Tale World Cup Qualification

 Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Semi-final - Slovakia v Kosovo - National Football Stadium, Bratislava, Slovakia - March 26, 2026 Kosovo's Florent Muslija celebrates scoring their third goal with teammates (Reuters)
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Semi-final - Slovakia v Kosovo - National Football Stadium, Bratislava, Slovakia - March 26, 2026 Kosovo's Florent Muslija celebrates scoring their third goal with teammates (Reuters)
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Kosovo One Game Away from Fairy Tale World Cup Qualification

 Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Semi-final - Slovakia v Kosovo - National Football Stadium, Bratislava, Slovakia - March 26, 2026 Kosovo's Florent Muslija celebrates scoring their third goal with teammates (Reuters)
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Semi-final - Slovakia v Kosovo - National Football Stadium, Bratislava, Slovakia - March 26, 2026 Kosovo's Florent Muslija celebrates scoring their third goal with teammates (Reuters)

It is less than a decade since Kosovo first played a World Cup qualifier, but they stand a single match away from a place at this year's finals in North America.

The small western Balkan republic declared its independence from Serbia in 2008 but was only admitted to the ranks of world football's governing body FIFA in 2016, playing a first competitive international in September of that year.

But if they win Tuesday's playoff at home to Türkiye in Pristina, they will qualify for a first appearance at a major tournament, after ‌a thrilling 4-3 ‌away win at Slovakia in Thursday's playoff semi-final.

It was Kosovo's ‌100th ⁠international and their ⁠most important since home and away success over Sweden in their qualifying group last year saw them finish second behind Switzerland and book a berth in the playoffs.

"I always believe in the team and, despite twice being behind, they all believed in themselves to fight," Kosovo's German coach Franco Foda said after the match.

"I'm very proud of this team and I think after 90 minutes it was a deserved victory," he ⁠added.

Kosovo managed only one point in their first World Cup ‌qualifying campaign, losing nine of 10 games, as ‌they began to build a team which included players who were allowed to switch allegiance after ‌previously playing for other countries, like striker Valon Berisha, formerly a Norwegian international, ‌and Albania goalkeeper Samir Ujkani.

KOSOVO TURNED TO DIASPORA TO STRENGTHEN SQUAD

They then sought to strengthen their squad with players from the extensive diaspora in Germany and Switzerland, and it is on the back of their performances that Kosovo steadily became more competitive.

Thursday's goalscorers were the ‌German-born pair of Fisnik Asllani and Florent Muslija, Swiss-born Kreshnik Hajrizi and Veldin Hodza, born and raised in Croatia, who ⁠only last year changed ⁠his footballing nationality.

But they only broke into the top 100 of the FIFA rankings for the first time in late 2024 and qualifying would be a stunning achievement.

Home advantage on Tuesday could be a decisive factor. At first, Kosovo had to play home matches in neighboring Albania during the 2018 World Cup qualifiers before being allowed to host games at Pristina's small 14,000-capacity Stadiumi Fadil Vokrri.

"We could probably sell 100,000 tickets for Tuesday's game, but with all this euphoria, we must keep our heads about us. The Turks have a very good team with excellent individual quality," Foda said.

The winner of Tuesday's playoff will complete in Group D at the World Cup, playing against Australia in Vancouver on June 13, Paraguay in San Francisco on June 19 and co-hosts United States in Los Angeles six days after that.


Mercedes' Russell Fastest in First Practice for Japan GP

Mercedes' George Russell was fastest in the first practice for the Japanese Grand Prix. Philip FONG / AFP
Mercedes' George Russell was fastest in the first practice for the Japanese Grand Prix. Philip FONG / AFP
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Mercedes' Russell Fastest in First Practice for Japan GP

Mercedes' George Russell was fastest in the first practice for the Japanese Grand Prix. Philip FONG / AFP
Mercedes' George Russell was fastest in the first practice for the Japanese Grand Prix. Philip FONG / AFP

George Russell went fastest ahead of team-mate Kimi Antonelli in an eventful first practice for the Japanese Grand Prix on Friday as Mercedes continued their dominant start to the Formula One season.

Mercedes have claimed one-two finishes at both grands prix so far and they were again out in front in dry, sunny conditions at Suzuka, AFP reported.

Early championship leader Russell clocked a fastest lap of 1min 31.666sec to pip 19-year-old Antonelli, who won the first grand prix of his career in China two weeks ago, by 0.026sec.

World champion Lando Norris was third, followed by his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri, and Ferrari pair Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton.

Red Bull's four-time world champion Max Verstappen was seventh, 0.791sec off Russell.

Norris, who along with Piastri did not start the Chinese Grand Prix because of a technical issue with his car, came out early but was then grounded for the first half of the session.

Alex Albon lost the nose of his Williams after crashing into Cadillac's Sergio Perez late in the session.

Albon had earlier skidded off the track and driven deep into the gravel before clipping a barrier on his way back.

Verstappen had a wobble when he tried to accelerate out of a corner.

His Red Bull team-mate Isack Hadjar also struggled, telling his team early in the session that his car was "pulling".

Aston Martin replaced Fernando Alonso with reserve driver Jak Crawford for the session.

Alonso arrived in Japan late following the birth of his first child.