Not long ago, it seemed like Chris Eubanks’ tennis future would be in the broadcast booth. But the Atlanta native is breaking through at Wimbledon.
Author: Dan Wolken, USA TODAY
LPGA has young star Rose Zhang and great golf. So why is women’s tour stagnating?
If LPGA can’t promote Rose Zhang, a charismatic American superstar, at US Women’s Open at Pebble Beach, it’s not a great sign for health of the tour.
Wimbledon draw: Novak Djokovic, Elena Rybakina look to defend title
Novak Djokovic, the No. 1 seed, is attempting to win his eighth Wimbledon championship, which would match Roger Federer’s record.
Venus Williams’ unbelievable run at Wimbledon continues with 24th appearance
Venus Williams, who turned 43 this month, is a five-time Wimbledon champion, but that’s not the only reason history will remember her.
Former world No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki returning to tennis tour after 2020 retirement
In a Vogue magazine essay, Caroline Wozniacki wrote she began practicing again last winter and decided to start down the road toward a return.
Kirby Smart, Georgia football program need to heed warning signs before it’s too late
Off-the-field problems have brought down coaches and programs in college football for years. Kirby Smart needs to be careful or he could be next.
NCAA takes correct stance on NIL booster collectives but enforcement could lack teeth
Regulating how schools interact with booster collectives is a competitive issue not a rights issue. That’s the NCAA’s realm not any legislature’s.
Blazers star Damian Lillard earning new moniker: NBA’s most annoying player
It’s time for Damian Lillard to say what he means and mean what he says about his future with the Portland Trail Blazers. Enough already.
Novak Djokovic proves he can still weather rigors of tennis in French Open semifinal win
Novak Djokovic showed the tennis torch is not yet ready to be passed — with Carlos Alcaraz showing potential but not enough to unseat a legend.
PGA Tour sold out to LIV Golf and the Saudis. Pro golf will never be the same.
In less than a year, the Saudis went from disruptors to forcing capitulation that laid PGA Tour’s moral high ground to waste. They now own pro golf.