MELBOURNE, Australia -- Daniil Medvedev was fined a total of $76,000 for his camera and racket smashing outbursts during the first two rounds of the Australian Open. The fines were published Sunday by Australian Open organizers, two days after Medvedev's ...
Learner Tien has become the youngest American man to reach the Australian Open’s third round since Pete Sampras in 1990.
Learner Tien, a 19-year-old qualifier from California, notched the biggest upset of the 2025 Australian Open to date by beating No. 5 seed and 2024 finalist, Daniil Medvedev, in five sets. Tien won 6-3,
Daniil Medvedev is fined over £60,000 for unsportsmanlike conduct following his on-court antics at this year's Australian Open.
Medvedev destroyed a tiny camera hanging in the net by repeatedly smacking it with his racket during a surprisingly hard, five-set, first-round win over Kasidit Samrej, who was ranked 418th
MELBOURNE, Australia — Daniil Medvedev has been fined a total of $76,000 for his camera and racket smashing outbursts during the first two rounds of the Australian Open. The fines were published ...
Learner Tien of the U.S. gestures during his second round match against Daniil Medvedev of Russia at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025.
The former world No. 1 smashed a net camera in his first-round match, and racked up $66,000 in fines for multiple code violations in his second-round loss to American teenager Learner Tien.
MELBOURNE, Australia -- Daniil Medvedev was fined a total of $76,000 for his camera and racket smashing outbursts during the first two rounds of the Australian Open. The fines were published ...
Madrid, Jan 27 (EFE).- Jannik Sinner has solidified his position as the leader of the ATP rankings after winning the Australian Open, while Russia’s Daniil Medvedev has suffered a significant drop—the largest—falling two places in the rankings to seventh position and losing 1,250 points.
American player Ben Shelton has criticized some of the questions and comments made by post-match TV interviewers at the Australian Open after reaching the semifinals at the Grand Slam tennis tournament.
A YouTube stream of the Australian Open has gone viral for its glitches, but it's also a sign of the future of sports media.