At home in Dubai, Sania trains with Malik for Big W

Sania Mirza is finding Dubai to be a home away from home. The other day she was training on the courts of an academy housed in a star hotel in the UAE metropolis when the temperature touched 41 degrees Celsius at 9.30 in the morning. By afternoon she got to hear that it was 45 degrees in Hyderabad. Just like at home, a few heads — mainly from Pakistanis and Indians — turn in her direction as she begins sparring with her hitting partner, Zeeshan Ali, the former India player.

“The last three weeks have been good with regard to training,” Sania told The Indian Express on Wednesday, while talking about her injured wrist that has kept her out of action since February. “My wrist has bothered me for the last two years. It is a chronic wrist injury but at the moment it is not hurting. I have been training in Dubai for the past nine days and it feels good,” Sania said.

Sania and her husband, Pakistan batsman, Shoaib Malik are busy setting up their house in Dubai. The couple whose marriage attracted controversy are now happy that the hullabaloo surrounding them has died down. Dubai is a neutral venue for both of them.

“Whatever happened just before our wedding was disturbing and difficult for both of us and for the families. When it was all over, I said to Shoaib ‘we have come through this. I think we can come through more things in my life rather easily now’. We both faced what people never face in their lives probably. We were not even married when all the controversy happened. It is great to be together. After all that happened, we are both back to being happy again and that really counts.”

Sania believes not much has changed since the wedding. “I have to get used to sharing my bathroom and bedroom,” she said jokingly. “Shoaib and I have been working out together. We play sports in which we have to be lean but also strong. It helps that we are from sporting backgrounds,” Sania added.

“Just yesterday, when we were watching a movie, we were telling each other that we can’t believe we are married. One good thing is that we never fight over watching soap operas or serial. I am not the ‘girly’ types so I watch sport and so does he.”

Good news came in the form of Malik’s name being in the probables list for the Asia Cup. The former Pakistan skipper is undergoing a one-year ban for ‘indiscipline’. “I have heard that things can change overnight in Pakistan cricket. I never used to follow Pakistan cricket earlier but now I do. Shoaib didn’t follow too much of women’s tennis but now he has no choice.”

Sania will kick-start her return with the event in Birmingham before heading to Wimbledon. “I didn’t take time off because I was getting married. I got married because I had time on my side due to my wrist injury. Somehow, people don’t understand that. Everyone goes through rough patches and Shoaib himself has had a roller-coaster year. He understands what it means to make a comeback after an injury.

“Grass is the most difficult surface to make a comeback, especially after a wrist injury, as the surface is uneven and one has to make lot of adjustments with the wrist. If I had a choice I would have made a comeback on a hard court. But that said I have played well on grass.”

Ranked 91 in singles and 75 in doubles, Sania knows that she’ll realise how match fit she is only after playing a couple of games. “I am not going in hoping to make the quarterfinal of Wimbledon. It is not going to be that easy. It doesn’t work like that. I want to get on court and play a few matches. And then we will see.”

PREVIEW – Tamim gives Bangladesh glimpse of hope

Tamim Iqbal gave Bangladesh a glimmer of hope for the first test against England starting at Lord’s on Thursday by promising to take his place at the top of the order despite a painful wrist injury.

The dashing left-hand opener has been told he can play with his left wrist taped, although he may eventually need surgery.

“I don’t want to take any chances but I’m batting okay in the nets and the pain is getting better day by day,” he told reporters.

Tamim, who scored three fluent half-centuries during the two-test home series against England this year, is one of Bangladesh’s two world-class players.

The other is captain and all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan, who expects to play despite contracting chicken pox.

Cooler weather and showers predicted for the weekend after a brief burst of searingly hot weather in south-east England will also create the usual problems for visiting teams at the start of the English summer with assistance for the home bowlers.

England have rested their Twenty20 captain Paul Collingwood and all-rounder Stuart Broad at the start of a hectic season, giving an opportunity to Eoin Morgan to show he can take his one-day form into the test arena.

Morgan does not have a great first-class record but the England management are impressed with his temperament under pressure and the Bangladesh attack provides as gentle an introduction to test cricket as anyone could wish.

England begin the home season buoyed by their win in the Twenty20 World Cup in the Caribbean and with an Ashes defence against losing finalists Australia to look forward to at the end of the year.

TURBULENT PAKISTAN

After the two-test Bangladesh series they play four tests against Pakistan, who are condemned to play their international cricket abroad because of the uncertain security situation at home.

Pakistan also play two tests against Australia and for the first time since the rain-drenched 1912 Triangular series between England, Australia and South Africa, Lord’s will stage three tests.

Even by their own turbulent standards, Pakistan have endured a spectacularly troubled year.

The International Cricket Council’s anti-corruption unit is investigating their woeful performances in Australia and the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has banned former captains Younus Khan and Shoaib Malik after an internal inquiry.

The pair were still included in a preliminary tour party on Tuesday pending their appeals against the bans along with fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar who has had more than his share of brushes with the Pakistan authorities.

They will be captained by the flamboyant wrist-spinning all-rounder Shahid Afridi, who ended a four-year self-imposed exile from test cricket at the weekend and who is, himself, appealing against a fine for ball-tampering.

The clear indication is that the PCB is determined to field the best side it can muster regardless of its own sanctions, a team who at their mercurial best can fully test both England and Australia and give useful hints to the course of the subsequent Ashes series.

(Editing by Ed Osmond; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Soderling strolls into last eight in Barcelona

World number eight Robin Soderling, the highest-ranked player left in the Barcelona Open after a slew of withdrawals, sprinted into the quarter-finals with a 6-3 6-2 win over Spain’s Feliciano Lopez on Thursday.

The second-seeded Swede, last year’s French Open runner-up, next plays Argentine Eduardo Schwank who put out Spain’s Ivan Navarro 6-3 7-6.

Third seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and number five Fernando Verdasco had to come from behind to advance.

Frenchman Tsonga overcame Spain’s Nicolas Almagro 5-7 6-1 6-4 while home hope Verdasco beat Austrian Juergen Melzer 3-6 7-6 6-3.

World number 10 Tsonga will play Thiemo de Bakker for a place in Saturday’s semi-finals after the 21-year-old Dutchman upset seventh seed Juan Carlos Ferrero 7-6 3-6 7-6.

“I wasn’t sliding well at the start, the clay was quite heavy,” Tsonga told reporters.

“Then I started to play a bit more how I play on hardcourts which enabled me to get back into the match in the second and third set.”

SLOW COURT

Verdasco, losing finalist at last week’s Monte Carlo Masters, will play Ernests Gulbis on Friday after the Latvian saw off Spanish qualifier Albert Ramos 6-1 6-3.

“The court was very slow and I had to suffer a lot to win but I got a lot of support from the crowd at key moments,” said Verdasco.

“I have to prepare for tomorrow’s match now which is definitely going to be very tough.”

Spanish eighth seed David Ferrer, runner-up to compatriot Rafael Nadal in 2008 and 2009, advanced when Simone Bolelli retired from their match with a wrist injury.

World number 17 Ferrer was leading 6-0 3-0 when the Italian pulled out. He next plays Thomaz Bellucci after the Brazilian 13th seed beat Spain’s Guillermo Garcia-Lopez 6-4 6-4.

World number three Nadal, who has won the title for the past five years, skipped this week’s event to give his body a rest after landing a record sixth consecutive Monte Carlo crown on Sunday.

(Writing by Iain Rogers in Madrid, editing by Tony Jimenez. To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Tsonga battles past Almagro into Barcelona quarters

Third seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga fought back from a set down to beat Nicolas Almagro for the second time in as many weeks and secure a berth in the quarter-finals of the Barcelona Open on Thursday.

The French world number 10, who defeated Spaniard Almagro in last week’s Monte Carlo Masters, had his serve broken twice in the opening set on the Catalan clay before rallying to win 5-7 6-1 6-4.

Tsonga will play former junior world number one Thiemo de Bakker for a place in Saturday’s semi-finals after the 21-year-old Dutchman upset seventh seed and former French Open champion Juan Carlos Ferrero 7-6 3-6 7-6.

Spanish eighth seed David Ferrer, runner-up to compatriot Rafael Nadal the past two years, advanced after Simone Bolelli retired from their match with a wrist injury. Ferrer was leading 6-0 3-0.

World number three Nadal, who has won the in Barcelona for the past five years, opted to skip the event to give his body a rest after winning a record sixth consecutive Monte Carlo Masters title on Sunday.

World number eight Robin Soderling, the highest-ranked player left in the draw, and number nine Fernando Verdasco, whom Nadal thrashed in the Monte Carlo final, play later on Thursday against Feliciano Lopez and Juergen Melzer respectively.

(Writing by Iain Rogers in Madrid, editing by Pritha Sarkar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Sania, family to get Pakistan visas today

New Delhi, Mar.30 (ANI): Tennis sensation Sania Mirza and her family will be leaving for Pakistan
shortly to meet former cricket captain Shoib Malik and his family.

Mirza is to marry Shoaib Malik and a formal wedding reception has been scheduled within a month.

According to diplomatic sources, Sania, her parents and sister have applied for a visa at Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi and are expected to get visas by this evening.

After the marriage, the couple will be based in Dubai, where Shoaib is a resident. Sania will continue to play tennis once she recovers fully from the wrist injury that has marred her career in the recent past.

Yestarday, Sania told mediapersons that her marriage will be the biggest day of her life.

Sania also hopes to be fully fit to represent India in the Commonwealth and Asian Games that are scheduled for later this year. (ANI)

Serena, Del Potro withdraw from Miami

Serena Williams and Juan Martin Del Potro have pulled out of the upcoming ATP and WTA hardcourt tournament in Miami with injuries, organisers said.

Argentina’s Del Potro had hoped to be back but is still nursing a wrist injury that wrecked his Australian Open campaign.

Last year’s US Open champion first felt the injury in Shanghai last October and it failed to clear up going into the new season.

Williams, a five-time Miami titlist, pulled out with a knee injury which she continues to rehabilitate following her victory at the Australian Open.

The tournament announced that Venus Williams will launch her bid for a fourth title on Thursday night (local time). She won in Miami in 1998, 1999 and 2001.

- AFP

Broken wrist sidelines Davydenko

Fifth-seeded Russian Nikolay Davydenko has learned that his painful left wrist is broken, sidelining him for four weeks, ATP tour officials said.

Davydenko withdrew from the Indian Wells Masters 1000, where he had already played and won one match – beating young Latvian Ernests Gulbis in his second-round opener on Saturday (local time).

But an MRI exam on Sunday morning showed the wrist injury that had kept him out of Russia’s Davis Cup clash with India earlier this month was, in fact, a fracture.

Davydenko was originally injured in his semi-final loss in Rotterdam in February.

It was not diagnosed as a broken bone, and he played one match the Dubai Open before retiring after one set from his match against Michael Berrer.

The injury was a particular issue for the righthander on his two-handed backhand. He had also said in Dubai that the more he played the more swollen and painful his wrist became.

An ATP spokesman said Davydenko would be out of action and have a splint on the wrist, for four weeks.

- AFP

Anna Kournikova spotted with diamond ring on engagement finger

Melbourne, July 07 (ANI): Anna Kournikova has been spotted with a huge diamond ring on her engagement finger.

The hot Tennis star, who has long been linked to singer Enrique Iglesias, showed off her ring when she came to watch World Team Tennis on Monday night, the Daily Telegraph reports.

However, when she was asked if the ring meant she was committed, she simply replied: “I thought you were the good press.”

The Russian bombshell became conscious and hid her hand behind her back.

Kournikova was scheduled to play for the St. Louis Aces but will miss the season because of a wrist injury.

She still participated in a kid’s clinic, signed autographs and cheered on her teammates. (ANI)

Sania makes a shocking first round exit from French Open

Paris, May 26 (IANS) Sania Mirza crashed out of French Open first round, losing 4-6, 6-7(3) to Kazakhstan’s Galina Voskoboeva at Roland Garros here Tuesday.

Sania, ranked 91, fought hard but failed to measure upto her 95th ranked opponent in their second meeting. The two are now levelled 1-1 and had previously met in hard courts of San Diego in 2005, where Sania had beaten Voskoboeva.

The 22-year-old Hyderabadi committed 10 double faults with a poor 27 per cent second serve in the 99-minute clash.

The Kazakh girl was quick to race ahead 4-2 after an early break in the first set and after couple of easy holds went 1-0 up. Sania had her opportunities but wasted four break points.

Voskoboeva began the second set in the same vein, breaking Sania’s serve in the very first game only to drop her’s in the second. The Kazakh then pulled one off in the seventh game for a 4-3 lead but Sania broke back in tenth to enforce a tie-break where Voskoboeva prevailed.

Sania will now compete in the doubles event, where she partnering Chia-Jung Chuang of Chinese Taipei(Taiwan) will open against Turkey’s Ipek Senoglu and Belgium’s Yanina Wickmayer.

Sania had missed the French Open last year due to a chronic wrist injury that sidelined her for much of last year. She hasn’t had much matches on clay this season though she participated in the Madrid Masters doubles after failing to make it to the singles main draw.

Sania has never moved beyond the second round of the French Open.

1ST LEAD: Federer battles, Murray rolls into quarter-finals

Indian Wells, California  – Roger Federer on Wednesday stretched his career domination of Fernando Gonzalez to a 12th victory from 13 meetings as he joined Andy Murray in the quarter- finals of the Indian Wells Masters.

Second seed Federer lost only his fifth career set against Chile’s big-hitting Gonzalez on the way to a 6-3, 5-7, 6-2 victory on a sweltering day in the desert east of Los Angeles.

“I enjoy playing Fernando because it’s so tactical,” said the 13- time Grand Slam winner. “But at the same time it’s so brutal, so aggressive. You think you have a slight chance to win the point, and then you realize, no, there’s actually none. It’s pretty interesting with him.

“At 30-love up, he doesn’t care if it’s a forehand or backhand coming his way, he’s just going to rip it anyway. We’ve played on many occasions, so we know each other’s games very well. I think that’s always fun to play somebody like that.”

Murray, seeded fourth and chasing his third title of the season, had it easy in just 50 minutes as Spanish 15th seed Tommy Robredo retired due to a wrist injury to hand over a 6-2, 3-0 win to the Scot.

“Mentally, a wrist problem can be tough,” Murray said.

“I’ve been through it. It’s not so much hitting the ball that’s worrying. It’s just the pain that’s there and feeling like, you know, something might happen.”

Spain’s Australian Open semi-finalist and 10th seed Fernando Verdasco advanced into the last eight with a defeat of German Philip Kohlschreiber 6-4, 3-6, 6-1.

Federer’s only loss to Gonzalez came in round-robin play at the Masters Cup two years ago in Shanghai. But the Swiss re-established superiority last year in the Roland Garros quarter-finals.

Federer needed one hour, 45 minutes to set up a match with Verdasco, the breakthrough player in Melbourne, after losing a five- hour semi-final duel with Rafael Nadal, who beat Federer for the Grand Slam title.

Gonzalez saved a match point before Federer closed out victory with a precise return into the corner. Federer won his 12th match of the season against two defeats and takes a 2-0 record – both on clay – over Verdasco into their match up.

Verdasco’s win over Kolhschreiber overturned a 1-3 record against the German.

“The Australian Open helped me so much when I won against Murray and (Jo-Wilfried) Tsonga, and then also the match I did with Rafa. All that made me feel that I can play and I can beat these top players,” said Verdasco.

In women’s play, fourth seed Vera Zvonareva reached her third semi-final of the season after Melbourne and a title in Pattaya City, Thailand, with a defeat of Dane Caroline Wozniacki 6-4, 6-2. (dpa)