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US state department stops issuing visas for Gaza’s children to get medical care | Trump administration

The US state department announced on Saturday that it would stop issuing visas to children from Gaza in desperate need of medical care after an online pressure campaign from Laura Loomer, a far-right influencer close to Donald Trump who has described herself as “a proud Islamophobe”.
“All visitor visas for individuals from Gaza are being stopped while we conduct a full and thorough review of the process and procedures used to issue a small number of temporary medical-humanitarian visas in recent days,” the state department said in a message posted on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, which Loomer was banned from before it was purchased by Elon Musk.
In a pair of posts on the social network on Friday, Loomer had shared video of badly injured Palestinian children and their family members arriving in Houston and San Francisco this month, along with false claims that their shouts of joy were “jihadi chants” and that they were “doing the HAMAS terror whistle”.
Loomer also falsely claimed that she had “exclusively obtained” the two video clips she shared. One was copied from a medical aid charity’s public Instagram account and the other was from the Houston Chronicle’s YouTube channel.
After misrepresenting the children, including amputees arriving to get prosthetic legs, as “Islamic invaders from an Islamic terror hot zone”, Loomer demanded to know “who at the US State Department under @marcorubio signed off on the visas for Palestinians from a HAMAS hot zone”.
“Is Rubio even aware of this?” Loomer wrote, in reference to the secretary of state who was at the time in Alaska meeting Vladimir Putin.
“Why would anyone at the State Department give visas to individuals who live in Gaza, which is run by HAMAS?” Loomer wrote, before falsely stating that “95% of GAZANS voted for HAMAS.”
In fact, Hamas got 44% of party list votes in the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections across Gaza and the West Bank, and lost three of the five districts in Gaza to the secular Fatah party.
After the visa program was halted, Loomer declared victory. “This is fantastic news,” she wrote in response to the state department announcement. “Hopefully all GAZANS will be added to President Trump’s travel ban. There are doctors in other countries. The US is not the world’s hospital!”
“If Laura Loomer had been around in 1940, she’d have been trying to prevent Jewish refugees from entering the US,” Paul Graham, co-founder of the Silicon Valley startup incubator Y Combinator, wrote on X after the halt on visas for wounded children was announced. “You know she would. And if Trump had been president then, she’d have succeeded.”
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No. 6 Oregon flattens Oklahoma State: Ducks hand Cowboys worst loss of Mike Gundy era

No. 6 Oregon delivered one of the most lopsided wins in program history Saturday, blasting Oklahoma State 69-3 at Autzen Stadium behind a barrage of explosive plays and a suffocating defense.
The Ducks scored 65- and 59-yard touchdowns on two of their first three snaps, seizing control just 90 seconds into the game. By halftime, Oregon led 41-3 with 473 yards of offense — 230 through the air and 230 on the ground — and an eye-popping 13.1 yards per play.
Quarterback Dante Moore was nearly flawless in his second start, completing 16 of 21 passes for 266 yards and three touchdowns. Running back Noah Whittington emerged as the lead option, rushing for 91 yards and a 59-yard score.
Oregon’s defense matched the dominance. Freshman quarterback Zane Flores struggled in his first start for Oklahoma State, throwing for just 67 yards with two interceptions — both returned for touchdowns by Peyton Woodyard and Jerry Mixon on consecutive plays in the third quarter. The Cowboys managed only 161 total yards, with more than half of Flores’ output coming on a 35-yard completion to Christian Fitzpatrick that set up their lone points.
The 66-point margin marked the third-worst defeat in Oklahoma State history and the most lopsided loss of Mike Gundy’s tenure.
Quick hitters
Key Stats – Oregon
- QB Dante Moore: 16 of 21, 266 yards, T-career high 3 pass TDs.
- Ducks gained more yards on first 3 plays (130) than Oklahoma State had in the 1st half (123).
- Outscored Oklahoma State 41-3 in the first half, with more TDs (6) than OSU had first downs (5).
- 8 plays of 20+ yards in the 1st half (most in any half since 2017 vs. Oregon State).
Key Stats – Oklahoma State
- Failed to start 2-0 for the first time since 2016 (2nd-longest active FBS streak entering Saturday).
- Scored 3 points or fewer for the 6th time in 259 games under Gundy.
- Suffered 10th straight loss vs. FBS opponents (longest streak in program history, 4th-longest active FBS streak nationally).
- Allowed 41 points in the 1st half, most since giving up 44 to Oklahoma in 2015.
- QB Zane Flores (first collegiate start): 6 of 18, 61 yards, 2 pick-sixes.
Season Snapshot – Oregon
- Dante Moore (2025): 77.3% comp, 479 pass yds, 10.9 YPA, 6 TD-0 INT.
- Oregon offense (2025): 22 drives → 16 TDs, 1 FG, 2 punts.
Oregon Active Streaks (FBS Rank)
- Home wins: 17 (3rd)
- Regular-season wins: 20 (1st, program record)
- Wins vs. unranked teams: 33 (T-2nd)
- Nonconference home wins: 36 (1st)
- Home wins vs. unranked teams: 41 (2nd)
Largest Losses in Oklahoma State History
- 1904 vs. Oklahoma: 75 points
- 1907 at Oklahoma: 67
- 2025 at Oregon: 66
- 1946 vs. Oklahoma: 61
- 1970 at Oklahoma: 60
Most Points Allowed in Oklahoma State History
- 1904 vs. Oklahoma: 75
- 1946 vs. Oklahoma: 73
- 1996 at Texas: 71
- 2025 at Oregon: 69
Longest Active FBS Losing Streaks vs. FBS Opponents
- Kent State: 23
- Southern Miss: 14
- UMass: 13
- Oklahoma State: 10 (longest in program history)
Next Week
- Oregon at Northwestern
- Oklahoma State vs. Tulsa (after bye)
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Chicago federal intervention latest: President Trump’s immigration enforcement, possible National Guard deployment | Live updates

Despite fear in some Chicago communities over the expected surge in immigration enforcement, Pilsen held its Mexican Independence Parade on Saturday. There were some extra precautions taken in case federal agents showed up.
This year’s Pilsen Mexican independence Day Parade not only looked different, but felt different. A lot of the community and their supporters have concerns over the administration’s continued immigration enforcement.
“I just think we still need to be out here, and so we’re not scared and still show our heritage, and that we’re a proud people, and that we’re not scared of anything that’s going on,” paradegoer Jasmine Martinez said.
For a 24th time, the annual procession headed across 18th Street at noon as heightened security concerns loomed following the Trump administration’s threats to deploy National Guard troops and ICE agents to the city.
“I’m against goons and masked people, that’s like the KKK,” Pilsen resident Tom Sanchez said. “So, I’m here.”
Despite fear in some Chicago communities over the expected surge in immigration enforcement, Pilsen held its Mexican Independence Parade on Saturday.
Bands, colorful floats and dancers marched in the parade to noticeably smaller crowds.
According to the most recent census, Chicago’s Mexican-American community represents 21.5% of the city’s total population. The threat of federal intervention has turned what is usually a time of celebration to one of anxiety in Latino neighborhoods.
“It does seem a little bit less crowded than the last time we were here,” paradegoer Ben Snyder said.
While reports of ramped-up deportation efforts caused other celebrations to be canceled or postponed, organizers of Pilsen’s parade said they did not think their event would be targeted, but still staged safety volunteers armed with warning whistles along the short parade route as a precaution.
“Three continuous whistles, like this, will mean an ICE sighting,” said Vicky Lugo, parade organizer and Pilsen Chamber of Commerce board member. “A continuous whistle like this [means someone is getting arrested by immigration agents.]“
Some of Illinois’ elected official have rejected Trump’s plans.
“This is more than a parade today, this is a show of unity,” Congressman Mike Quigley said. “This is a reminder that there is more than unites us than divides us.”
The actual Mexican Independence Day falls on September 16, but celebrations will continue throughout the week, usually drawing hundreds of thousands of people. Where there were no issues at Pilsen’s parade this year, there are concerns about next weekend. That’s when the Little Village Mexican Independence Day Parade kicks off. There’s concern there could be some enforcement activity there.
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US Open tennis 2025: Aryna Sabalenka beats Amanda Anisimova in women’s singles final – live | US Open Tennis 2025

Key events
It’s a fourth grand slam title overall for Sabalenka and she’s the first player to successfully defend their US Open singles title since Serena Williams in 2014. Her record in her past six hard-court majors reads W/F/W/W/F/W. It’s almost Sinner-like.
Sabalenka sinks to her knees and is crying, before Anisimova comes over to her side of the net to share an embrace. Sabalenka celebrates with her team. And now Anisimova is crying too. Her disappointment is, of course, understandable, but I hope she isn’t too hard on herself. She played a good match – her level was higher than Sabalenka at times, but she was just too up and down. Sabalenka, meanwhile, had clearly learned from her two major final defeats this year and was able to maintain a state of equilibrium.
Sabalenka beats Anisimova 6-3, 7-6 (3) to win the US Open!
… credit to Sabalenka for the way she’s put that missed overhead at 5-4 to the back of her mind. And she’s nonchalantly hitting the balls back to Anisimova to serve, after setting up five championship points for 6-1. Anisimova’s serve is too strong for Sabalenka on the first, Sabalenka tries to bury her return on the second … but overcooks her forehand. But now the third championship point is on her own serve, and Anisimova goes wide! It’s back-to-back US Open titles for Sabalenka! After her season of what-ifs, she’s finally got her hands on a slam trophy, banishing her demons from the Australian Open and French Open finals. For Anisimova, it’s another defeat in a slam final, but after not turning up at Wimbledon, she more than played her part this time.
… and Anisimova doubles. Ach. That second serve didn’t miss by much. But, anyhow, it’s her fifth double fault of the set. So it’s 4-1 Sabalenka … and 5-1 at the changeover after a snarling serve …
Sabalenka is 20-1 in tie-breaks this year. That’s phenomenal. Though Anisimova did come through a second-set tie-break against Osaka in their semi-final. Anisimova sends down an ace on the opening point … Sabalenka steadies herself for 1-1 and then 2-1, as the crowd are rebuked by the umpire for being too shouty. Who can blame them though? Sabalenka seizes the first mini-break for 3-1 …
Second set: Sabalenka 6-3, 6-6 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
A net cord distracts Anisimova on the opening point. Sabalenka strikes long on the second. 15-all turns into 30-15, and Sablenka pulls off a classic one-two punch for 40-15. Anisimova then nets her return. A steely hold from Sabalenka.
Second set: *Sabalenka 6-3, 5-6 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
But every time Anisimova seems to have got herself back into this match, she has faltered. Will this be any different? Yes, because she holds to 30, despite a double fault! Having been two points from defeat, Anisimova is now on top. She even allows herself a smile at the changeover. She knows at the very least she’s got herself a tie-break.
Anisimova breaks: Sabalenka 6-3, 5-5 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
So, after two grand slam final defeats this year, can Sabalenka get the job done? She starts how she doesn’t mean to go on, as Anisimova attacks her serve and is rewarded for that bravery. Another slightly safe serve and Anisimova is all over that too! 0-30. This time a gutsy second serve saves Sabalenka, cue her biggest roar of the match so far. She’s willing herself over the line. And then hitting herself over the line, when she fizzes a forehand winner. 30-all. Will it be break point or match point? It looks for all of Arthur Ashe as though it’ll be match point … but Sabalenka mis-times her smash, jumping far too early, and whacks into the net! P-R-E-S-S-U-R-E. And Anisimova strikes with a forehand down the line! This match isn’t over yet.
Second set: *Sabalenka 6-3, 5-4 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
Perhaps now the pressure is almost off, Anisimova will swing more freely again. Which is exactly how this game plays out. 15-0, 30-0, 40-0. Well, how it starts to play out. Because Sabalenka smacks down a smash for 40-15. And then hits a beautiful backhand return, which sets up the point for her. 40-30. But Anisimova survives from there. Sabalenka, though, is just 90 seconds away from serving for her second US Open title.
Second set: Sabalenka 6-3, 5-3 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
A no-fuss, quicker than quick hold from Sabalenka to 15. Anisimova will serve to stay in this.
Sabalenka breaks: *Sabalenka 6-3, 4-3 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
But then Anisimova gets in on the double fault act, slipping to 15-30 and then 15-40 with a loose forehand error. Sabalenka’s return then rocks Anisimova, who can’t get the ball back. She’s been all over Anisimova’s second serve today. Just as in the first set, Anisimova has worked so hard to haul herself level, but then it gets away from her in the blink of an eye. She’ll be kicking herself. Sabalenka is two games away from retaining her title.
Anisimova breaks: Sabalenka 6-3, 3-3 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
Some of the celebrities in the house are shown on the big screen at the changeover. No signs of any marriage proposals yet though, after someone proposed in the crowd during Sabalenka’s third-round win over Leylah Fernandez. Which led to this exchange on Sky Sports. Awkward. But back to more immediate matters, because Anisimova has whipped the crowd into a New York frenzy with a one-two punch for 0-15 on Sabalenka’s serve. Which develops into 0-30. And then 0-40, when Sabalenka double faults! Well, well. Now it’s the defending champ who’s feeling the nerves. And Anisimova breaks with another one of those trademark backhands! She’s right back in it! And Arthur Ashe erupts!
Second set: *Sabalenka 6-3, 3-2 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
Anisimova reminds Sabalenka that she hasn’t totally gone away, with a backhand winner. But from 30-15, she snatches at her shot and nets. She’s chattering and chuntering to herself and doesn’t look as if she believes she can turn this around. But Sabalenka then morphs into Anisimova, going for broke, and missing. 40-15. Game, when Sabalenka tamely nets.
Second set: Sabalenka 6-3, 3-1 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
“She just doesn’t know whether to hit harder or softer, because her normal game isn’t working,” says Navratilova of the quandary Anisimova now finds herself in. And Sabalenka bosses another service game, getting to 40-15 before scooping a wonderful backhand cross-court, and Anisimova isn’t getting that back into play. The break is consolidated.
Sabalenka breaks: *Sabalenka 6-3, 2-1 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
Sabalenka gets her biggest cheer of the night when, defending for her life, scurrying left and right and left and right at the baseline and then forward to the drop shot, out drop shots Anisimova to reach 0-30! The camera pans in on Courteney Cox, who’s voicing her approval. And Sabalenka goes on to break with a backhand winner! Sabalenka has weathered that mid-first-set storm from Anisimova and is now firmly in control.
Second set: Sabalenka 6-3, 1-1 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
Another chat between the umpire and Anisimova at the change of ends. The umpire says nothing can be done and it’s been the same all week. Anisimova’s reply? “That’s ridiculous.” She needs to refocus. And for the first time in this final, Sabalenka holds to love. Anisimova has come from a set down this fortnight already, by the way, against Osaka in the semi-finals, ending a three-year, eight-match losing streak after losing the first set at a grand slam. But doing so against Sabalenka is another matter entirely.
Second set: *Sabalenka 6-3, 0-1 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
Anisimova is now complaining to the umpire; I think it’s to do with the lights affecting her ball toss. I can’t see how anything will change, though. She needs to get it out of her mind and reset. And show more patience than she did in that opening set, when she hit 15 unforced errors to Sabalenka’s four. She seems poised to do that when she advances to 40-30, but then here’s a wobbly double and it’s deuce. Advantage Anisimova. Then another double. She looks up again at the closed roof and shakes her head. But it’s the same for both players. Deuce. Advantage Anisimova. Deuce. Advantage Anisimova. Game Anisimova. A crucial hold.
Sabalenka wins the first set 6-3
You just don’t know what to expect from Anisimova now. It’s so hit and miss. But more misses than hits, as Sabalenka secures two set points at 40-15. Anisimova’s forehand return flies into the tramlines and that’s the end of a curious set, in which Anisimova fell behind, moved ahead and then fell apart in a flurry of errors. All Sabalenka needed to do was stay steady.
Sabalenka breaks: *Sabalenka 5-3 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
“Anisimova is Alcaraz and Sabalenka is Sinner,” notes Patrick Mouratoglou, the former coach of Naomi Osaka and Serena Williams, on social media. “The first one taking a lot of risks and making the winners and the unforced, the second one putting a lot of intensity and consistency.” Anisimova, perhaps now feeling the scoreboard pressure in this set, coughs up two double faults to give Sabalenka 15-40. If Sabalenka takes one of these break points she’ll be serving for the first. And a wild and wayward low-percentage backhand means Anisimova concedes another break. Cue the sound of silence.
First set: Sabalenka 4-3 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
Looking at the stats, Sabalenka will be encouraged by the fact that she’s only hit three winners so far but is still somehow on level terms; the defending champion will feel she’s got another gear to get to. At 40-30, she then nearly takes Anisimova out with an errant 115mph body serve – that’s one way to down the American – and apologises. She lands her second serve and holds from there.
Sabalenka breaks: *Sabalenka 3-3 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
But Anisimova, suddenly, loses focus. 0-15, 0-30, 0-40. She looks to the skies. Or more accurately the roof. She knows Sabalenka hasn’t done much to earn these three break points; she handed them to the Belarusian. And a fourth error gift wraps the game.
Anisimova holds and then breaks: Sabalenka 2-3 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
Now that Anisimova has secured her first game, this final can really start. And the American holds fairly confidently to 30. She’s already hit 10 winners to Sabalenka’s three; it’s not often you say that in a match featuring the world No 1. Another colossal hit – this one on the forehand – and Anisimova is hitting Sabalenka off the court. She’s got another break point. And a brilliant return from Anisimova forces Sabalenka to hit long! From 2-0 down, Anisimova leads 3-2. This is the Anisimova we saw against Swiatek in the quarter-finals.
Anisimova breaks: Sabalenka 2-1 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
Anisimova shows courage under fire to get to 30-all from 30-0 down. And that backhand down the line gets her a break-back point! Anisimova is bossing the break point, with Sabalenka screaming and crouching as she desperately attempts to withstand the barrage, but Anisimova eventually finds a way through her with a forehand winner! Cue the loudest cheer of the match so far. Anisimova isn’t celebrating though, she’s keeping her emotions in check. She’s not only on the board for the first time in a grand slam final, she’s also back on serve.
Sabalenka breaks: *Sabalenka 2-0 Anisimova (*denotes next server)
That opening game showed Anisimova has confidence in this match-up. She actually leads the head-to-head 6-3, including that most recent meeting in the Wimbledon semi-finals, though Sabalenka did beat Anisimova in the French Open fourth round in June. From 30-all, Anisimova pushes her backhand wide, and now it’s Sabalenka’s turn for a break point. The pair trade backhands on the break point, before Sabalenka mixes it up, and Anisimova hits well beyond the baseline. Sabalenka has the break … and you wouldn’t blame Anisimova for wondering if this is now going the way of the Wimbledon. But she needs to keep her head up; it could easily have been 1-1.
First set: Sabalenka 1-0 Anisimova* (*denotes next server)
An early break point for Anisimova. Already she’s done more than she did in the entire Wimbledon final. Sabalenka saves herself with a smart kick serve, but Anisimova crushes another winner for a second break point. A big serve rescues Sabalenka once more, but here’s a third bp. And it’s a similar story as Sabalenka’s serve dismisses the danger. And Sabalenka secures the next two points for the hold. A promising start from Anisimova, nonetheless.
Anisimova admitted, after forcing herself to watch the highlights (or should that be lowlights) of the Wimbledon final that she was as “slow as hell”. Perhaps that’s why she’s wearing the brightest of red trainers today, to remind herself to keep her feet moving. Sabalenka, meanwhile, is dressed in white. You feel the start is more important for Anisimova given what happened in the Wimbledon final, but unfortunately for her, this game isn’t on her racket, because Sabalenka is serving. Sabalenka moves 30-0 ahead before Anisimova shows everyone why her backhand is one of the best in the business, smoking the sideline with a winner. And then it’s 30-all. And Sabalenka double faults!
Apparently Sabalenka looked a little stressed in her practice earlier; she knows the pressure is on. But she seems more comfortable during the warm-up. They’re almost good to go.
A spine-tingling moment as they make their entrance, the sound of the New York crowd magnified by the roof. It has to be said the welcome for Sabalenka was nearly as loud as that for Anisimova, despite Anisimova being the home player.
Mary Joe-Fernandez has grabbed both players for a quick pre-match chat. Which seems a bit mean when they’ve got a grand slam final to focus on.
“I’m feeling very confident, playing at my home slam is very special,” says Anisimova. “I’m super excited and I’m sure the crowd will be backing me.”
As for Sabalenka, she says: “It means a lot [to defend my title]. I’m living my dream life and I’m ready to do everything possible to get this win. For me it’s important to focus on myself and never doubt my shots and go for it.”
“Despite being the clear favourite in terms of ranking and prior experience, Sabalenka faces a stern test in Anisimova,” emails Gavriella Epstein-Lightman. “Few can match Sabalenka from the baseline – her pummelling groundstrokes, consistently deep, push many players into perennial defence. Yet Anisimova is one of a select coterie of players who possesses the purity of ballstrike and power off both forehand and backhand wings. She is no counterpuncher and won’t be easily cowed. If Anisimova can hold her nerve, this could be tight.”
“I just hope it’s a good match,” Martina Navratilova says on Sky when asked for her prediction. “But I have to go with Sabalenka – at her best she’s the better player.”
First we’ll hear America the Beautiful, sung by Brittney Spencer. 24,000 fans fall silent. The roof is still shut, which is only adding to the atmosphere.
Sabalenka is now throwing a giant ball about, while doing a good job of ignoring Anisimova, who’s only a few metres away from her. If Sabalenka can see the ball that big when she gets on to court, she’ll be unbeatable. They should be out very shortly.
Do remember you can get in touch with your predictions too. It’s always good to hear from you.
So who wins? Erm, I’m really undecided. Sabalenka has the greater experience; Anisimova has the crowd. You could argue that Sabalenka has the bigger pressure being the world No 1 and defending champ; but there’s also huge pressure on Anisimova to give a better account of herself than she did in the Wimbledon final. But if Sabalenka keeps her emotions in check, she has the edge.
The players are still warming up backstage, both being pulled around on giant resistance bands, so we’ve got time to talk tactics. Sabalenka and Anisimova are two of the biggest ball-strikers in the game – and Anisimova’s two-handed backhand in particular can be devastating – so this will be first-strike tennis, even though Sabalenka has learned in recent years how to throw in some drop shots and forays to the net too. But their fearsome hitting is mixed with mental vulnerabilities. Anisimova can freeze (the Wimbledon final, of course, being the most extreme example) – while Sabalenka can let her emotions boil over. This will most likely come down to who handles the occasion better.
Stat attack. Sabalenka is the first woman to reach the Australian and US Opens finals for three consecutive years since Martina Hingis in 1999, as well as the first to make three major singles finals in a calendar year since Serena Williams in 2016. Anisimova is the youngest woman to reach the Wimbledon and US Open finals in a season since Serena and Venus in 2002.
Anisimova says:
I’ve worked really hard, especially on my mental game and not giving up. When I was at Wimbledon, every single match was a surprise to me. I was shocked with every match that I won. But here it feels more I believe in myself, and I’m able to do it. I think I have really shifted with my attitude.
Sabalenka says:
I’m super excited to give myself another opportunity, another final. If I’ll be able to hold that trophy, it’s going to mean a lot for me. I’ll be just the happiest person on earth probably.
I felt like in that match [against Anisimova] at Wimby, I was doubting a lot my decisions. That was the main thing that was bringing a lot of unforced errors. I feel like I had my opportunities, I didn’t use them. The key for me is going to be just go out there, obviously fight, but trust my decisions and go after my shots.
Road to the final. Not only has Anisimova beaten Swiatek this tournament, she also came back from a set down to defeat another grand slam champion in Naomi Osaka in their semi-final. Sabalenka’s path has been easier, especially after Marketa Vondrousova withdrew before their quarter-final, but she also came from behind in the last four to see off Jessica Pegula, which was a rematch of last year’s final.
Sabalenka
First round def Rebeka Masarova 7-5, 6-1
Second round def Polina Kudermetova 7-6, 6-2
Third round def Leylah Fernandez (31) 6-3, 7-6
Fourth round def Cristina Bucsa 6-1, 6-4
Quarter-final walkover against Marketa Vondrousova
Semi-final def Jessica Pegula (4) 4-6, 6-3, 6-4
Anisimova
First round def Kimberly Birrell 6-3, 6-2
Second round def Maya Joint 7-6, 6-2
Third round def Jaqueline Cristian 6-4, 4-6. 6-2
Fourth round def Beatriz Haddad Maia (18) 6-0, 6-3
Quarter-final def Iga Swiatek (2) 6-4, 6-3
Semi-final def Naomi Osaka (23) 6-7, 7-6, 6-3
Tale of the tape
Sabalenka – Anisimova
27 Age 24
1 Seeding 8
1 World ranking 9
3 Grand slam titles 0
7 Grand slam finals 2
20 Singles titles 3
3 Head-to-head 6
His interview with Anisimova from back in May, in which she talks about the mental health break she took from tennis in 2023, is well worth a look too, if you haven’t already read it:
Meanwhile: I’ve just eaten an obscene amount of sushi and am feeling a little sluggish. So here’s Tumaini’s excellent preview to keep you going while I recover:
Amanda Anisimova was struggling to maintain her composure in the days leading up to the final grand slam tournament of the year. As the American braced herself for her first round match, her high expectations became a source of significant stress. In hindsight, this was nothing out of the ordinary. “I think most players are putting a lot of pressure on themselves and those few days before the tournament are pretty stressful, just the anticipation of it,” she said after reaching round three. “I feel it was natural for me to feel that way.”
However, the circumstances surrounding Anisimova on the eve of the US Open made her situation unique. The last time she appeared at a grand slam, Anisimova was beaten 6-0, 6-0 in the Wimbledon final by Iga Swiatek. Wimbledon had represented a long-awaited breakthrough after years of unfulfilled promise and under most circumstances it would have only signified a positive step forward in her career, but by the end of her excruciating day on Centre Court it was hard not to wonder if such a humiliating moment might completely derail her progress.
For that reason, Anisimova’s handling of those challenges has been nothing short of remarkable. At the next grand slam tournament, her earliest possible opportunity, the 24-year-old has given herself another shot at competing for a grand slam title again as she faces Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1 and defending champion, on home soil in the US Open final on Saturday.
Anisimova’s talent has never been in doubt. She is one of the cleanest, most destructive ball strikers on the tour, blessed with peerless timing and technique that allows her to take the ball so early, change directions at will and generate immense pace off both ground strokes, particularly her extraordinary two-handed backhand.
Those skills were evident in her last few matches, which have been an exhibition in devastating offensive shotmaking. In her win over Swiatek, she constantly robbed time from the Pole’s offensive weapons. Despite her early nerves a day later against Naomi Osaka, it was remarkable how she turned the match around, dominating another of the biggest hitters in the game from the baseline. Even as they neared 1am after nearly three hours on the court, her hands remained steady during the decisive moments at the end and she never stopped attacking.
You can read the rest here:
Just after the match finished, along came thunder, lightning and torrential rain, just to add to the tension before the women’s final. At least Arthur Ashe has a roof. So this match will feel more like a night match, even though it gets under way at about 4pm in New York.
Already today, Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski have fallen agonisingly short in their attempt to become the first all-British pair since 1903 to win the men’s doubles title. They had three match points in the third set, before being edged out 3-6, 7-6, 7-5 by Spain’s Marcel Granollers and Argentina’s Horacio Zeballos, who also won the French Open title together this year. And look who’s celebrating:
Preamble
Tennis, bloody hell. 56 days ago Amanda Anisimova was whitewashed in the Wimbledon final 6-0, 6-0 by Iga Swiatek as she froze in the headlights in the biggest match of her life. It was the most public and painful of humiliations from which most of us, if put in the same position, would not recover, let alone have the character to return to the tour less than three weeks later as she started her preparations for the US Open.
And now here the 24-year-old is in the final of her home grand slam, having gained the sweetest of revenge against Swiatek in the quarter-finals, and she’ll be fortified by the knowledge she can beat Aryna Sabalenka when it matters, having defeated the Belarusian in three sets in their Wimbledon semi-final. Get the better of Sabalenka again and Anisimova’s redemption story would rank among the greatest in tennis, along with Jana Novotna winning Wimbledon in 1998 after heartbreak five years earlier, Jennifer Capriati going to hell and back before finally becoming a major champion in 2001 and Andre Agassi returning from the tennis wilderness to claim his career slam in 1999. And doing it in New York, not far from where Anisimova was born in New Jersey, would add a shine that not even Broadway could make up.
But Sabalenka is in the slightly curious position of needing to prove herself too, despite being the defending champion, world No 1 and top seed. She’s got her own ghosts of grand slams past to banish, having also let her emotions get the better of her in the crucial moments this year. After losing to Madison Keys in the Australian Open final, Coco Gauff in the French Open final and Anisimova in that Wimbledon semi, this match represents her last chance to end a year of what-ifs with a significant triumph.
So both want their own form of redemption – and Sabalenka probably wants a bit of revenge too. If I could, I’d call the two of them as the US Open champion – Sabalenka arguably deserves a slam for her efforts this year, but who would deny Anisimova such a heartwarming comeback for the ages? – but alas, that’s not possible. So let’s just hope, for both their sakes, that this time these huge hitters can show courage and composure every bit as big as their shots.
The players will arrive at about: 4pm New York time/9pm BST.
In the meantime: here’s a trip down memory lane:
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