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Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Monday 4th June Roland Garros 4th Round News :

Women's 4th round Results: 


Kazakh Yaroslava Shvedova Defeats The Chinese Star LI Na By 3-6, 6-2, 6-0.On a windy and cold day in Paris, the fortunes of two Grand Slam champions blew in different directions as Maria Sharapova needed to labor for more than three hours to score a victory, while defending Roland Garros champion Li Na was stunned by a qualifier.Kazakh Yaroslava Shvedova ended Li's hope of becoming the first back to back titlist since Justine Henin won three crowns between 2005-2007 when she hit through the Chinese 3-6, 6-2, 6-0 on Court Suzanne Lenglen in a match where Li completely lost her rhythm in the last two sets.Li, who had looked good in her first three matches and had reached the final of Rome two weeks ago, committed 41 unforced errors and could not stay with the charged-up Shvedova off the ground."Nothing happen," Li said. "I just try to play ball back to the court, but I can't. I mean, just like normal.  Tennis, only two players on the court.  Only win or is lose.  For me is nothing special.  If today I lose the match, lose.  If I win, just win.  If I lose the match, I have to find the reason why I lose the match.  I have to try working hard next day."No.142 Shvedova, who reached a career high ranking of no.29 two years ago after reaching the quarter-finals of Roland Garros, had fallen off the map in singles, as she began the year ranked no.201 and had to play ITF Futures events to get her confidence back and her ranking high enough so she'd even have a chance to qualify for the majors."It's the most incredible win for me," Shvedova said. "I always have nice matches against top players, because it's I have no pressure, and I always come to beat them." She will play Petra Kvitova, who seems to have finally found her form on clay and made her class count against Varvara Lepchenko, who looked overawed by the challenge of taking on the Wimbledon champion. Kvitova needed no second invitation to blast the American out of the tournament 6-2, 6-1.

Sharapova and Czech Klara Zakopalova fought tooth and nail in match that featured 21 breaks of serves, but also some searing groundstrokes from both women, who combined for 82 winners. Even though she failed to serve the match out twice in the second set and saw Zakopalova hit through her in a hard-fought contest that tested both players legs and wills, Sharapova came away with a 6-4 6-7(5) 6-2 victory."My opponent I played extremely well, the best that she's played against me," Sharapova said. "She's dangerous. She can play well  because first of all, she's had very good wins, so she's confident.  On top of that, when she hits the ball, I think some days she goes out there and goes for it, and it seems like everything just goes in and stays so low over the net.A great example is that first match point,  she was just drilling the ball. I'm sure some other days she goes out and makes mistakes. And that's probably why she came to this tournament not seeded.  But she's certainly dangerous. But I came out strong in the third set, and I guess that's really what matters and nice to be in the quarters again."

With no.1 Victoria Azarenka, defending champion Li as well as 13-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams out of the draw, it may appear that this is Sharapova's best chance to complete a career Grand Slam, but as the 30-year-old Zakopalova showed on Monday, there are plenty of players who do not fear the higher seeds and can stay with them.But perhaps the one positive that came out of Sharapova' near career ending shoulder surgery in 2008 is she spent a tremendous amount of time off court strengthening her body. Plus, she doesn’t panic like she used to on clay."It's more like I felt like I would always have to save myself, because knowing that it's seven matches, I never felt like I recovered that well," said Sharapova who has fizzled during the second week of Roland Garros on seven previous occasions.  But I think with experience and just being physically stronger, I'm much better at that. Here you have a day off, so it's like helpful."The second seed added that while she did jam her right wrist during the match that it feels OK.Sharapova will play Kaia Kanepi, who downed Arantxa Rus 6-1, 4-6, 6-0. The Estonian was hugely impressive, especially in that last set, shrugging off her second set blip to crush her young Dutch opponent.

Men's 4th Round Results:



Andy Murray waited out a perfect storm of a first set by his opponent Richard Gasquet before taking the match by the scruff of the neck to win 1-6, 6-4, 6-1, 6-2. He was blown away for the first half-an-hour, held his own for the next set before turning the match on its head.The match was a contrast in styles between the old and the new school. One-handed backhands are a dying art that is destined to be "grandfathered" out of the sport once Federer, Wawrinka and Gasquet retire. Coaches refuse to teach youngsters this arcane skill as it is said to put too much stress on the shoulder. In years to come, historians will speak fondly of the continental grip that was all the rage back in the 20th century, but for half-an-hour on a chilly Philippe Chatrier Court, it was back in fashion and the French crowd loved it.
Gasquet  dispatched every ball which landed to his left like a ringmaster cracking his whip. Each backhand seemed to speed like a tracer bullet low and true over the net and into the corners. The fans on Chatrier roared, stood to applaud and feted his 6-1 first set with a Mexican wave which did three laps of the stands and lasted for the whole changeover. The "Mozart of French tennis" as he is often known here – the child prodigy destined for greatness ever since he appeared on the cover of a sports magazine at the tender age of nine – was finally coming of age.Or so we thought. The second set settled into more of a conventional rhythm and Murray even got his nose in front, only for Gasquet to break back, amid more roaring, standing and waving. But then Mozart tried an audacious arpeggio which turned into a bum note. At 4-5 advantage Murray, Gasquet attempted to find the outside of the box with a second service. The crowd groaned as it failed to clip the white line and Murray was handed the second set.Never one to look a gift horse in the mouth, the Scotsman set about converting this unexpected slice of fortune into hard currency. And while Gasquet tried desperately to conjure up the magic of the first set, Murray picked his spots and dismantled an opponent who, rather than consolidating, decided unwisely to chase the game.For the neutral it was a great spectacle. There were more drop shots than we had seen in this part of Paris since Justine Henin hung up her racquet, and Murray began to showcase the art of the two-handed backhand which, while less aesthetic than its one-handed cousin, is every bit as effective. When Gasquet smashed, Murray retrieved. When he sliced, Murray hared in and outdropped him. And when he missed, Murray pounced.

The third and fourth sets were as one-sided as the first as Murray parlayed his greater experience into the kind of win that would have eluded him earlier in his career. Gasquet saved two match points to the delight of the crowd, but it was delaying the inevitable. And speaking of inevitable, the Frenchman will once again face an inquest into his big-match temperament.Murray meanwhile moves on to the quarter-finals to face David Ferrer, an altogether different animal and one who loves clay with a passion bordering on obsession. The Scotsman's coach Ivan Lendl, seen nodding sagely throughout the contest today, will be pleased with his new charge's performance but is well aware that he will have to raise his game a notch or two if his Grand Slam duck is to be broken here in Paris.



Rafael Nadal’s 6-2, 6-0, 6-0 win over Juan Monaco was that it somehow took one hour and 46 minutes to compile. Still, credit where it’s due; at one stage the Argentinean was actually ahead in the match, albeit at 2-1 in the first set. It was the next 17 games that Monaco will need to forget, as Nadal took him apart, displaying terrifying form. The result bears testament to the Spaniard’s lethal potency at Roland Garros – but even allowing for that, the scoreline was embarrassing alongside the name of any player seeded 13 in a Slam tournament.On a really cold afternoon on Suzanne Lenglen court, it was not as if Monaco was frozen with fear. In the first set he actually really gave the impossible task a go, doing his best to provide some kind of creative challenge to the perennial tournament favourite. He had two break points (albeit unconverted), did not make significantly more unforced errors than his opponent, and his first serve percentage was way better than Nadal's at 86% to 66%, Yet he could make no headway. By the middle of the second set, Monaco's stock of ideas had run dry. Nadal, meanwhile, was simply stunning. Hitting the lines as if the ball was drawn there on a wire every time, he has only dropped 19 games in four matches. He will play his compatriot Nicolas Almagro in the last eight.Nadal was almost regretful after the match, quick to reassure his friend Monaco: "In my opinion, he was unlucky, unlucky in the first set.  That's my feeling, no?  6‑2 was too much. Later, sure, very happy the way I played.  I feel very, very sorry for him.  I think he's playing probably the best tennis of his career, but probably not today after, especially the last set, no, when he start to miss, you know.  I saw him a little bit, you know, suffering a little bit on court at the end. He's one of my best friends on tour.  I feel very sorry for him."


David Ferrer continued his charge through the men’s draw with another efficient display to win through to the last eight. Today’s casualty was his Davis Cup team-mate Marcel Granollers, seeded No.20 here. For the fourth time in as many outings at Roland Garros 2012, Ferrer was never in anything you could seriously call trouble. He won 6-3, 6-2, 6-0 in an hour and 51 minutes, to equal his best career display at Roland Garros.Granollers too has had a good tournament, with this fourth round appearance his best Slam performance to date. But on a frankly chilly Philippe Chatrier court, he became the latest contender to fall victim to Ferrer’s trick of making his opponents play badly, a skill noted by Mats Wilander. The seven-time Slam winner (including three on the Parisian clay) says Ferrer’s expertise is so subtle that he leaves opponents puzzled as to exactly how he wins so many matches. But Wilander made it plain he would be delighted if Ferrer can capture a Slam title because it would be a triumph of dedication.Certainly many here see Ferrer as a worthier member of the Big Four than his potential quarter-final opponent Andy Murray. But whether he can translate that into an actual Slam victory, particularly this year, is harder to see. Nonetheless, this fourth-round outing was right up his street, as he took his opponent to multiple deuces in Granollers’ opening service game. It was only a matter of time before the defences crumbled. At 3-2 Ferrer brought up his third break point of the game by outfoxing Granollers with a drop shot followed by a perfect ball down the line (not the last time he would use that combination to crushing effect). Granollers, who is just the sixth-ranked Spaniard here despite his seeding, double faulted and it was 2-4. Aside from one thoroughly atypical love game, he always looked vulnerable on service.Granollers did however manage to carve out two chances. Ferrer was serving for the set and unexpectedly put the ball wide for break point. A 23-stroke rally forced Granollers further and further into a defensive corner and left him nowhere to go. Then Ferrer sent the ball long again, and another long rally drew a further error from Granollers. That was the nearest Ferrer came to a crisis, even though it was a set where he made more errors than Granollers. Crucially Ferrer produced even more winners, and he served it out 6-3 in 44 minutes.The second set opened with a 13-minute game as Ferrer cemented his advantage. He brought up his fourth break point with a backhand volley, and converted with a wrong-footing forehand. At 0-2 it was raining on Granollers’ parade and also on Chatrier, although play continued. At 3-1 Ferrer forced the pace once more, racing to the net to reach a seemingly perfect drop shot and send it down the line to move clear at 4-1. Granollers had little left to give and captured just one more game before the match was done.Commented Ferrer after the win: "It's a series of reasons why I have reached quarterfinals, why this year is my best performance at Roland Garros. It's true that in the past three or four ‑ well, four matches ‑ I felt really comfortable.  I felt really at ease.  I think I have to continue this way. Next match I will be playing will probably be a difficult match to play, but I'll have to continue and be positive.  I should try and reach semifinals.  I've never managed to go beyond the level of quarterfinals. I managed at the US Open but never on clay, so I will have to continue and make even more effort."


Nicolas Almagro, meanwhile, continued his incredible run that began in the first round of the Nice Open. Since that match, the Spanish no.12 seed has yet to drop a set, winning the tournament in the south of France and racing into the quarter-finals here. Almagro's latest victim was Janko Tipsarevic, no less, the no.8 seed from Serbia. Tipsarevic was outplayed in every part of the game by the Spaniard who must be starting to feel invincible, such is his form. The clay-court specialist is about to find out, as he faces the winner of the Juan Monaco-Rafael Nadal match this afternoon.Almagro was understandably delighted to reach the last eight: "Yes, of course I'm very happy.  I think I played great tennis today.  The day was a little bit cloudy, but now it's really sunny for me.  (Smiling.) Now that win is one of the best moments of my career, and I want to enjoy and I'm very happy with my tennis."

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga was a mightily relieved man when he converted his second match point on Stanislav Wawrinska's serve to win 6-4, 7-6(6), 3-6, 3-6, 6-4. The French fifth seed had come into the match carried over from last night with a 4-2 lead and lost the first game to relinquish his precious break. The Swiss then drew level at 4-4 and a potentially tight, drawn-out conclusion looked likely. No doubt annoyed at letting his lead slip, Tsonga had other ideas, running around his forehand to smash winners in the next two games and grasp victory from the valiant Wawrinka. Providing he makes full use of that devastating forehand in tomorrow's quarter-final, the Frenchman must have a (small) chance. Especially if Djokovic starts as sluggishly as he did against Andreas Seppi in the last round...Juan Martin Del Potro took up where he left off last night, carving out a 7-6(6), 1-6, 6-3, 7-5 win over Tomas Berdych by taking the fourth set he required. Leading two sets to one overnight, the Argentinean no.9 seed broke to lead 2-0, only to relinquish that break in the seventh game. Del Potro looked the more dangerous throughout though, and after he raced into a 0-40 lead in the 12th game he clinched his place in the quarter-final on his first match point when Berdych hit long.




Del Potro was bothered by his heavily strapped knee in the early rounds, but gave no sign of discomfort either yesterday or today. His groundstrokes have been wreaking havoc and Roger Federer will need to bring his A-game against the former US Open champion in the quarter-final. Since missing nearly all of 2010 with a wrist injury, tennis fans have been waiting for the giant South American to get back to his devastating best. He is not there yet, but there are growing signs that the Del Potro of old is back, and the 'Big Four' may become a 'Big Five' on this evidence.Looking forward to his quarter-final with Roger Federer, Del Potro was upbeat: "I (need to) play an unbelievable match, try to take my opportunities, serve 100%, trying to play winners with my forehand, with my backhand, and put him to raise his game.  I don't like to run too much, so I will try to be more aggressive than his game and looking at unbelievable shots."

Monday, 4 June 2012

Pakistan wins against Sri Lanka in 2nd T20 and level the series

Shahid Afridi scored a half-century and picked up two wickets in Pakistan's series-levelling win in Hambantota.
Pakistan wins against Sri Lanka by 23 runs to level the two-match Twenty20 series by 1-1 in the second game at the Mahinda Rajapaksa International Cricket Stadium, Sooriyawewa in Hambantota on Sunday.Chasing a modest total of 123 runs to win, Sri Lanka could manage only 99 all-out off 19.2 overs.Yasir Arafat and Mohammad Sami bagged three wickets each while all-rounder Shahid Afridi claimed two for 17.An inspired Sri Lanka bowling attack restricted Pakistan to a modest total of 122 for six despite Shahid Afridi’s half-century in their second and final Twenty20 international.Afridi's 33-ball unbeaten 52, which included one six and five boundaries, was the only bright spot for the Pakistan side in their must-win match.Pakistan captain Mohammad Hafeez’s decision to bat first after winning the toss backfired as his side made a poor start.Ahmed Shehzad fell to Nuwan Kulasekara for six in the third over of the innings, and youngster Khalid Latif was run out for one as Pakistan slipped to 18 for two in the fifth over.The tourists suffered another serious blow when their star batsman Umar Akmal was trapped in front of the wickets by Kaushal Lokuarachchi in the 10th over, which left them reeling at 29 for three.From the other hand, Hafeez tried to provide his side some momentum with a 34-ball 24, studded with three boundaries, but his innings came to an end in the 11th over by Lokuarachchi.Senior batsman Afridi and Shoaib Malik then joined forces to bail their side out of trouble and added 68 runs for the fifth wicket. But a disciplined Sri Lanka bowling attack kept the Pakistan batsmen in check and didn’t allow them to free their arms.Nuwan Kulasekara impressed with the figures impress, while Lokuarachchi finished with 2 for 31.

Saturday, 2 June 2012

Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich to offer €250M for Lionel Messi and Pep Guardiola

Chelsea owner Abramovich is prepared to buy Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi for Pep Guardiola.El Confidencial says Abramovich wants to bring Pep Guardiola to Chelsea - and is willing to wait for the former Barca coach should he stick to his plans to take a year away from football to live in New York.The prospect of buying Messi has been tentatively discussed and it's suggested Abramovich would not blink should Guardiola demand the Argentine's signing.Messi's €250 million buyout clause is within Abramovich's reach and Chelsea's marketing men believe they would make their money back in shirt sales and merchandise.

Chelsea Near To Capture Hulk While Berbatov Will Leave United

Chelsea Have Done A deal With Hulk ,38 million pound ($58 million) As Hulk Is Near To Arrive At Chelsea As He said that I leave My Future To My Agent.With the transfer fee agreement in place, all that remains is for both clubs to sign the necessary paperwork to make the deal official, with the striker’s personal terms not expected to prevent a deal going ahead.The news comes after Chelsea had an initial offer of 30 million pounds for the player rejected by Porto, with the Portuguese side claiming the release clause in Hulk’s contract was around 80 million pounds, yet the Guardian has reported that this figure is a far more modest 48 million pounds.The fee represents a considerable investment by Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich, even though Chelsea remain without a permanent manager.Hulk scored 57 goals for Porto over the past two seasons, operating primarily on the right of an attacking trio, and looks set to line up alongside Eden Hazard and Fernando Torres as Chelsea’s first-choice front line.



Manchester United’s record signing Dimitar Berbatov has been told by United boss Sir Alex Ferguson that he can leave this summer, after he made just five starts in the league all season.The player’s contract is set to expire this summer, but the club have decided to trigger a clause in his contract that will renew the deal for one more year.This move ensures that United would be entitled to a transfer fee should any club wish to make a bid for the player who joined the Manchester side in a 30.75 million pound transfer.Bayer Leverkusen are interested in the striker who they sold to Tottenham for 10.9 million pounds, but Leverkusen’s chief executive Wolfgang Holzhauer has announced that the German side are unwilling to pay a transfer fee for Berbatov.“The return of Berbatov is not an option for us,” he said. “He would only be an option if he was available on a free transfer.”Borussia Dortmund are keen on the player, and would hope to receive the player in any deal with United for Polish striker Robert Lewandowski.Paris St. Germain, backed by the Qatari royal family, showed an interest in Berbatov in January, and the forward’s agent has revealed he would be open to a move to the French side.Bologna’s Uruguayan midfielder Gaston Ramirez is attracting interest from Manchester City and Italian champions Juventus, with German side Wolfsburg also keen on the player.It is understood that Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has made the first move for the midfielder, with Ramirez’s agent Pablo Betancourt confirming the interest of an unnamed Spanish side.“Juventus and Manchester City have contacted me but there is especially an interesting offer from Wolfsburg and also another one from an important Spanish club,” he said.Earlier this week Mancini admitted his interest in the 21-year-old whom he said is “a good, young player with great potential.”Following reports that Didier Drogba was considering a switch to Real Madrid, it has been revealed that Chelsea’s Champions League hero is struggling to agree to the terms of Madrid club.Drogba had been expected to join Chinese side Shanghai Shenhua, with club officials confident of landing the Ivorian, yet reports in the Daily Mail state that the player remains in negotiations with the club.However, the Spanish champions are reluctant to sign him on a two-year deal with his wage demands thought to be about 150,000 pounds a week.Norwich City manager Paul Lambert is keen to join Aston Villa, and handed in his resignation to the East Anglia side after days of talks with the club’s hierarchy.Lambert’s resignation has not been accepted by Norwich, but Aston Villa are confident of securing the services of the Scot.He steered his side to 12th place in the Premier League, and achieved back-to-back promotions with the Canaries after joining from Colchester in 2009, but the club appear resigned to losing their manager, issuing a statement thanking him for his contributions over the past three seasons.Grant Holt could be set to follow his manager in making the switch from Norwich to Villa, with the striker having announced his intention to leave via his Twitter account.Holt finished the season as the second highest English goal-scorer in the league after Wayne Rooney, and had a transfer request turned down by Norwich.Lambert is believed to see Holt, who scored 17 goals last season, as the perfect foil for England striker Darren Bent.

Manchester City Eye Arsenal's Robin Van Persie

Manchester city Manger Roberto Mancini Has Targeted The Arsenal's Hero Robin Van Persie for £25m After He's Out of Contract with His Current team.Van Persie is out of contract at the Emirates in 12 months' time and City's Italian manager has made no secret of his desire to reunite last season's Premier League top scorer with his old Arsenal team-mates Samir Nasri and Gael Clichy.It would still take an offer in the region of £25million to sign Van Persie, but Mancini believes that is more realistic than the £45m price tag Napoli have put on his other target, Uruguay striker Edinson Cavani.He said: 'Who would I choose between Van Persie and Cavani? The Dutchman is a champion, while the Uruguayan has everything and I wanted to take him to Inter Milan when he played at Palermo. But it's impossible to sign Cavani at his current price - with Van Persie it's different.'Van Persie is a top-class player. His situation is different than when we signed Clichy and Nasri. It was difficult for Arsene Wenger to keep them in London. We will sign a striker if one of our forwards leave.' Edin Dzeko looks likely to be the striker to make way at City this summer, with Juventus ready to compete with any bid from Bayern Munich.Mancini insists he has no intention of selling Mario Balotelli and also believes Carlos Tevez will stay after settling his differences with the club. 'Balotelli will stay for sure,' he said. 'I forgive Tevez and he will stay unless he asks to leave.'Arsenal are taking a hardline approach to their contract negotiations with Van Persie.The club's chief executive, Ivan Gazidis, met with Van Persie's agent, Kees Vos, for another round of discussions on Monday, but still no agreement has been reached.Arsenal have offered Van Persie a new three-year deal worth £130,000 per week - plus a £5million signing-on bonus.The Dutchman is stalling on the deal, and Sportsmail understands one of the reasons is the club's unwillingness to offer him a fourth year. Arsenal sources have indicated the existing deal on the table will not be improved.  Meanwhile, Jack Wilshere will endure gruelling double pre-season training sessions as Arsenal prepare him for his long-awaited return. The midfielder missed the whole of last season with ankle and foot problems before undergoing surgery to clear up a tendinitis complaint in his left knee.Once the 20-year-old's rehabilitation from his latest surgery is complete, he will embark on a series of double summer training sessions designed to get him up to speed in time for the new season.




Roland Garros News and Updates :

Roger Federer Beats Nicolas Mahut  6-3, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5 In the 3rd round Of French Open While Djokovic Ease Pass through Nicolas Devilder.Even though he was again far from his best, Roger Federer still managed to win at the French Open.Novak Djokovic and Victoria Azarenka, the top-ranked man and woman, had much easier paths to victory.Federer, the 2009 champion at Roland Garros, was pushed to four sets Friday for the second straight match, this time beating Nicolas Mahut of France 6-3, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5 in the third round."I think for bigger guys it's about, if you're able to move them around enough and they have to defend time and time again, this is maybe where you can expose some of their weaknesses potentially," Federer said. "I thought he did well. (I) struggled a little bit, but overall obviously I'm happy I came through."With the win, Federer improved his record number of Grand Slam match wins to 235. The 16-time Grand Slam champion is trying to become the first man over 30 years old to win a major title since Andre Agassi in 2003 at the Australian Open.For Mahut, it was the first time he has ever won a set against Federer in four matches."I was believing in it. I was maybe a bit nervous going into that centre court, but this went well," Mahut said. "But I'm disappointed, because you always want to do better. Disappointed I didn't win that fourth set."Djokovic also advanced to the fourth round, extending his Grand Slam win streak to 24 matches by beating Nicolas Devilder of France 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 in a match that ended just as the sun was setting."Last 15 minutes was very hard," Djokovic said. "It was very important for me to finish the match today. I wouldn't like to come back tomorrow and play a few games."No. 5 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France, No. 7 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic and No. 9 Juan Martin del Potro also won, while No. 11 Gilles Simon lost.Azarenka reached the fourth round in the woman's draw with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Canada's Aleksandra Wozniak, while Maria Sharapova advanced to the third round. But the big surprises came early in the day when third-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska and 2008 French Open champion Ana Ivanovic were eliminated.Two days after beating seven-time Grand Slam champion Venus Williams, Radwanska was routed by 2009 French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova 6-1, 6-2.On Court Philippe Chatrier, the 23-year-old Pole didn't look anything like the player who overwhelmed Williams in straight sets on Wednesday."She was just playing very aggressive on both sides," Radwanska said of Kuznetsova. "She just had (an) answer for everything I was trying to do."Radwanska has been having a stellar year on tour, winning three titles and moving up to a career-high No. 3 ranking last month. But she is the only player in the top 10 who has never reached a Grand Slam semifinal."It's always disappointing when losing in the first week of a Grand Slam, that's for sure," Radwanska said. "Today I didn't play bad, she was just playing unbelievable."Against Kuznetsova, however, Radwanska has struggled. She is now 3-10 against the Russian, including her only two losses in tournament finals.Before Friday's match, Radwanska had been 38-7 in 2012, with six of those losses coming against top-ranked Victoria Azarenka.Kuznetsova, who also won the U.S. Open in 2004, has struggled since winning the title at Roland Garros three years ago, only reaching one Grand Slam quarterfinal."I try to play more forehands. I try to dictate. I play more speed," Kuznetsova said of her play Friday. "This is the game I was playing when I won U.S. Open and I won the French Open."In the second round, Sharapova advanced with another straight-forward, straight-set victory.Three days after scoring a "double bagel" in the first round, the second-seeded Sharapova defeated Ayumi Morita of Japan 6-1, 6-1."I really wanted to try to get her on the move. I thought I played well, aggressive, moved in when I had to," Sharapova said. "With every round I'm going to be playing tougher opponents, and that's when you really want to kind of step it up and raise your level. That's what I'll try to do in the next round."Sharapova has won three major titles in her career, but she still needs to win at Roland Garros to complete a career Grand Slam.Last year, she lost in the semifinals at the French Open.Also in the third round, the 13th-seeded Ivanovic lost to Sara Errani of Italy 1-6, 7-5, 6-3.The former top-ranked player committed 37 of her 40 unforced errors in the final two sets. Errani had only 18."In the third set I was creating a lot of opportunities and missing a lot of easy, easy finishing balls," Ivanovic said. "That's something that I'm not really happy about."For Errani, it was only the second time in 39 matches that she has beaten a player ranked in the top 15.No. 6 Sam Stosur, the 2010 runner-up, advanced as well.American teen Sloane Stephens also advanced to the fourth round, beating Mathilde Johansson of France 6-3, 6-2. Of the eight teenagers in this year's draw, the 19-year-old Stephens was the only one to even reach the third round.

John Terry To Miss 3 European Matches With Chelsea

John Terry Has Been Banned 3 European Matches With Chelsea Following The Controversial Red Card against Barcelona In Semis 2nd Leg ( UEFA Champions League ).The England international will miss the Blues' next two European outings, which will be their European Super Cup tie against Atletico Madrid as well as their first group game in European club football’s elite competition.Chelsea have three days in which to lodge an appeal, although that appears unlikely given Terry’s frank apology for the incident after the game."I feel I've let them (team-mates) down, I've apologised and I apologise to the fans," he said after Chelsea had secured their place in the final.He added: "It does look bad on the replay. I raised my knee but hopefully the people out there who know me, know I'm not that kind of player."At the time I was bewildered, but looking at the replay it looks a red card. On a personal note, of course (it hurts I miss the final). But we deserve to be in the Champions League final."I really hope that doesn't take away from this win."Despite Terry’s absence Chelsea secured one of the finest results in their history on their way to claiming their first ever Champions League trophy.A goal down when Terry was handed his marching orders, the Blues fought back to claim a 2-2 draw despite conceding a spot-kick which Lionel Messi missed while the west London side were 2-1 down on the night.Chelsea went on to beat Bayern Munich in the final to secure the trophy and their pace in next year’s competition, knocking Tottenham down into the Europa League in the process.

Sri-Lanka Wins 1st T20 Against Pakistan

A Low Scoring Game Match at Hambantota Came To An End as Sri-Lanka Gained a 37 Runs Victory Over Pakistan.Sri Lanka put on a brilliant bowling and fielding performance to post a comfortable 37-run victory over Pakistan in their opening Twenty20 international on Friday.Pakistan were bowled out for 95, their lowest T20 total against Sri Lanka, after restricting the hosts to 132-7 in Hambantota.Sri Lankan pace men Nuwan Kulasekera, Angelo Mathews and Lasith Malinga and debutant off-spinner Sachithra Senanayake took two wickets apiece after man-of-the-match Thisara Perera scored a crucial 32 not out.Opener Ahmed Shehzad top-scored for Pakistan with 36 while the extras contributed 19 runs, the second-highest of the innings. Umar Akmal (12) was the other batsman to reach double-figures.Pakistan never recovered after losing two wickets off the first two balls of the innings, with Kulasekera removing skipper Mohammad Hafeez and debutant Shakeel Ansar.The Sri Lankan bowlers were backed by their fielders, with Perera and Kulasekera each taking a superb catch.Left-arm paceman Sohail Tanvir earlier grabbed three big wickets as Pakistan restricted Sri Lanka.He jolted the top order when he dismissed skipper Mahela Jayawardene, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara in his opening three overs to reduce the hosts to 31-3.Tanvir finished with 3-12 off four tight overs, his best performance in Twenty20 internationals, while off-spinner Saeed Ajmal bagged two wickets for 20 runs.Perera smashed two sixes and as many fours in his 16-ball knock to help his team make 43 runs off the last 22 balls.Lahiru Thirimanne, making his T20 debut, was the other main scorer with a 25-ball 30.Sri Lanka made a poor start after electing to bat, losing four wickets in the opening eight overs with just 39 on the board.Tanvir struck with his third delivery when he had Jayawardene caught by Shoaib Malik in the covers and then had Dilshan caught by Umar Gul at fine-leg in his next over.Sangakkara (19) hit three successive fours off paceman Mohammad Sami before he inside-edged a Tanvir delivery onto his stumps.The second and final Twenty20 match will be played on Sunday.