Tag: Open

  • Teen girls open up on trans athlete scandal that turned their high school into a culture war battleground

    Teen girls open up on trans athlete scandal that turned their high school into a culture war battleground

    Taylor Starling and Kaitlyn Slavin – student athletes at Martin Luther King High School in Riverside, California – held a live press conference on X Friday hosted California Family Council Outreach Director Sophia Lorey. The two girls shared their perspectives on a recent national controversy that has besieged their community caused by a trans athlete competing on the girls’ cross country team. 

    “It was confusing, this has never happened to me before, like I didn’t even think this was going to be happening to me,” Starling said. “It was all just like, surprising, that there was going to be a guy running with the girls.”

    Slavin, who is only a freshman, said the experience of having her first year of high school involve the situation is “kind of crazy.”

    “Just in high school, having to compete against males when you shouldn’t be is something that shocked me right away,” Slavin said. 

    Starling lost her varsity spot to a trans athlete who transferred to the school this past year, and when they wore shirts that read “Save Girls Sports” in protest, they allege school administrators compared the shirts to swastikas. The two girls and their families are now engaged in a lawsuit against the Riverside Unified School District (RUSD) over those allegations.

    In response, hundreds of their fellow students and hundreds of other residents in the community began wearing the shirts in protest. The shirts became a local, and then national symbol for the protection of female athletes from biological male inclusion in their sports and locker rooms. 

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    The ensuing controversy and media coverage of the situation has thrust the two teenage girls, their families and the whole town into the spotlight of the national debate over trans inclusion in women’s sports, which became a hot-button political issue in the 2024 election year. 

    And for Starling, Slavin and their classmates, it has come with a wave of attention that they have never experienced, both negative and positive. 

    “I’ve had tons of people reach out to me and say ‘thank you so much for what you’re doing and standing up for these women,’” Starling said. “For my friends, a lot of my friends have been shoulder-checked because they were wearing the shirts and a lot of them have been cursed out and called really bad names, and they posted certain stuff on the internet calling people horrible names for wearing these shirts.” 

    Slavin, who says she’s found stress relief in sports throughout her life, has only found more stress from sports because of the situation this year. 

    “It’s scary that that’s not something that can always be a stress-relieving place if we’re going to have all this going on,” Slavin said. “It affects you mentally and emotionally… It’s so hard to have this all going on.” 

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    Transgender athlete supporters hold up signs at left as Tori Hitchcock, center, of the Young Women for America, and Salomay McCullough, right, both former female athletes, show off their “Save Girls Sports” shirts as an overflow crowd converges outside the Riverside Unified School District meeting Thursday night to debate the rights of transgender athletes to compete in high school sports Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024.  (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

    Starling says the trans athlete has been using the girls’ restroom at the school, however, they haven’t seen the athlete much in the locker room due to frequently missing practices. 

    The two girls, and multiple parents who have spoken to Fox News Digital, allege the trans athlete was allowed to compete on varsity despite missing practice every week. 

    Starling’s father, Ryan Starling, previously told Fox News Digital that when his daughter and other girls approached the administrators about it, they were told “transgenders have more rights than cisgenders.” The RUSD previously provided a statement to Fox News Digital insisting that its handling of the situation has been in accordance with California state law. 

    The two girls then ignited a viral trend in their communities when they showed up to school in November wearing the “Save Girls Sports” shirts. 

    And despite being scolded by school administrators for it and having to file a lawsuit, more and more students began to show up each week wearing the shirts, as the school had to alter its dress code and start placing students in detention for wearing them. This didn’t stop the shirts from spreading and growing. It became a weekly ritual for hundreds of students every Wednesday to show up wearing the shirts support of the girls and their messaging, and many of them created viral social media posts on it. 

    In early December, the school administrators gave up on their efforts to discipline students for wearing the shirts. Sources told Fox News Digital that more than 400 students have shown up wearing the shirts at a time, and students at other schools in the district have started to wear them to class.

    HOW TRANSGENDERISM IN SPORTS SHIFTED THE 2024 ELECTION AND IGNITED A NATIONAL COUNTERCULTURE

    Students at Martin Luther King High School

    Students at Martin Luther King High School in Riverside, California wear t-shirts that read “Save Girls’ Sports” to protest a trans athlete on the cross country team. (Courtesy of Sophia Lorey)

    But Slavin, Starling their attorney Julianne Fleischer, said the school administrators have still told the two girls that they aren’t allowed to wear the shirts, during the press conference on Friday. However, they also said more than 400 students at their school have continued to show up wearing the shirts every Wednesday.

    The situation culminated in a heated and confrontational event on Dec. 19, when the RUSD held a school board meeting to address the issue. Prior to the meeting, outside the district office, there were competing protests between activists and parents wearing the “Save Girls Sports” shirts and LGBTQ activists. 

    Sources, including Ryan Starling, have told Fox News Digital that the LGBTQ activists at the event were harassing the “Save Girls Sports” protesters, and even disrupted a women’s prayer group during a prayer circle prior to the meeting. 

    “Members of the pro-LGBTQ groups started heckling and harassing the people in line who were speaking in opposition of their values. Some of these adult protesters were even coming up to the young girls that were going to be speaking and were yelling at them close to their face,” Young Women for America (YWA)’s Inland Empire chapter President Tori Hitchcock told Fox News Digital.

    One anonymous parent told Fox News Digital about witnessing a child being bombarded with vulgar insults by pro-trans protesters after the meeting.

    Transgender athlete supporter Kyle Harp, left, of Riverside holds the progress  pride flag as "Save Girls Sports" supporters Lori Lopez and her dad Pete Pickering, both of Riverside, listen to the debate as they join the overflow crowd converging outside the Riverside Unified School District meeting Thursday night to debate the rights of transgender athletes to compete in high school sports Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024. 

    Transgender athlete supporter Kyle Harp, left, of Riverside holds the progress  pride flag as “Save Girls Sports” supporters Lori Lopez and her dad Pete Pickering, both of Riverside, listen to the debate as they join the overflow crowd converging outside the Riverside Unified School District meeting Thursday night to debate the rights of transgender athletes to compete in high school sports Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024.  (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

    “My 16-year old son and a few others were standing outside after speaking when a group of the LGBTQ community intentionally walked by them pointing at each one of them saying, ‘FU FU FU,’” the anonymous parent said. 

    Then, inside the meeting, parents and opposing activists gave impassioned speeches about their thoughts on the situation, with multiple speakers yelling in hysterical tones. The meeting went on for nearly five hours, and included testimony between individuals who opposed trans inclusion in girls’ sports and those who supported it. 

    Many of the pro-trans speeches were met with high-pitched cheers and the waiving of LGBTQ pride flags by those in attendance. 

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    The RUSD previously provided a statement to Fox News Digital insisting that its handling of the situation has been in accordance with California state law. 

    “While these rules were not created by RUSD, the District is committed to complying with the law and CIF regulations. California state law prohibits discrimination of students based on gender, gender identity and gender expression, and specifically prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender in physical education and athletics. The protections we provide to all students are not only aligned with the law but also with our core values which include equity and well-being,” the statement said. 

    The RUSD also placed blame for its handling of the situation on officials in Washington D.C., and California’s state capital, Sacramento. They made this statement back in early December, prior to President Donald Trump returning to office. 

    "Save Girls Sports" supporters Skylar Crawford, left, and Jadeynn Gallardo, both of Martin Luther King High School, and Tori Hitchcock, right, of Young Women for America, pray among the overflow crowd converging outside the Riverside Unified School District meeting Thursday night to debate the rights of transgender athletes to compete in high school sports Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024.

    “Save Girls Sports” supporters Skylar Crawford, left, and Jadeynn Gallardo, both of Martin Luther King High School, and Tori Hitchcock, right, of Young Women for America, pray among the overflow crowd converging outside the Riverside Unified School District meeting Thursday night to debate the rights of transgender athletes to compete in high school sports Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

    “As these matters play out in our courts and the media, opposition and protests should be directed at those in a position to affect those laws and policies (including officials in Washington D.C. and Sacramento),” their statement read. 

    Trump has pledged to ban trans athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s sports, as a federal bill titled The Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act is currently progressing through congress. It has already passed in the House of Representatives.

    Until that bill is potentially signed into law, Slavin and Starling are asking their supporters to “pray” for them. 

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  • New FOIA on migrants potentially avoiding the draft could open new deportation predicate: attorneys

    New FOIA on migrants potentially avoiding the draft could open new deportation predicate: attorneys

    A top government accountability group will send a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the U.S. Selective Service System (SSS) for data on illegal immigrants who did not register for the draft and therefore committed a felony.

    Oversight Project executive director Mike Howell – whose group is filing the action – underlined the move is not an illustration of any support for illegal immigrants serving in the military.

    By law, all U.S. males aged 18-26 must register with the SSS under penalty of felony conviction and $250,000 fine under the Military Selective Service Act of 1917, Howell’s group noted in their filing.

    Additionally, the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952 makes failure to register with the SSS a deportable offense, and the SSS website clearly states undocumented aliens are required to sign up for the draft, Howell noted.

    However, the Oversight Project’s filing also cites a passage on the SSS website saying the agency does not share or collect information on a man’s immigration status and has “no authority to collect such information, has no use for it, and it is irrelevant to the registration requirement.”

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    Given that discrepancy, the letter goes on to cite a 2023 SSS report to Congress cataloging 23,249 registrations from USCIS – the federal agency responsible for overseeing legal immigration – but no data from ICE, the Office of Refugee Resettlement or other agencies engaged in handling illegal immigration and asylees.

    In a Thursday interview, Howell and attorney Kyle Brosnan said SSS registration has been flat during the Biden administration as far as it relates to the obvious uptick in “military-aged males” crossing the border and being “caught-and-released” by federal immigration authorities.

    “The absence of such a surge indicates that there is widespread criminal non-compliance by such aliens,” they wrote in their FOIA request.

    There should be a large increase in [SSS registration] with 10 million illegals that have come over the border in the last four years,” Brosnan said.

    “Former Secretary Mayorkas went on the Hill and talked about how good [Biden’s DHS] was at processing people – well, how didn’t that processing lead to an increase in registrations for Selective Service?”

    “What we are really looking at now is whether the Selective Service under the Biden administration took this into account and they purposely avoided this issue for political reasons.”

    “If you look at their website… they go out of their way to assure illegal aliens like we’re not going to share information with ICE… So I want, you know, whether those people have any culpability for failing to register the biggest population surge of military age males in U.S. history when their job is to register military.”

    OVERSIGHT GROUP SEEKS DOCS FROM WALZ’ MINNESOTA AS DOJ REBUKES VA VOTER ROLL MAINTENANCE

    Howell said the FOIA request’s results could go beyond the scope of just determining whether undocumented residents of the U.S. may have attempted to avoid the draft – but also potentially offer an additional avenue for Border Czar Thomas Homan’s mass deportation plans.

    With failure to register with SSS being a felony and a deportable offense, Howell said that if the threads are pulled further on this situation, it could provide simplified legal grounds for the mass deportation plans of the Trump administration.

    “Now that this little quirk has been figured out, how can ICE and other entities in the federal government use this new authority to drastically scale-up immigration enforcement?” 

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    Migrants attempting to enter the U.S. illegally rush a border wall on March 21, 2024. (James Breeden for New York Post/Mega)

    “You can turn a class of individuals into potential criminals overnight. What it also means is you don’t need ICE necessarily to do it. [Alleged SSS violators] would be prosecuted by DOJ. That means they’re in other beds that aren’t ICE beds. So you’re looking at all of them being in federal prison potentially, as opposed to taking up space in ICE custody,” Howell said. 

    “All of these things open up the aperture for immigration enforcement in a huge way.”

    The Oversight Project went on to formally request at least a dozen data points from SSS in hopes of ascertaining how many asylum seekers and illegal immigrants are violating the law twofold with their avoidance of the draft.

    Copies of the letter will also be sent to Homan, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.

  • Ed Sheeran India Concert 2025: ‘The Archies’ Star Dot. To Open ‘Shape of You’ Singer’s Mathematics Tour in Pune (View Post)

    Ed Sheeran India Concert 2025: ‘The Archies’ Star Dot. To Open ‘Shape of You’ Singer’s Mathematics Tour in Pune (View Post)

    After Coldplay, British pop icon Ed Sheeran has come to India. The “Shape of You” singer will go on a six city tour across the country during his Mathematics Tour. Musician and actor Dot. has been roped in to open for the global musician. These two will be seen coming together today, on January 30, during the Pune concert of the +-=÷× tour. Sharing the exciting announcement, Dot. penned on her official Instagram handle, “Tonight’s going to be awesome! So excited to open for @teddysphotos at Yash Lawns, Pune!” Ed Sheeran Makes History As First International Artiste To Perform in Bhutan at Changlimithang Stadium (Watch Video).

    For those who do not know, Dot. made her acting debut with Zoya Akhtar’s The Archies, co-starring Agastya Nanda, Khushi Kapoor, Suhana Khan, Vedang Raina, Mihir Ahuja, and Yuvraj Menda. Furthermore, Dot. also recently performed at Bandland 2024, and her act was applauded by the audience. Ed Sheeran India Tour 2025: Global Pop Icon Announces Tour Dates for Six Indian Cities, Details Inside.

    Dot. To Open for Ed Sheeran’s Pune Concert 

    Ed Sheeran’s tour will kick off in Pune today on January 30 in Yash Lawns. This will be followed by his performance in Hyderabad’s Ramoji Film City on 2nd February. On 5th February, the British singer will fly off to Chennai for his concert at the YMCA Grounds.  In addition to this, ED Sheeran will also perform in Bengaluru on February 8 at the NICE Grounds. His next stop will be Shillong’s JN Stadium on February 12. Finally, the Mathematical tour will come to an end on February 15 at the Leisure Valley Grounds.

    Talking about the tickets, music enthusiasts can secure tickets in between the price range of ₹3,000 to ₹28,000, depending on the seating category and venue. The concert tickets are available on BookMyShow. The +-=÷× tour will mark ED Sheeran’s second visit to India, following his previous sold-out Mumbai concert. The concert is expected to hold a mix of all the blockbuster songs by Ed Sheeran including “Shape Of You”, “Photograph”, “Thinking Our Loud”, “Castle On The Hill” and “Perfect Symphony”, among others.

    (The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jan 30, 2025 05:16 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

  • Trump, Open AI CEO Sam Altman on Chinese AI startup DeepSeek

    Trump, Open AI CEO Sam Altman on Chinese AI startup DeepSeek

    President Donald Trump and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman both joined in on the buzz surrounding Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek, which sent the technology sector into turmoil on Monday following its emergence as a potential rival to leading U.S.-based firms.

    The president said the release of the lower-cost, high-performance AI models from a Chinese firm “should be a wake-up call,” while Altman conceded that DeepSeek’s R1 model was “impressive” – and vowed OpenAI will deliver models that are superior.

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (R), accompanied by President Donald Trump, speaks during a news conference in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Jan. 21, 2025, in Washington, DC.  ((Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images) / Getty Images)

    “Hopefully the release of DeepSeek AI from a Chinese company should be a wake-up call for our industries that we need to be laser focused on competing to win, because we have the greatest scientists in the world,” Trump told House Republicans on Monday night in Doral, Florida, during a speech at their annual retreat.

    THE DEEPSEEK AI CHATBOT BURST ONTO THE SCENE: ARE FEARS ABOUT IT OVERBLOWN?

    However, the president said the revelation that DeepSeek has developed a way to produce AI models at a much lower cost than other U.S. models “could be very much a positive development.”

    Trump inaugural address

    President Donald Trump spoke at the House Republicans’ annual retreat on Monday night. (CHIP SOMODEVILLA/POOL/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “Instead of spending billions and billions, you’ll spend less and you’ll come up with hopefully the same solution under the Trump administration,” Trump continued, adding, “We’re going to unleash our tech companies and we’re going to dominate the future like never before.”

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK?

    Altman, whose company created the popular ChatGPT models, took to X to give his take, writing, “deepseek’s r1 is an impressive model, particularly around what they’re able to deliver for the price.”

    The OpenAI CEO went on to say, “We will obviously deliver much better models and also it’s legit invigorating to have a new competitor!”

    The quality of DeepSeek’s models and its reported cost efficiency have changed the narrative that China’s AI firms are trailing their U.S. counterparts, which began after the first Chinese ChatGPT equivalent was released by Baidu. 

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    The DeepSeek-R1 model was released last week and is 20 to 50 times cheaper to use than OpenAI’s o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on the company’s official WeChat account.

    The R1 model is also open source and available to users for free, while OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pro Plan costs $200 per month.

    American tech leaders are taking notice. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg pointed to DeepSeek during an interview on “The Joe Rogan Experience,” saying the company’s models show how competitive the AI race has become, and stressed the importance of the industry having support from the federal government.

    “We should want the American model to win,” Zuckerberg told host Joe Rogan.

    “I think it’s easy for the government to take for granted that the U.S. will lead on these things,” Zuckerberg said. “But I think it’s a very close competition, and we need the help. We need them to not be a force that’s making it harder for us to do these things.”

    FOX Business’ Eric Revell and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Trump open to considering re-entry into World Health Organization

    Trump open to considering re-entry into World Health Organization

    President Donald Trump said he was open to potentially rejoining the World Health Organization (WHO), just days after he signed a Day One executive order that withdrew the U.S. from the international group.

    During a rally at Circa Resort & Casino in Downtown Las Vegas, the president told those in attendance that it was unfair a country like China, with a population much greater than the U.S., was only paying a fraction of what the U.S. was paying annually to the WHO.

    “We paid $500 million a year and China paid $39 million a year despite a much larger population. Think of that. China’s paying $39 million to have 1.4 billion people, we pay $500 million we have – no one knows what the hell we have, does anyone know? We have so many people pouring in we have no idea,” Trump told rally goers on Saturday.

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    “They offered me at $39 million, they said ‘We’ll let you back in for $39 million,’ they’re going to reduce it from [$500 million] to [$39 million], and I turned them down, because it became so popular I didn’t know if it would be well received even at [$39 million], but maybe we would consider doing it again, I don’t know, they have to clean it up a bit.”

    WHO Director Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping before a meeting in Beijing in 2020. (Naohiko Hatta/Pool Photo via AP, File)

    An analysis of national contributions to the WHO from NPR found that the U.S. pays for roughly 10% of the WHO’s budget, while China pays about 3%.

    Trump withdrew the U.S. from the WHO in an executive order issued hours after he was sworn into office last week. The president cited reasons such as WHO’s “mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic,” the “failure to adopt urgently needed reforms,” and “unfairly onerous payments” forced on the U.S. During Trump’s first term, in July 2020, he took steps to withdraw the U.S. from the WHO but his successor, former President Joe Biden, eventually reinstated the nation’s participation in the global health initiative.

    The World Health Organisation

    Trump withdrew the U.S. from the WHO in an executive order issued hours after he was sworn into office. (Reuters/Denis Balibouse/File Photo)

    The president’s complaints about the U.S. paying too much to the WHO mirror his complaints about U.S. participation in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), as well. During the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last week, Trump said he was asking all NATO nations to contribute 5% of their gross domestic products to NATO defense spending.

    NATO set a threshold of 2% that countries must pay in 2014, but, according to Trump, “most nations didn’t pay” until he began pushing for other countries to contribute more. Still, according to NATO’s Secretary-General Mark Rutte, countries like Spain, Italy and Canada have yet to even meet that 2% contribution. 

    NATO Secretary General, Mark Rutte, on stage in Belgium

    Secretary-General Mark Rutte holds a press conference at NATO headquarters on Dec. 4, 2024, in Brussels, Belgium. (Omar Havana/Getty Images)

    Following Trump’s demands that NATO members spend 5% of their gross domestic product, he questioned whether the U.S. should be spending anything on NATO at all, telling reporters from the Oval Office that the U.S. was protecting NATO members, but those same members are “not protecting us.”

    “I’m not sure we should be spending anything, but we should certainly be helping them,” Trump said from the Oval Office. 

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    The White House declined to comment for purposes of this story. 

  • Jannik Sinner wins Australian Open for 2nd straight time

    Jannik Sinner wins Australian Open for 2nd straight time

    Italian tennis star Jannik Sinner defeated German Alexander Zverev in straight sets to win his second consecutive Australian Open title on Sunday, 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-3.

    Sinner once again solidified his top ranking in tennis. He’s been No. 1 in the world since June with no signs of stopping. He didn’t face a break point, and had more winners (32-25) and fewer unforced errors (45-27).

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    Jannik Sinner celebrates after defeating Alexander Zverev in the men’s singles final at the Australian Open in Melbourne, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

    Zverev said it himself.

    “You’re the best player in the world, by far. I was hoping that I could be more of a competitor today, but you’re just too good. It’s as simple as that,” he said.

    It’s the third Grand Slam title for Sinner. He’s won the Australian Open twice and won the U.S. Open last year. He went as far as the semifinals in the French Open and in Wimbledon. He’s the eighth man in the Open era to start his career 3-0 in Grand Slam finals.

    “It’s amazing to achieve these things,” he said.

    AMERICAN MADISON KEYS WINS AUSTRALIAN OPEN, UPSETS NO. 1-RANKED ARYNA SABALENKA

    Jannik Sinner thumbs up

    Jannik Sinner carries the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup after defeating Alexander Zverev at the Australian Open, Jan. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake)

    Sinner came into the tournament with a massive spotlight on him. He tested positive for a trace amount of an anabolic steroid twice last March but blamed it on an accidental exposure involving two members of his team. He was cleared in a ruling that was appealed by the World Anti-Doping Agency.

    He was initially exonerated in August, but WADA’s appeal is set for April.

    Tennis stars such as Nick Kyrgios have spoken up about the doping violations of players like Sinner and Iga Swiatek, who accepted a suspension in November.

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    Jannik Sinner reaches

    Jannik Sinner plays a forehand to Alexander Zverev during the men’s singles final at the Australian Open, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

    “Two world No.1s both getting done for doping is disgusting for our sport. It’s a horrible look,” the Aussie star said last month. “Tennis integrity right now, and everyone knows it, but no one wants to speak about it, it’s awful.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Aryna Sabalenka slams, throws racket after being upset by Madison Keys in Australian Open final

    Aryna Sabalenka slams, throws racket after being upset by Madison Keys in Australian Open final

    A thriller at Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne saw American Madison Keys upset No. 1-ranked women’s singles player Aryna Sabalenka to win the Australian Open on Saturday. 

    After shaking hands with the victor, Sabalenka let out her emotions on her racket. 

    Sabalenka, who was looking to become the first player since Martina Hingis to win three straight Australian Opens, fell to Keys, 6-3, 2-6, 7-5, in the match, which gave her opponent her first-ever Grand Slam title. 

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    Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus reacts after the women’s singles final against Madison Keys of the U.S. at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Asanka Brendon Ratnayake)

    Sabalenka shook Keys’ hand at the net, followed by the chair umpire, but she was seen slamming her racket and throwing it at the bench once the niceties were finished. 

    Sabalenka then covered her face in a towel before storming off into the locker room. 

    The heat of competition not going your way in the end can be tough to swallow in the moment, and Sabalenka said as much during his post-match press conference. 

    AUSTRALIAN TENNIS STAR ANNOUNCES DIVORCE FROM HUSBAND, TEASES ONLYFANS PAGE

    “There definitely was a bit of frustration, because I was so close to achieve something crazy,” she said, per The New York Post. “When you’re out there, you’re fighting, but it seems like everything (is not) going the way you really want (it) to go.”

    Sabalenka added that she “just needed to throw those negative emotions at the end,” and she did so literally to her Wilson racket. She said she needed to do that “so I could give a speech (and) not stand there being disrespectful.”

    “I was just trying to let it go and be a good person,” Sabalenka said. 

    Getting the raw emotion out appeared to work, as Sabalenka was seen joking with her team after the loss. 

    Aryna Sabalenka reacts during interview

    Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: Aryna Sabalenka interviews after her match against Paula Badosa of Spain in the semifinals of the women’s singles at the 2025 Australian Open at Melbourne Park. (Mike Frey-Imagn Images)

    “As always, that’s your fault guys,” she said, laughing. “I don’t wanna see you for the next week. I really hate you. No thank you for everything you are doing for me and blah, blah, blah.”

    Sabalenka got back to a serious note, though, addressing Keys. 

    “I think we did our best,” Sabalenka said. “Just Madison was playing incredible. I just couldn’t do anything in this match. Next time I play against Madison, I bring better tennis.” 

    As for Keys, she also showed love to Sabalenka, saying it was “unbelievable playing” on her part. She also noted, at age 29, that she never thought she’d win a Grand Slam despite coming close in the past. 

    “From a pretty young age, I felt like if I never won a Grand Slam, then I wouldn’t have lived up to what people thought I should have been. That was a pretty heavy burden to kind of carry around,” Keys said. 

    Aryna Sabalenka looks up on tennis court

    Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus reacts during the women’s singles final against Madison Keys of the U.S. at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

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    “So, I finally got to the point where I was proud of myself and proud of my career, with or without a Grand Slam. I finally got to the point where I was OK if it didn’t happen. I didn’t need it, to feel like I had a good career or that I deserved to be talked about as a great tennis player.

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  • American Madison Keys wins Australian Open, upsets No. 1-ranked Aryna Sabalenka

    American Madison Keys wins Australian Open, upsets No. 1-ranked Aryna Sabalenka

    American tennis star Madison Keys upset No. 1-ranked Aryna Sabalenka to win the Australian Open on Saturday.

    Keys, 29, won 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 in the tightly contested match to win her first-ever Grand Slam tournament. 

    Keys finished with just one more point won than Sabalenka overall, winning 92 points, compared to Sabalenka’s 91. 

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    Madison Keys, center, of the U.S. reacts as she receives the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup from Evonne Goolagong Cawley after defeating Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus in the women’s singles final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, on Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025.  (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

    Sabalenka was seeking to win her third consecutive Australian Open, something that was last achieved — by Martina Hingis — from 1997 through 1999. 

    This was the second time in Keys’ career that she had a chance at a major title, her last being a 6-3, 6-0 loss to fellow countrywoman Sloane Stephens in the 2017 US Open. 

    Keys had high expectations for herself in her tennis career, but began to accept the fact that she might never win a Grand Slam title. 

    “From a pretty young age, I felt like if I never won a Grand Slam, then I wouldn’t have lived up to what people thought I should have been. That was a pretty heavy burden to kind of carry around,” Keys said. 

    NOVAK DJOKOVIC BOOED AFTER RETIRING FROM AUSTRALIAN OPEN SEMIFINAL MATCH WITH INJURY

    Madison Keys reacts

    Madison Keys of the U.S. reacts during her women’s singles final match against Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025.  (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

    “So I finally got to the point where I was proud of myself and proud of my career, with or without a Grand Slam. I finally got to the point where I was OK if it didn’t happen. I didn’t need it to feel like I had a good career or that I deserved to be talked about as a great tennis player.

    “I feel like finally letting go of that kind of internal talk that I had just gave me the ability to actually go out and play some really good tennis to actually win a Grand Slam.”

    Not only did Keys upset the No.1 ranked Sabalenka, but she also took down No. 2 ranked Iga Świątek in the semifinals en route to her Australian Open title victory.

    Keys was the first woman since Serena Williams in 2005 to defeat both of the WTA’s top two players at Melbourne Park. She said that beating Swiatek gave her the confidence she could win against Sabalenka.

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    Madison Keys speaks

    Madison Keys of the U.S. speaks during a press conference after defeating Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus in the women’s singles final at the Australian Open tennis championship to win the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup, in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025.  (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

    “Winning that match the other night against Iga was really kind of a big hurdle,” Keys said. “I always believed that I could do it, but to do it that way — really I thought to myself after the match that I can absolutely win on Saturday.”

    This was Keys 46th Slam appearance, the third most before winning a women’s major title, being only Flavia Pennetta’s 49 and Marion Bartoli’s 47 appearances before they won. 

    “I didn’t always believe that I could get back to this point. But to be able to do it and win, it means the world to me.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Republic Day 2025 Holiday: Will Schools Remain Open or Closed in Maharashtra on Sunday, January 26? Here’s What State Government Has Said

    Republic Day 2025 Holiday: Will Schools Remain Open or Closed in Maharashtra on Sunday, January 26? Here’s What State Government Has Said

    Is it a school holiday in Maharashtra on Republic Day to be observed on Sunday, January 26? No, there won’t be a school holiday in Maharashtra on Sunday, January 26. The state government has cancelled the Republic Day Holiday for students. All schools have been directed to organise day-long celebrations to mark the Republic Day 2025. Therefore, all government and private schools will remain open on Sunday, January 26, to commemorate the Republic Day 2025. Students will have to attend and participate in the activities. In the past, students would get a holiday after the flag-hoisting ceremony on January 26. Maharashtra Government Holiday List 2025: State Govt Announces Dates for All Holidays on Account of Festivities and Observances, Check Complete Details.

    No Republic Day 2025 Holiday in Maharashtra Schools on Sunday, January 26

    (SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, viral trends and information from social media world, including Twitter (X), Instagram and Youtube. The above post is embeded directly from the user’s social media account and LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body. The views and facts appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY, also LatestLY does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.)

  • Novak Djokovic booed after retiring from Australian Open semifinal match with injury

    Novak Djokovic booed after retiring from Australian Open semifinal match with injury

    The Melbourne, Austrailia, crowd was not kind to Novak Djokovic early Friday morning.

    In his quest to extend his record with a 25th grand slam, Djokovic only managed to play one set, withdrawing from his Australian Open semifinal match after tearing a muscle in his left leg.

    The withdrawal sent Alexander Zverev to Sunday’s final against Jannick Sinner, and it left the crowd disappointed.

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    Serbia’s Novak Djokovic packs his bags after retiring from his men’s singles semi-final match against Germany’s Alexander Zverev on day 13 of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on Jan. 24, 2025. (WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)

    After he conceded the match to Zverev, who won the set, fans booed him as he walked off toward the locker room.

    Djokovic stopped, turned around and responded by giving two thumbs-up.

    Zverev made his disappointment with the crowd known.

    “Don’t boo a player when he goes out with injury. I know that everybody paid for tickets and everybody wants to see a great five-set match, but you gotta understand Novak Djokovic is somebody that has given this sport for the past 20 years absolutely everything of his life,” Zverev said in his on-court interview.

    Novak thumbs up

    Novak Djokovic of Serbia exits after his match against Alexander Zverev of Germany in the semifinals of the men’s singles at the 2025 Australian Open at Melbourne Park. (Mike Frey-Imagn Images)

    “He has won this tournament with an abdominal tear. He has won this tournament with a hamstring tear. If he can’t continue a tennis match, it really means he can’t continue a tennis match. So, please be respectful.”

    AMERICAN TENNIS STAR BEN SHELTON PUTS AUSTRALIAN OPEN TV INTERVIEWERS ON BLAST OVER TREATMENT OF PLAYERS

    John McEnroe added on the call, “They can’t possibly be booing him. Please! He’s won this 10 times, for god’s sakes. Unreal…

    “I mean, clearly something was up. The guy is a battler. I mean, him and Rafa [Nadal] have dug deeper than any two players I have seen. So to do that because he decided that he couldn’t go on after what he’s done here I thought was absolutely ludicrous, honestly. That was almost as depressing as seeing the end of the match.”

    Djokovic suffered the injury during his five-set classic with Carlos Alcaraz in the quarterfinal, but he said the pain was getting “worse and worse.”

    “Towards the end of that first set, I just started feeling more and more pain, and it was too much to handle for me at the moment. So, yeah, unfortunate ending, but I tried,” Djokovic said.

    “I knew even if I won the first set, it was going to be a huge uphill battle for me.”

    He withdrew from last year’s French Open before the quarterfinals after tearing the meniscus in his right knee during a match.

    Djokovic had surgery a couple of days later and immediately reached the final at the following major, Wimbledon, then won a gold medal for Serbia at the Paris Olympics.

    Novak tired

    Serbia’s Novak Djokovic reacts on a point against Germany’s Alexander Zverev during their men’s singles semi-final match on day 13 of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on Jan. 24, 2025. (WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)

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    This will be Zverev’s first final at the Australian Open and the third final of his career. He also made last year’s French Open final as well as the 2020 U.S. Open.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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