Rohan Bopanna retires from tennis
Digest more
This week on Tennis Channel, we're looking back some of the sport's most important players, personalities and moments throughout its colorful history. On Monday, from 12-3 p.m. ET, watch the documentary Barnstormers. Here's a preview, and a present-day ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Wimbledon is the oldest tennis tournament in the world, and one of the most prestigious. Played every year on the grass courts at the All England Croquet and ...
On one of her first days at Mira Mesa High School, then-freshman Samantha Truong wandered into the gym, looking for a CIF girls tennis championship banner hanging on a wall. Said Truong, now a senior,
Arizona senior Jay Friend has rewritten the record books for Wildcat tennis, becoming the first player in program history to win the ITA All-American Championship.
When I started writing about the unsung African-American tennis pioneer Jimmie McDaniel, I was told that the first person I needed to talk to was Art Carrington. For good reason. Carrington, a 73-year-old teacher, researcher and former pro, wrote the book ...
The tennis world witnessed a historic moment today as Rohan Bopanna announced his retirement from the sport at the age of 45. The Indian veteran, who made history earlier last year year by becoming the oldest men’s Grand Slam champion with his 2024 Australian Open triumph,
(Reuters) -Monaco Tennis Federation president Melanie-Antoinette de Massy hailed Valentin Vacherot's Shanghai Masters victory on Sunday as a historic milestone for the principality, marking the federation's first-ever Masters 1000 singles title.
A two-time Grand Slam champion and former World No. 1 in doubles, Rohan Bopanna retires not just as one of India’s greatest tennis icons, but as a player who redefined longevity in the modern game.
Tennis World USA on MSN
Taylor Fritz reveals his Mount Rushmore of men’s tennis
Among fans, enthusiasts, and tennis players, there are mixed opinions regarding the players who would be placed on the "small Mount Rushmore" of men's tennis.