the concept of flavio cobolli 1st time grand slam champion
the concept of felix auger alliasime 1st time grand slam champion. CHILLS!
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@fairie-bread
the concept of flavio cobolli 1st time grand slam champion
the concept of felix auger alliasime 1st time grand slam champion. CHILLS!

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the concept of flavio cobolli 1st time grand slam champion
eye of the tiger playing over a montage of aryna looking like she’s having the worst day of her life IMSKDVDKEK
Spain's Juan Carlos Ferrero puts his racket on his head during his semifinal match against Russia's Marat Safin at Roland Garros on June 7, 2002.
📸: REUTERS/Vincent Kessler / Bridgeman Images
jcf is being THIS crazy and he's not even blonde anymore. can u imagine what he'd be like if he was still blonde

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-memory of a fire-
top 50 player, roland garros '26 quarterfinalist maja chwalińska!!!!!
top 30 player, roland garros '26 semifinalist maja chwalińska!!!!!!!!
I should've ridden with you
yayyyy charthur yayayayay

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Scissor-tailed Flycatcher (Tyrannus forficatus), male, family Tyrannidae, order Passeriformes, East TX, USA
photographs by Ken Edwards
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the vengeance of the daughter
Carlos Alcaraz at Indian Wells 03.11.2026 © Antoine Couvercelle
it's starting to hit me now that zverev might actually win this and nothing we can do to stop it 😔 (tbc i didn't expect rafa to win necessarily, still an amazing run for him, just zverev was so locked in today and can't deny anymore that there aren't many people left in the draw who trouble him when he shows this level)
Yeah I mean listen, despite all our wishing that is very well what might happen. Whether we like it or not, the ethical failing here is not on a top player for winning a slam but on the governing bodies which have allowed him to keep playing.
Ultimately, sports results are not beholden to morals. All we can really do is make our broader distaste known to those bodies, and lobby for change and advocacy for those abused, especially in sports spaces we have access to— and aim for that change to propagate upwards, because it starts with everyone. If it's accepted somewhere, it can be justified anywhere.
I don't love to discuss this here since I think (1) I know bringing him up is hard for some people on here and since this is a safe space I try to bring him up as minimally as possible and (2) I tend to prefer to address these types of issues offline, as personal preference.
I will say it is a bit of a hard issue advocacy-wise as well, since most non-profits and bills work around the prevention of abuse against athletes— which is an extremely prevalent and important issue, and one I do work for irl, but is handled separately from abuse accusations against player themselves, which is an internal review process at least in the ATP. In tennis, players are independent contractors with the ATP and WTA, not part of any sort of players's union. There are independent review boards internal to these organizations that elevate and review complaints (can do a post explaining the tennis bodies and how they work later if anyone is interested also).
However if you are in US and interested, there are multiple organizations that work towards addressing abuse at a broader scale in sports. In 2024 the Safer Sports for Athletes Act was passed by both survivors and advocates to help strengthen the US Center for SafeSport which tries to address sexual, physical, and emotional abuse in sport. This is a great org I highly recommend. The Assist is also another great resources focusing on sexual violence in sport and amplifying survivors' voices, esp. for women. There are also a number of regional organizations that work in these spaces, so I do recommend looking into those if comfortable. I would share mine but it's doxxing but trust many exist.
I do not currently know of any for survivors of abuse by athletes but trust that I am looking into it more and will provide if I find any.
Beyond which (and semi-relevant so I'll mention it here as an addendum), there is now a number of organizations partnering with both professional sports orgs (e.g. WTA) and the NCAA to try and help curb online abuse by bettors and others; so if that interests you to help those orgs as well, I recommend!

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(RE: zverev being in the rg semifinals)
the very very real possibility that zverev might win a grand slam this month is putting tennisblr into a veeery weird space in which everybody is acknowledging it but at the same time nobody wants to. and i think part of it is the uncomfortable disconnect of the 'well if he wins it doesn't mean anything bc sport doesn't matter, it's just a game' mindset clashing with the 'if my fave #myfave wins it means a lot bc sport matters!' mindset, which is a big part of what makes tennis fun to watch. and i think we all have to understand that u can't celebrate a big achievement like winning a slam for one player without validating the status, reputation, and praise that zverev will achieve if/when he wins one; both of these perspectives can't co-exist. and that's just a v strange position to be in (speaking only of the fans right now obviously; it's another thing entirely to consider what impact this would likely have on his victims, to see him lauded for an achievement like this—but although i've seen firsthand, in my own life, the effect that successful men continuing to be publically praised for their success has on the people they've abused, i don't think it's my place to speculate on their feelings).
but this is a pattern as old as time and it will keep happening as long as the patriarchy, elite sports, celebrity culture, and sports fandom are inseparably intertwined as we all know they are. it's a pattern we shouldn't be forced to accept and we shouldn't be forced to ignore it; too much of that already happens at the top of the sport, and that's exactly how the cycle of abuse continues and continues and continues. and situations like this force us as watchers to confront what sport actually means, and more specifically the institutions that uphold it, and to realise the kinds of people the institutions of sport are built to serve, bc it's def not the people who watch it.
anyway i know there's literally nothing new to say about this. but it's something we're gonna have to talk about anyway, for as long as this man (and likely others like him) are playing this sport and being very very good at it, and being upheld and celebrated for it constantly. and it fucking sucks
oh brother