
Djokovic vs Sinner Live Streaming: When and where to watch French Open semifinal
Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner are set for a blockbuster semi-final clash in the men's singles at the French Open 2025. Their match will be the second of the day on Court Philippe-Chatrier, following the showdown between Lorenzo Musetti and defending champion Carlos Alcaraz.Djokovic entered the tournament after four first-round exits earlier this year. However, he regained form by winning the Geneva Open - his 100th ATP title. Now, the 24-time Grand Slam champion is just two wins away from securing a record 25th major.advertisementThe 38-year-old Serb didn't drop a set until Alexander Zverev took the opening set off him on Wednesday. Djokovic bounced back strongly to win the match in three hours and 17 minutes.
Sinner, meanwhile, is eyeing his first-ever French Open final. After losing to Alcaraz last year, the Italian will be eager to make amends. He also carries momentum, having won his last three matches against Djokovic.Where to watch Novak Djokovic vs Jannik Sinner in French Open 2025Sony Sports Network has the broadcasting rights for the French Open 2025. Live streaming of the Novak Djokovic vs Jannik Sinner semi-final can be watched on Sony LIV and Fancode app.When to watch Novak Djokovic vs Jannik Sinner in French Open 2025The match between Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner will not start before 7 PM local time, and 10:30 PM IST.Must Watch
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Hindustan Times
40 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Stroke of genius: Kunal Pradhan on tennis's Lorenzo Musetti and the beauty of the backhand
Lorenzo Musetti, 23, of Tuscany, Italy, lasted three-and-a-half sets against Carlos Alcaraz in the semi-final of the French Open, before pulling up with cramps. Musetti plays against Carlos Alcaraz at this year's French Open. (Reuters) For about 120 of the 145 minutes they spent on court, Musetti gave the champion a run for his money. It was perhaps inevitable that the Italian would lose; he hadn't beaten the Spaniard in any of their last five meetings. Still, this was more than just another semi-final loss in the annual cycle of Grand Slam tournaments. For many, it was personal. Musetti, ranked No. 7, is the best single-handed backhand player in the world today. The leader of a dying breed of men and women who have been sidelined by sports science — the one-handed backhand return is deemed too weak, with the evolution of carbon-fibre racquets, nylon strings and vibration dampeners that offer greater power and control — but who still press on with it. Grigor Dimitrov and Stefanos Tsitsipas are the others in the top 30 who have a single-handed backhand. But only eight men in the top 100 employ the most elegant stroke in tennis . On the women's tour, there are none in the top 70, and only three in the top 100. These are the impractical, romantic madcaps who persevere no matter how many coaches and pundits tell them to switch. For them, there is pride in playing the shot. The fluid arc as the single-handed backhand falls into a slice or rises into a topspin for a flourishing follow-through is the kind of poetry in motion nothing else in tennis can ever be. These are professional players who want to win, but this is a stroke that defines their love of the game — a nod, if you will, to Don Budge, Ken Rosewall, Rod Laver, John McEnroe, Martina Navratilova, Steffi Graf, Stefan Edberg, Pete Sampras, Justine Henin and Roger Federer — and without it, there would be no point at all. Poetry in motion: Stefanos Tsitsipas at the French Open in 2021. (Getty Images) Talking about a revolution The problem with the single-handed backhand, Navratilova said in 2016, is that it practically takes a genius to hit one. Navratilova, who won 18 Grand Slam singles titles, used a single-handed backhand — not the most elegant avatar of the stroke, but an efficient mix of slices and top spins that set up one of the most aggressive serve-and-volley games in history. What Navratilova said nine years ago is particularly important since she had a view from across the net of what would turn out to be perhaps the most important innovation in sport since Dick Fosbury's flop in the 1968 Mexico Olympics changed the high-jump forever. Here's a short summary of what happened. In 1954, Chris Evert, Navratilova's great rival, was born into a tennis family in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Her father, Jimmy Evert, was a professional coach. Chris was five when she first stepped on court, and when Jimmy realised she couldn't generate enough power on her backhand side, he encouraged her to try using both hands — a temporary retrieval plan for a young girl, borrowed from the Australians Vivian McGrath and John Bromwich, who used it in the 1930s. Chris found that the stroke worked perfectly. The repeat motion, with a use of the stronger right hand for support, was a bit like hitting a forehand from the other side. So what if it compromised on reach; she could compensate for that with greater fitness. And so what if it didn't look that great; it got the job done. When Evert started climbing the ranks — as a 14-year-old who made the semi-final of a senior event, a 15-year-old who defeated World No. 1 Margaret Court, a 16-year-old invited to the US Open, and a 19-year-old double Grand Slam champion — the world started to take note of this odd double-handed system that relied on supreme fitness and hanging back at the baseline to offer greater consistency and power. Over the next decade, while Evert and Navratilova were locked in a battle of philosophies in women's tennis, it helped the double-handed cause that Jimmy Connors burst on the men's side with a similar stroke that was encouraged by his mother Gloria Connors. And it helped that Bjorn Borg emerged with an even stranger double-handed style that had a straighter backswing, inspired by his early days as a hockey player. And so, the revolution — albeit not a pretty one — was being televised. A parting shot It took a couple of decades from the Evert-Connors era for the balance to shift. Great champions such as Sampras and Federer on the men's side and Graf and Henin on the women's side concealed the fact that change was truly upon us, until we woke up one morning in today's sports-tech-ruled world. A world in which Musetti, Dimitrov and Tsitsipas, with zero Grand Slam titles between them, are the last samurais fighting for a stroke in danger of being lost in time. A stroke that, as Navratilova said, now requires a genius to play it. But therein lies the hope that it's not all over; that someone will rise to not just celebrate the shot but also triumph with it. For what is sport without a dash of genius?


Hindustan Times
6 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Perez hits go-ahead single, India and Witt homer as the Royals beat the Padres 6-5
Jun 21, 2025 10:29 AM IST SAN DIEGO — Salvador Perez singled in the go-ahead run in the eighth inning for the Kansas City Royals, who got home runs from Jonathan India and Bobby Witt Jr. to beat the San Diego Padres 6-5 on Friday night for their fourth straight win. HT Image The Royals started this trip with a three-game sweep at Texas. The Padres have lost eight of 11. San Diego's Manny Machado hit his 12th homer leading off the ninth off Carlos Estévez, who then retired the side for his big league-leading 22nd save. Padres manager Mike Shildt served his one-game suspension handed down by MLB after a brouhaha in Los Angeles on Thursday night after Fernando Tatis Jr. was hit on the right wrist by a pitch in San Diego's 5-3 win, which prevented a four-game sweep. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts also was suspended for one game. Padres closer Robert Suarez was suspended for three games for hitting Shohei Ohtani with a pitch in the ninth inning. He is appealing. Tatis started Friday night after imaging showed no damage. Padres reliever Jason Adam opened the eighth by allowing a single and a walk before the 35-year-old Perez singled to left to bring in Maikel Garcia with the go-ahead run. Drew Waters added an RBI single with two outs. Witt homered to left with one out in the first, his 11th, off Nick Pivetta. Pivetta opened the fifth with consecutive walks to Freddy Fermin and Nick Loftin and then allowed India's shot to left with one out for a 4-0 lead. It was his fourth. The Padres chased starter Matt Lorenzen in the sixth as they closed to 4-2. Gavin Sheets tied it with a two-out, two-run single in the seventh off Lucas Erceg . Jake Cronenworth worked a full count against Estévez before popping up to end it. Xander Bogaerts, who has struggled this year, tied the Padres' franchise record by hitting safely in eight straight at-bats before popping up in the ninth. Royals LHP Noah Cameron and Padres RHP Dylan Cease are scheduled to start Saturday night. MLB: /hub/MLB This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text. Stay updated with the latest sports news, including latest headlines and updates from the Olympics 2024, where Indian athletes will compete for glory in Paris. Catch all the action from tennis Grand Slam tournaments, follow your favourite football teams and players with the latest match results, and get the latest on international hockey tournaments and series.


Mint
7 hours ago
- Mint
AFP Sports Diary for June 21 to July 18
AFP Sports Diary for June 21 to July 18: CRICKET: Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 1st Test at Galle (ends June 21); England v India 1st Test at Headingley, Leeds (ends June 24) CYCLING: Tour of Switzerland (ends June 22) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- Group E: Inter Milan v Urawa Red Diamonds at Seattle, River Plate v Monterrey at Los Angeles; Group F: Mamelodi Sundowns v Borussia Dortmund at Cincinnati, Fluminense v Ulsan at New York (ends July 13); CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA (ends July 6) GOLF: PGA Tour at Travelers Championship; LPGA Women's PGA Championship at Frisco, Texas (end June 22) RACING: Royal Ascot featuring Coronation Stakes (ends June 21) TENNIS: ATP at Queen's Club, London; Halle, Germany; WTA Berlin Open; Nottingham Open (end June 22) RUGBY UNION: Super Rugby final -- Canterbury Crusaders v Waikato Chiefs at Christchurch; French Top 14 semi-final -- Bordeaux-Begles v Toulon at Lyon BASKETBALL: NBA Finals Game 7 -- Oklahoma City Thunder host Indiana Pacers CRICKET: England v India 1st Test at Headingley, Leeds (ends June 24) CYCLING: Tour of Switzerland (ends); Copenhagen Sprint FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- Group G: Juventus v Wydad at Philadelphia, Manchester City v Al Ain at Atlanta; Group H: Real Madrid v Pachuca at Charlotte, Salzburg v Al Hilal at Washington DC (ends July 13); CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA (ends July 6) GOLF: PGA Tour at Travelers Championship; LPGA Women's PGA Championship at Frisco, Texas (end) TENNIS: ATP at Queen's Club, London; Halle, Germany; WTA Berlin Open; Nottingham Open (end) MOTORCYCLING: Italian MotoGP at Mugello CRICKET: England v India 1st Test at Headingley, Leeds (ends June 24) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- Inter Milan v Palmeiras at Miami, Porto v Al Ahly at New York; Group B: Seattle Sounders v Paris Saint Germain at Seattle, Atletico Madrid v Botafogo at Los Angeles (ends July 13); CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA (ends July 6) TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne (end June 29) WTA at Eastbourne; Bad Homburg (end June 28) CRICKET: England v India 1st Test at Headingley, Leeds (ends June 24) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- Group C: Auckland City v Boca Juniors at Nashville, Benfica v Bayern Munich at Charlotte; Group D: LAFC v Flamengo at Orlando, Esperance v Chelsea at Philadelphia (ends July 13); CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA (ends July 6) TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne (end June 29) WTA at Eastbourne; Bad Homburg (end June 28) ATHLETICS: Golden Spike Continental meet at Ostrava FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- Group E: Inter Milan v River Plate at Seattle, Urawa Red Diamonds v Monterrey at Los Angeles; Group F: Borussia Dortmund v Ulsan at Cincinnati, Mamelodi Sundowns v Fluminense at Miami (ends July 13) CRICKET: Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd Test at Colombo (ends June 29); West Indies v Australia 1st Test at Bridgetown, Barbados (end June 29) TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne (end June 29) WTA at Eastbourne; Bad Homburg (end June 28) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- Group G: Juventus v Manchester City at Orlando, Wydad v Al Ain; Group H: Al Hilal v Pachuca at Nashville, Salzburg v Real Madrid at Philadelphia (ends July 13) CRICKET: Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd Test at Colombo (ends June 29); West Indies v Australia 1st Test at Bridgetown, Barbados (end June 29) TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne (end June 29) WTA at Eastbourne; Bad Homburg (end June 28) GOLF: PGA Tour at Detroit, Michigan; European Tour's Italian Open; LPGA Tour at Midland, Michigan (end June 29) RALLYING: Acropolis Rally, Greece (ends June 29) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- rest day (ends July 13) TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne (end June 29) WTA at Eastbourne; Bad Homburg (end June 28) GOLF: PGA Tour at Detroit, Michigan; European Tour's Italian Open; LPGA Tour at Midland, Michigan; LIV Golf at Dallas (end June 29) RALLYING: Acropolis Rally, Greece (ends June 29) CRICKET: Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd Test at Colombo (ends June 29); West Indies v Australia 1st Test at Bridgetown, Barbados (end June 29) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- last 16 begins: Group A winners v Group B runners-up at Philadelphia; Group C winners v Group D runners-up at Charlotte (ends July 13); CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA -- quarter-finals (ends July 6) MOTORCYCLING: Dutch MotoGP sprint race at Assen TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne; WTA at Eastbourne; Bad Homburg (end) GOLF: PGA Tour at Detroit, Michigan; European Tour's Italian Open; LPGA Tour at Midland, Michigan; LIV Golf at Dallas (end June 29) RALLYING: Acropolis Rally, Greece (ends June 29) CRICKET: Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd Test at Colombo (ends June 29); West Indies v Australia 1st Test at Bridgetown, Barbados (ends June 29); Zimbabwe v South Africa 1st Test at Bulawayo (ends July 2) RUGBY UNION: Western Force v British and Irish Lions at Perth; South Africa v Barbarians at Cape Town; Top 14 final at Paris FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- last 16: Group B winners v Group A runners-up at Atlanta; Group D winners v Group C runners-up at Miami (ends July 13); CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA -- quarter-finals (ends July 6) FORMULA ONE: Austrian Grand Prix at Spielberg MOTORCYCLING: Dutch MotoGP at Assen TENNIS: ATP at Mallorca; Eastbourne (end) GOLF: PGA Tour at Detroit, Michigan; European Tour's Italian Open; LPGA Tour at Midland, Michigan; LIV Golf at Dallas (end) RALLYING: Acropolis Rally, Greece (ends June 29) RACING: Irish Derby at The Curragh CRICKET: Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd Test at Colombo (ends); West Indies v Australia 1st Test at Bridgetown, Barbados (ends); Zimbabwe v South Africa 1st Test at Bulawayo (ends July 2) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- last 16: Group E winners v Group F runners-up at Charlotte; Group G winners v Group H runners-up at Orlando (ends July 13) CRICKET: Zimbabwe v South Africa 1st Test at Bulawayo (ends July 2) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- last 16: Group F winners v Group E runners-up at Atlanta; Group H winners v Group G runners-up at Miami (ends July 13) CRICKET: Zimbabwe v South Africa 1st Test at Bulawayo (ends July 2) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) RUGBY UNION: Queensland Reds v British and Irish Lions at Brisbane FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- rest day (ends July 13); Women's European Championships begin in Switzerland -- Group A: Iceland v Finland at Thun, Switzerland v Norway at Basel; CONCACAF Gold Cup in USA -- semi-finals (ends July 6) CRICKET: Zimbabwe v South Africa 1st Test at Bulawayo (ends); England v India 2nd Test at Edgbaston (ends July 6); Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 1st ODI at Colombo TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- rest day (ends July 13); Women's European Championships -- Group B: Belgium v Italy at Sion, Spain v Portugal at Bern; CONCACAF Gold Cup -- semi-finals (ends July 7) CRICKET: England v India 2nd Test at Edgbaston (ends July 6); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at St George's (ends July 7) GOLF: European Tour at Munich; PGA Tour at John Deere Classic, Illinois (end July 6) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CRICKET: England v India 2nd Test at Edgbaston (ends July 6); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at St George's (ends July 7) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- quarter-finals begin at Orlando and Philadelphia (ends July 13); Women's European Championships -- Group C: Denmark v Sweden Geneva, Germany v Poland at St Gallen GOLF: European Tour at Munich; PGA Tour at John Deere Classic, Illinois (end July 6) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France begins (ends July 27) CRICKET: England v India 2nd Test at Edgbaston (ends July 6); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at St George's (ends July 7); Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd ODI at Colombo FOOTBALL: Club World Cup in United States -- quarter-finals begin at Orlando and Philadelphia (ends July 13); Women's European Championships -- Group D: Wales v Netherlands at Lucerne, France v England at Zurich RUGBY UNION: NSW Waratahs v British and Irish Lions at Sydney; Argentina v England 1st Test at Buenos Aires; New Zealand v France 1st Test at Dunedin; Japan v Wales 1st Test at Kitakyushu; Georgia v Ireland at Tbilisi GOLF: European Tour at Munich; PGA Tour at John Deere Classic, Illinois (end July 6) ATHLETICS: Diamond League meeting at Eugene, Oregon TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: England v India 2nd Test at Edgbaston (ends); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at St George's (ends July 7); Zimbabwe v South Africa 2nd Test at Bulawayo (ends July 10) RUGBY UNION: Australia v Fiji at Newcastle, NSW FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Group A: Norway v Finland at Sion, Switzerland v Iceland at Bern; CONCACAF Gold Cup final at Houston, USA (ends) FORMULA ONE: British Grand Prix at Silverstone GOLF: European Tour at Munich; PGA Tour at John Deere Classic, Illinois (end) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at St George's (ends July 7); Zimbabwe v South Africa 2nd Test at Bulawayo (ends July 10) FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Group B: Spain v Belgium at Thun, Portugal v Italy at Geneva FOOTBALL: Club World Cup semi-final at New York; Women's European Championships -- Group C: Germany v Denmark at Basel, Poland v Sweden at Lucerne TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: Zimbabwe v South Africa 2nd Test at Bulawayo (ends July 10); Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 3rd ODI at Pallekele FOOTBALL: Club World Cup semi-final at New York; Women's European Championships -- Group D: England v Netherlands at Zurich, France v Wales at St Gallen TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: Zimbabwe v South Africa 2nd Test at Bulawayo (ends July 10) RUGBY UNION: ACT Brumbies v British and Irish Lions at Canberra TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Group A: Finland v Switzerland at Geneva, Norway v Iceland at Thun GOLF: European Tour Scottish Open at North Berwick; PGA Tour at Louisville, Kentucky; LPGA at Evian Championship (end July 13) CRICKET: Zimbabwe v South Africa 2nd Test at Bulawayo (ends); England v India 3rd Test at Lord's (ends July 14); Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 1st T20 at Pallekele TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon (ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) ATHLETICS: Diamond League meeting at Monaco FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Group B: Italy v Spain at Bern, Portugal v Belgium at Sion GOLF: European Tour Scottish Open at North Berwick; PGA Tour at Louisville, Kentucky; LPGA at Evian Championship; LIV Golf Andalucia at Sotogrande (end July 13) CRICKET: England v India 3rd Test at Lord's (ends July 14) SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships begin in Singapore (end August 3) TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon -- women's singles final(ends July 13) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) GOLF: European Tour Scottish Open at North Berwick; PGA Tour at Louisville, Kentucky; LPGA at Evian Championship; LIV Golf Andalucia at Sotogrande (end July 13) CRICKET: England v India 3rd Test at Lord's (ends July 14); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at Kingston (ends July 16) FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Group C: Sweden v Germany at Zurich, Poland v Denmark at Lucerne SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) MOTORCYCLING: German MotoGP sprint race at Sachsenring RUGBY UNION: Invitational Australia and New Zealand XV v British and Irish Lions at Adelaide; New Zealand v France 2nd Test at Wellington; Fiji v Scotland at Suva; Argentina v England 2nd Test at San Juan; Japan v Wales 2nd Test at Kobe; Portugal v Ireland at Lisbon TENNIS: ATP and WTA at Wimbledon -- men's singles final (ends) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) FOOTBALL: Club World Cup final at New York; Women's European Championships -- Group D: Netherlands v France at Basel, England v Wales at St Gallen GOLF: European Tour Scottish Open at North Berwick; PGA Tour at Louisville, Kentucky; LPGA at Evian Championship; LIV Golf Andalucia at Sotogrande (end) CRICKET: England v India 3rd Test at Lord's (ends July 14); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at Kingston (ends July 16); Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 2nd T20 at Dambulla SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) MOTORCYCLING: German MotoGP at Sachsenring CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: England v India 3rd Test at Lord's (ends); West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at Kingston (ends July 16); T20 Tri Series -- Zimbabwe v South Africa at Harare SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) TENNIS: ATP at Los Cabos, Mexico, Swiss Open at Gstaad, at Bastad, Sweden; WTA at Iasi Open at Iasi, Romania, Hamburg Open (end July 20) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at Kingston (ends July 16) SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) TENNIS: ATP at Los Cabos, Mexico, Swiss Open at Gstaad, at Bastad, Sweden; WTA at Iasi Open at Iasi, Romania, Hamburg Open (end July 20) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: West Indies v Australia 2nd Test at Kingston (ends); T20 Tri Series -- New Zealand v South Africa at Harare; Sri Lanka v Bangladesh 3rd T20 at Colombo FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Quarter-finals: Winner Group A v Runner-up Group B at Geneva SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) TENNIS: ATP at Los Cabos, Mexico, Swiss Open at Gstaad, at Bastad, Sweden; WTA at Iasi Open at Iasi, Romania, Hamburg Open (end July 20) GOLF: European Tour and PGA at The Open, Portrush, Northern Ireland, PGA at Barracuda Championship, Truckee, California (end July 20) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Quarter-finals: Winner Group C v Runner-up Group D at Zurich SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) TENNIS: ATP at Los Cabos, Mexico, Swiss Open at Gstaad, at Bastad, Sweden; WTA at Iasi Open at Iasi, Romania, Hamburg Open (end July 20) RALLYING: Eighth leg of the World Rally Championship -- Rally Estonia (ends July 20) GOLF: European Tour and PGA at The Open, Portrush, Northern Ireland, PGA at Barracuda Championship, Truckee, California (end July 20) CYCLING: Tour de France (ends July 27) CRICKET: T20 Tri Series -- Zimbabwe v New Zealand at Harare FOOTBALL: Women's European Championships -- Quarter-finals: Winner Group B v Runner-up Group A at Bern SWIMMING: World Aquatics Championships in Singapore (end August 3) TENNIS: ATP at Los Cabos, Mexico, Swiss Open at Gstaad, at Bastad, Sweden; WTA at Iasi Open at Iasi, Romania, Hamburg Open (end July 20) RALLYING: Eighth leg of the World Rally Championship -- Rally Estonia (ends July 20)