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Carlos Alcaraz's difficult girlfriend problem and Emma Raducanu's 'boyfriend ban'

Carlos Alcaraz's difficult girlfriend problem and Emma Raducanu's 'boyfriend ban'

Wales Online17 hours ago

Carlos Alcaraz's difficult girlfriend problem and Emma Raducanu's 'boyfriend ban'
Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu are among the top tennis stars in the world, but their search for glory has had its setbacks in other departments
Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu have had problems with relationships
(Image: Tim Clayton, Corbis via Getty Images )
Life as an elite tennis player is not without its sacrifices.
While innate talent is undoubtedly essential for success, it alone cannot propel athletes to the pinnacle of their sport. The demands of rigorous training regimens can be all-consuming, leaving little time for leisure activities, nurturing relationships or simply spending time with loved ones.

And no one knows this better than Carlos Alcaraz. The 22-year-old has five Grand Slam titles under his belt as well as a world No. 2 ranking, and his dedication to his craft is evident.

However, his intense training schedule and constant travel have taken a toll on his personal life, particularly when it comes to romantic relationships. In an interview with The Sunday Times last year, Alcaraz said: "I am single. I am looking for someone. It can be difficult as a tennis player to meet the right person because you are travelling all the time."
He also echoed similar sentiments in a conversation with Vogue a year earlier, saying: "It's complicated, never staying in one place. It's hard to find the person who can share things with you if you're always in different parts of the world," reports the Express.
Whether Alcaraz's relationship status has changed since then remains unknown, but there have been no public reports linking him to anyone romantically as of late. Alcaraz is not alone in suggesting that the sport puts constraints on personal relationships.
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Emma Raducanu, who has signed up to play mixed doubles with Alcaraz at the US Open later this year, has shared how her parents once forbade her from having a boyfriend during her early career. Recounting her parents' strictures, Raducanu told The Times: "My parents were very much against [boyfriends] as it interfered with training. When I was younger, I wasn't even allowed to hang out with my girl friends. A lot of the time I was very resentful, but it made me very confident and comfortable in my own company."
Carlos Alcaraz has opened up about finding love as a tennis player
(Image: Getty )
In her adulthood, Raducanu briefly dated Carlo Agostinelli, taking their relationship public in 2023. Yet, by the following year, the romance had come to a conclusion, with The Sun claiming that their time together had "run its course".

Moreover, tennis veterans like Andy Murray have also experienced romantic complications due to the demands of the sport. Murray recently disclosed the significant influence his career had on his honeymoon with Kim Sears.
After their 2015 wedding at the beautiful Dunblane Cathedral, the couple scarcely managed to escape to Barcelona before sporting commitments came calling. Regretful over the brief honeymoon caused by an intensive training schedule, Murray told GQ: "When we got married, our honeymoon was in Barcelona, and I was doing a training block.
"Essentially, we got to spend a couple of nights with each other, but I was practising during the day, training and going to the gym and doing all my physio work. [A honeymoon] is very important for most couples.

Andy Murray has been married to Kim Sears since 2015
(Image: Getty )
"Maybe for her it was too, but she was willing to sacrifice that to allow me to chase my goals. She's super important to everything I achieved, so now I'm trying my best to make up for all that."
He added: "She's been a huge support and a massive, massive part of my career. When you're playing, you don't always appreciate that. I think a lot of individual athletes - me included - would be selfish at times. You think a lot about yourself and your own performance, and your mood is reflective of whether you've had a good match. Say, I won. I'm in a good mood. I lost, I'm in a bad mood.
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"It's not really fair on the people around you. But even at the end, when I was struggling physically and was not winning many matches, and we had young children, Kim was always so supportive of me continuing to play because she knew I loved the sport and loved playing."

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Jamie Baker on what it takes to ensure Wimbledon runs smoothy
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Any challenge, problem, incident or question that arises - it all lands on Baker's desk. Keeping the tournament running smoothly is, unsurprisingly, quite a task but Baker remains steadfast in his belief that his background as a player is a hugely significant factor in the success he's had in the role so far and will, he hopes, continue to have this year. 'In this job, you have to deal with different things all the time and actually having been an athlete is very helpful because I have that mindset of going to bed every night and thinking about what went well, what didn't go well and what I can do to improve the next day. You need that mindset as an athlete and that really helps with this job.' Of all the thoughts that will pass through Baker's head in the coming days and weeks, there will be one constant; the weather. 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Watching someone from your part of the world thrive is deeply moving
Watching someone from your part of the world thrive is deeply moving

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Josh Kerr: Getting to the top is the easy part, staying there is tough
Josh Kerr: Getting to the top is the easy part, staying there is tough

The Herald Scotland

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Josh Kerr: Getting to the top is the easy part, staying there is tough

While retaining his place at the top of the men's 1500m tree is far from easy, Kerr is as well-equipped as anyone to manage it. There are few better examples of Kerr's ability to live up to both the hype and the pressure than his last outing; earlier this month, at the Grand Slam Track meet in Philadelphia, the Scot was in a lowly sixth place with just 200m of the 1500m to go. Twenty seconds later, he'd won the race, beating the Olympic champion in the process. It was a performance that illustrated Kerr's desire, desperation even, to continue improving year-on-year, which is not always easy when the standard you've set is being the best 1500m runner on the planet. 'For sure, it's easier to get to the top than stay at the top,' Kerr says. 'When you're trying to get to the top, you can take multiple attempts whereas when you're trying to stay at the top, every person on the planet is gunning for you every single race. 'Getting to the top, you're exploring what works for you, and to stay at the top, you have to keep adapting and get the balance right. 'I've learned so much over the past three years and now, I've got a real wealth of knowledge about what works for me and what doesn't. Each year, I up my level of professionalism and improve the way I live my life, the way I train and the way I race.' 'I've built off last year and I feel the strongest I've ever been. I'm working on my speed now so I think it's going to end up with some pretty awesome performances.' (Image: Getty Images) The 27-year-old from Edinburgh has evolved into one of the faces of track and field. His world 1500m title in 2023, which was bookended by Olympic bronze and Olympic silver in 2021 and 2024 is, to date, the high point of Kerr's career and kick-started a rivalry with the Norwegian Jakob Ingebrigtsen which brought an audience to the sport whose attention had been captured by the back-and-forth between the pair. Both Kerr and Ingebrigtsen, however, failed to become Olympic champion last summer with American Cole Hocker producing one of the upsets of Paris to claim the 1500m title. Given Kerr had begun last year stating explicitly that his aim was to become Olympic champion, his Olympic silver was, on paper, a failure. But a personal best time and a British record in the Olympic final softened the blow somewhat and over the months that followed Paris 2024, Kerr came to accept that he's not always going to be able to live up to the standards he sets himself. And he hasn't, perhaps surprisingly, used that defeat in the Olympic final as motivation for this season. 'Olympic silver produces very mixed emotions,' he says. 'I've shown up every year for the last six years and run either a season's best or a personal best in major championships finals and that's the best I can do. I have no control over what anyone else does. 'Yes, if I don't win, I'm not happy with how my year went. That's a pretty tough standard to meet and it's one I'm not going to meet every year because I'm a human being. 'When you set those standards, you have to be strict with yourself but I love what I do and if I wasn't getting paid to do it, I would still do it because I'm so curious to see how far I can push my body and see if I can keep putting on these performances in high-pressure environments.' (Image: Getty Images) Kerr has raced six times so far this year, all of which have been at Grand Slam Track meets. The new venture, set up by Olympic running great, Michael Johnson, was developed with the aim of revitalising athletics and bringing it to a new, wider audience. Kerr has been one of the most prominent faces in Grand Slam Track this season and on the track, the Scot certainly lived up his billing, winning his first Grand Slam Track title at the second meet in Miami last month with impressive performances over both 1500m and 800m (and taking home $100,000 as a result) while at the most recent meet in Philadelphia, Kerr produced one of the most thrilling performances of the weekend with his aforementioned surge from sixth place to first in the 1500m. This race in particular highlighted one of the major selling points of Grand Slam Track which is that athletes will be racing to beat each other rather than merely chasing fast times, which is what, to it's detriment, the sport has widely focused upon in recent years. Grand Slam Track has lofty aspirations to change the face of athletics and while not all of the initial aims have been fulfilled, Kerr retains the belief that it's been, and will continue to be, a very good thing for the sport. 'The first meet was the first meet. We weren't sure how it was going to go and in some respects, the organisers wanted it to be the Super Bowl but that's very hard to do,' he says. 'What was so awesome about it, though, is that it was continually being tweaked to make it better. And as athletes, we had an awesome time. We got treated like professionals and we raced against the best athletes in the world, which I really liked. 'Recently, we've been running time trials a lot and I wouldn't say that becomes boring but it is very difficult physically and mentally to keep running like that. In the 1500m at Grand Slam Track, we provided some really great entertainment and that's what people like watching. 'So I feel like Grand Slam track is on a really good trajectory, and I'm excited to see how it looks next season.' A sizeable bump in the road for Grand Slam Track has been the cancellation of the fourth and final meet, which had been scheduled for next weekend in LA. It is, says founder Michael Johnson, a 'business decision' and while many have used the meet's cancellation as a stick with which to beat the project, Kerr feels none of that pessimism. 'There's always going to be positives and negatives at the start of every new venture and Grand Slam track is just trying to find its way. And actually, I think dropping LA this season is the right decision,' he says. 'It's easy for audiences to sit and critique but I feel like Grand Slam Track was good because it was improving with each meet. 'There's always going to be some negatives around a decision like the one to cancel LA but, at the end of the day, they want to put on the best track meets in the world and elevate the sport, which can only be a good thing.' The cancellation of next week's event means Kerr's competitive appearances will be sparse between now and the World Championships in Tokyo in September, at which he'll be defending his world 1500m title. On his schedule between now and his world title defence is only the London Athletics Meet next month and the British Championships in August. This will, he is confident, ensure he's in the best possible shape both physically and mentally when he arrives in Tokyo later in the season. 'The year is planned out to make sure I'm at my best for Tokyo and that's all on track,' he says. 'My sessions are coming together and everything else is coming together too so I can't complain with where I'm at. Things are going to plan as of right now and the aim is absolutely to retain my world title.'

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