×
U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championships — Tommy Paul beats Roman Burruchaga to clinch title in Houston  American fourth seed Tommy Paul saved three match points before scoring a battling three-set victory over unseeded Argentine Roman Burruchaga to win the ATP Houston US Men’s Clay Court Championship on Sunday.Paul, 28, held his nerve in a nail-biting third set to dig out a 6-1, 3-6, 7-5 triumph in two hours and 40 minutes to claim the fifth ATP title of his career.The American had looked to be heading for defeat after the 77th-ranked Burruchaga engineered a trio of match points while leading 5-3 on Paul’s serve in the decisive third set.But Paul showed tremendous resilience to put out that fire and hold, and then broke Burruchaga in the next game to square the match at 5-5.Buoyed by that narrow escape, Paul then held to love to go 6-5 up, and suddenly the pressure was all on the 24-year-old from Buenos Aires, playing in his first ATP final.Burruchaga, the son of 1986 World Cup-winning footballer Jorge Burruchaga, appeared equal to the challenge after going 40-0 up.Yet once again, Paul dug deep and clawed his way back to deuce.The American moved to match point when Burruchaga drilled a backhand wide down the line, and then clinched victory when the South American yanked a wild forehand long on the next point.Published on Apr 06, 2026  #U.S #Mens #Clay #Court #Championships #Tommy #Paul #beats #Roman #Burruchaga #clinch #title #Houston

U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championships — Tommy Paul beats Roman Burruchaga to clinch title in Houston

American fourth seed Tommy Paul saved three match points before scoring a battling three-set victory over unseeded Argentine Roman Burruchaga to win the ATP Houston US Men’s Clay Court Championship on Sunday.

Paul, 28, held his nerve in a nail-biting third set to dig out a 6-1, 3-6, 7-5 triumph in two hours and 40 minutes to claim the fifth ATP title of his career.

The American had looked to be heading for defeat after the 77th-ranked Burruchaga engineered a trio of match points while leading 5-3 on Paul’s serve in the decisive third set.

But Paul showed tremendous resilience to put out that fire and hold, and then broke Burruchaga in the next game to square the match at 5-5.

Buoyed by that narrow escape, Paul then held to love to go 6-5 up, and suddenly the pressure was all on the 24-year-old from Buenos Aires, playing in his first ATP final.

Burruchaga, the son of 1986 World Cup-winning footballer Jorge Burruchaga, appeared equal to the challenge after going 40-0 up.

Yet once again, Paul dug deep and clawed his way back to deuce.

The American moved to match point when Burruchaga drilled a backhand wide down the line, and then clinched victory when the South American yanked a wild forehand long on the next point.

Published on Apr 06, 2026

#U.S #Mens #Clay #Court #Championships #Tommy #Paul #beats #Roman #Burruchaga #clinch #title #Houston

American fourth seed Tommy Paul saved three match points before scoring a battling three-set victory over unseeded Argentine Roman Burruchaga to win the ATP Houston US Men’s Clay Court Championship on Sunday.

Paul, 28, held his nerve in a nail-biting third set to dig out a 6-1, 3-6, 7-5 triumph in two hours and 40 minutes to claim the fifth ATP title of his career.

The American had looked to be heading for defeat after the 77th-ranked Burruchaga engineered a trio of match points while leading 5-3 on Paul’s serve in the decisive third set.

But Paul showed tremendous resilience to put out that fire and hold, and then broke Burruchaga in the next game to square the match at 5-5.

Buoyed by that narrow escape, Paul then held to love to go 6-5 up, and suddenly the pressure was all on the 24-year-old from Buenos Aires, playing in his first ATP final.

Burruchaga, the son of 1986 World Cup-winning footballer Jorge Burruchaga, appeared equal to the challenge after going 40-0 up.

Yet once again, Paul dug deep and clawed his way back to deuce.

The American moved to match point when Burruchaga drilled a backhand wide down the line, and then clinched victory when the South American yanked a wild forehand long on the next point.

Published on Apr 06, 2026

Source link
#U.S #Mens #Clay #Court #Championships #Tommy #Paul #beats #Roman #Burruchaga #clinch #title #Houston

Previous post

Deadspin | Dodgers rally past Nationals to earn sweep <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28666369.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28666369.jpg" alt="MLB: Los Angeles Dodgers at Washington Nationals" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Apr 5, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) celebrates with Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker (23) after their game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>Shohei Ohtani, Dalton Rushing and Teoscar Hernandez homered, and the Los Angeles Dodgers rallied to beat the Nationals 8-6 on Sunday in Washington, completing the three-game sweep.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>Ohtani’s sacrifice fly drove in the go-ahead run to cap a four-run eighth inning for the Dodgers. Former National Alex Call had two hits and scored twice.</p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>James Wood had a three-run homer and Luis Garcia, Jr. hit a two-run shot for Washington, which has dropped five straight.</p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>With Los Angeles trailing 6-3 in the eighth, Freddie Freeman led off with a single against Cionel Perez (0-1) and Andy Pages doubled him to third. After Call walked, Santiago Espinal lined a single to center, scoring two runs to make it 6-5.</p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>Will Smith walked and Clayton Beeter came on to face pinch-hitter Kyle Tucker, who grounded into a fielder’s choice that scored Call to make it 6-6. Ohtani then flied to left, scoring Espinal with the go-ahead run.</p> </section><section id="section-6"> <p>Hernandez provided some insurance with a solo homer in the ninth.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-7"> <p>Jack Dreyer (1-0) pitched a scoreless seventh inning for the win and Edwin Diaz worked the ninth for his third save.</p> </section> <section id="section-8"> <p>Los Angeles starter Roki Sasaki was roughed up for six runs on five hits over five innings. He walked three and struck out five.</p> </section><section id="section-9"> <p>Washington’s Foster Griffin left with the lead after allowing a run on five hits and three walks. He struck out six.</p> </section><section id="section-10"> <p>Ohtani homered to center in the third to give the Dodgers a 1-0 lead.</p> </section><section id="section-11"> <p>In the bottom half, Wood walked with one out and Garcia homered with two down to give Washington the lead.</p> </section><section id="section-12"> <p>The Nationals added four in the fourth. With one out, C.J. Abrams walked and stole second. Keibert Ruiz hit a grounder that deflected off the bag and over the head of first baseman Freeman for an RBI-single. Jose Tena singled and Wood homered to left-center to make it 6-1.</p> </section><section id="section-13"> <p>In the Los Angeles sixth, Call doubled and Rushing hit his first homer of the season to pull the Dodgers within 6-3.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-14"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section> </div> #Deadspin #Dodgers #rally #Nationals #earn #sweep

Next post

Birthday Special: अभिनेता बनने से पहले अजय देवगन ने शुरू कर दिया था ये काम, फिर हुआ ऐसा कि…<p><img src="https://static.samacharjagatlive.com/newscdn/resources/uploads/ALL-NEWS/02042026/1775112537.jpg" width="600px" /> </p> <p><strong>इंटरनेट डेस्क।</strong> बॉलीवुड के जानेमाने अभिनेता-फिल्मकार अजय देवगन का आज जन्मदिन है। 57 वर्ष के हो चुके अजय देवगन का जन्म आज ही के दिन यानी 02 अप्रैल 1969 को दिल्ली में हुआ था। पिता वीरू देवगन हिंदी फिल्मों के नामी स्टंट मैन होने के कारण अजय देवगन की रुचि शुरू से ही फिल्मों की ओर हो गई। इसी कारण वह फिल्म निर्देशक बनने का सपना देखने लगे।</p> <p>स्नातक की पढ़ाई मुंबई के मिट्ठी भाई कॉलेज से पूरी करने के बाद अजय देवगन फिल्म निर्देशक शेखर कपूर के साथ सहायक निर्देशक के रूप में काम करने लगे। इसी दौरान कुक्कु कोहली ने फिल्म फूल और कांटे में नायक बनने की अजय देवगन से पेशकश की। जिसे उन्होंने स्वीकार कर लिया। उनकी पहली ही फिल्म सफल साबित हुई। इसके बाद उनकी छवि एक्शन हीरो के रूप में बन गई। इसके बाद उन्हेंएक्शन से भरपूर फिल्मों जिगर, दिव्य शक्ति, प्लेटफॉर्म, शक्तिमान और एक ही रास्ता जैसी फिल्में में काम करने मौका मिला।</p> <p><strong>अजय देवगन को इन दो फिल्मों के लिए मिला राष्ट्रीय पुरस्कार</strong></p> <p>वहीं महेश भटृ की फिल्म 'जख्म' में दमदार अभिनय के लिए उन्हें सर्वश्रेष्ठ अभिनेता का राष्ट्रीय पुरस्कार मिला। साल 1999 में संजय लीला भंसाली की फिल्म 'हम दिल दे चुके सनम' अजय देवगन के सिने कॅरियर की एक और महत्वपूर्ण फिल्म साबित हुई। इस फिल्म में दमदार अभिनय के लिए उन्हें फिल्म फेयर पुरस्कार के लिए नामांकित किया गया। वर्ष 2002 में अजय देवगन की फिल्म 'द लीजेंड ऑफ भगत सिंह' प्रदर्शित हुई। इस फिल्म के लिए भी उन्हें सर्वश्रेष्ठ अभिनेता के राष्ट्रीय पुरस्कार से सम्मानित किया गया। अजय देवगन को साल 2016 में पद्मश्री सम्मान से सम्मानित किया गया था।</p> <p>PC:ndtv</p>Birthday Special,Ajay Devgn, Hindi news, Bollywood news

In episode three of this series, I began a two-part exploration of the encounter between Toronto’s George Bell and Boston’s Bruce Kison on June 23rd, 1985. Having visited Kison side of things, we will now consider the life and times of George Bell.

In the late 1970s scouts all around major league baseball began descending upon the Dominican Republic, which had suddenly been identified as highly lucrative territory. The DR was home to countless talented young ball players and those ball players due to the country’s dire economic conditions were highly exploitable.

With the unemployment rate around 40% teams realized they could sign players for a lot less than American prospects asked for. And if those Dominican players did happen to get signed by a major league team, they were sent to the states socially isolated by the language barrier and dependent upon agents who were often crooked and looking to swindle ‘em all over again.

A cruel irony recalled by George Bell, one of those young Dominican players, was that while navigating this labyrinth of shameless exploitation, he was the one looked at with suspicion. American players found any reason they could to dislike him. His English wasn’t polished enough, he was too this, not enough that, didn’t play the game the right way.

In 1982, while playing for minor league Syracuse, Bell stepped in against Lynn McGlothen, an 11 year Major League vet pitching in AAA ball in the hopes of one last call up. In a game years earlier while pitching for the Cardinals, McGlothen beamed one New York Mets batter then brushed back another three innings later, then hit that batter too. The intent was so transparently clear that the Mets Dave Kingman charged the mound straight from the dugout.

McGlothen did not hesitate to throw at a batter if he had the inclination and he seemed to resent George Bell for the same superficial reasons everybody else did. Bell was a hotdogger. It was decided. McGlothen drilled him in the face, fracturing his cheek and jawbones. While his teammates stormed the field to exact revenge, Bell arrived on the ground certain that his career in baseball, his one chance at a better life was over.

“He’s dead,” Bell thought of McGlothen, not because Bell would kill him or because his teammates would, but because fate would one day catch up with him.

Two years later, McGlothen lost his life in a fire. His friend was also killed with everyone else escaping the home. Bell who’d fully recovered and made his way to the majors, addressed the tragedy sometime after seemingly unprompted. He expressed his sympathies for the friends and loved ones of those who died then said in McGlothen’s fate, “People like that decide it. They have a bad heart. No way they can stay alive.”

You might find those words to be callous, even cruel. I mean I do. Then again, I doubt either of us have persevered through the circumstances Bell did only for somebody to break his face and potentially ruin his life just for playing baseball with a little bit too much swagger.

Baseball was George Bell’s one and only chance at a better life, the sort of life we’d wish for anybody, and he was fiercely, sometimes even violently protective of that chance.

#HISTORY #CHARGING #MOUND #EPISODE #GEORGE #BELL">THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 4: GEORGE BELL  In episode three of this series, I began a two-part exploration of the encounter between Toronto’s George Bell and Boston’s Bruce Kison on June 23rd, 1985. Having visited Kison side of things, we will now consider the life and times of George Bell.In the late 1970s scouts all around major league baseball began descending upon the Dominican Republic, which had suddenly been identified as highly lucrative territory. The DR was home to countless talented young ball players and those ball players due to the country’s dire economic conditions were highly exploitable.With the unemployment rate around 40% teams realized they could sign players for a lot less than American prospects asked for. And if those Dominican players did happen to get signed by a major league team, they were sent to the states socially isolated by the language barrier and dependent upon agents who were often crooked and looking to swindle ‘em all over again.A cruel irony recalled by George Bell, one of those young Dominican players, was that while navigating this labyrinth of shameless exploitation, he was the one looked at with suspicion. American players found any reason they could to dislike him. His English wasn’t polished enough, he was too this, not enough that, didn’t play the game the right way.In 1982, while playing for minor league Syracuse, Bell stepped in against Lynn McGlothen, an 11 year Major League vet pitching in AAA ball in the hopes of one last call up. In a game years earlier while pitching for the Cardinals, McGlothen beamed one New York Mets batter then brushed back another three innings later, then hit that batter too. The intent was so transparently clear that the Mets Dave Kingman charged the mound straight from the dugout.McGlothen did not hesitate to throw at a batter if he had the inclination and he seemed to resent George Bell for the same superficial reasons everybody else did. Bell was a hotdogger. It was decided. McGlothen drilled him in the face, fracturing his cheek and jawbones. While his teammates stormed the field to exact revenge, Bell arrived on the ground certain that his career in baseball, his one chance at a better life was over.“He’s dead,” Bell thought of McGlothen, not because Bell would kill him or because his teammates would, but because fate would one day catch up with him.Two years later, McGlothen lost his life in a fire. His friend was also killed with everyone else escaping the home. Bell who’d fully recovered and made his way to the majors, addressed the tragedy sometime after seemingly unprompted. He expressed his sympathies for the friends and loved ones of those who died then said in McGlothen’s fate, “People like that decide it. They have a bad heart. No way they can stay alive.”You might find those words to be callous, even cruel. I mean I do. Then again, I doubt either of us have persevered through the circumstances Bell did only for somebody to break his face and potentially ruin his life just for playing baseball with a little bit too much swagger.Baseball was George Bell’s one and only chance at a better life, the sort of life we’d wish for anybody, and he was fiercely, sometimes even violently protective of that chance.  #HISTORY #CHARGING #MOUND #EPISODE #GEORGE #BELL

Post Comment