Michelsen vs Jódar at Roland Garros
Spanish tennis sensation Rafa Jódar, 21, faces American counterpart Alex Michelsen in what could be the most significant match of Jódar's burgeoning career. Jódar enters as the favorite based on his impressive Roland Garros performance, while Michelsen, despite reaching the fourth round at the 2025 Australian Open, has struggled during the current season. mieszalniakolorado.pl
The match features two of tennis's emerging talents, with Jódar's explosive form contrasting with Michelsen's inconsistent play. Both players represent the new generation of global tennis, but Jódar's recent rise has been particularly noteworthy as he seeks to advance further in the prestigious French Grand Slam tournament.
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French Open Day 6: Rublev Leads
At Roland Garros, Rublev dominated the latter stages of the first set against Borges, securing the break at 6-5 to serve for the set. The match featured fluctuating performances from both players, with Rublev's powerful forehands and serves proving crucial in key moments.
Day six also sees defending champion Iga Swiatek, Novak Djokovic, and Karolina Muchova competing for places in the later rounds of the tournament.
Ferrari to stay in WEC only if it can build entire car in-house under new regs
The WEC is working with various stakeholders on a new unified set of rules to replace the current split between LMDh and LMH formulas, with a possible introduction as early as 2030.
Ferrari joined Hypercar ...Keep reading
Nick Bosa on temporary use of grass for World Cup is "a little bizarre, but what can you expect?"
With the World Cup coming soon, multiple NFL stadiums have torn up their artificial turf and installed high-quality, FIFA-compliant grass pitches. Then, after the tournament ends, the grass will be removed and replaced with artificial turf again.
49ers defensive end Nick Bosa, whose team will play five 2026 games at stadiums that perform the turf to grass back to turf transformation, was asked about the decision to switch the surfaces at those venues to grass before putting the fake stuff back in.
"Yeah, it's a little bizarre," Bosa said, "but what can you expect?"
That says it all. It's all about money. It's cheaper to have turf for NFL games. And it's expensive, but necessary, to install grass in order to make the extra money that comes from hosting World Cup games.
The 49ers will play this year at Seattle (Week 5), at Atlanta (Week 7), at Dallas (Week 10), at the Giants (Week 13), and at the Chargers (Week 15). All five stadiums will have grass for the summer before returning to artificial turf.
In 2020, Bosa suffered a torn ACL on artificial turf at MetLife Stadium. (He tore the ACL in the other knee on grass in 2025.) And while the fact that he has torn an ACL on each surface will prompt some to say there's no difference, the difference between playing on grass and fake grass is obvious to anyone who does it — which is why 92 percent of players prefer grass.
