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Tiger Woods’ former girlfriend Lindsey Vonn was a surprise face in Jannik Sinner’s box during the US Open tennis final against Carlos Alcaraz on Sunday, sparking plenty of speculation among fans.

The American ski legend, who won Olympic gold in 2010 and is one of the most decorated skiers in history, was seated directly behind Sinner’s team at Flushing Meadows.

Vonn had a romantic relationship with golf legend Woods between 2013 and 2015.

7 Years After Their Split, Lindsey Vonn Confessed the 'Really Difficult' Part About Dating Tiger Woods: 'I Didn't Need to Share That' - EssentiallySports

JUST IN: ‘He’s Limited’: Why PGA Tour Pro Raises Alarming Concern on Tiger Woods’ Game Amid Comeback Rumors

After splitting with Vonn, the PGA Tour superstar got into a relationship with Erica Herman in 2017 only for that relationship to end five years later.

In 2022, Vonn openly spoke about her relationship with Woods during an interview with ET Online, making it clear she remains friends with him.

Woods then confirmed earlier this season he is now happily dating Vanessa Trump, the former wife of Donald Trump Jr.

Some reports surfaced over the summer that Woods is so in love right now that he is planning a proposal to Vanessa.

Woods has only been married once to Elin Nordegren between 2004 and 2010.

Nordegren had a hilarious reaction when finding out Woods was dating a Trump.

But back to the top of the story, and why Woods’ ex-girlfriend Vonn was sat in Sinner’s box during the 2025 US Open final on Sunday.

Despite recent social media rumours linking the Italian tennis ace with various models and celebrities, there is no suggestion Vonn and Sinner are romantically linked.

Sinner has never disclosed his girlfriend but he reportedly has a wallaper photo of Danish model Laila Hasanovic on his phone.

Vonn and Sinner are said to have bonded in recent years as a result of their skiing backgrounds.

Before choosing tennis, Sinner was an elite junior skier in northern Italy, and he and Vonn hit the slopes together in 2024.

Speaking to the ATP last year, Vonn explained why she felt such a connection with the Italian star:

“I always thought it was really special that he was a former ski racer and that’s obviously where we connected. He’s a pretty shy guy, but he’s really humble and always super kind.”

Vonn has also praised Sinner’s composure under pressure, comparing it to the fearlessness needed in skiing:

“If he’s under pressure and has to serve on match point, his perspective is that if he misses, nothing happens. It’s not like skiing, where one wrong turn can cause a crash. That fearlessness is something he uses to his advantage.”

She even drew comparisons with Roger Federer, saying Sinner is “a great athlete, very smart and someone who’s going to be around for a long time.”

Sinner went on to lose 3-1 to Spanish superstar Carlos Alcaraz, who clinched his second US Open title to move back to World No.1.

Alcaraz was followed closely en route to US Open glory by his good friend Sergio Garcia, who spoke exclusively to GolfMagic last week.

Garcia told us that he withdrew from last week’s Irish Open as a result of not making the European Ryder Cup team.

Garcia then told us later in the week that he played a golf match with Alcaraz before his semi-final at the US Open.

Alcaraz joined Garcia’s Fireballs GC teammate David Puig, while Garcia partnered Alcaraz’s tennis coach Juan Carlos Ferrero.

Puig and Alcaraz won the match 1up on the 18th green.

Rory McIlroy cancelled his wedding to former US Open finalist Caroline Wozniacki just days after sending out invitations. 

McIlroy had been in a relationship with the Danish tennis star for three years before brutally ending things via a phonecall in 2014.

The golfer, who is currently tied for third at the Irish Open, had popped the question to Wozniacki on New Year’s Eve in 2013. The duo were regarded as a sporting power couple, with McIlroy’s golfing triumphs matched by future Australian Open champion Wozniacki, who also made it to the 2009 and 2014 US Open finals. Yet as their big day got closer, McIlroy realised he wasn’t ready to marry Wozniacki. The Times reported that McIlroy had ended their engagement during a brief three-minute conversation, with the golfer later explaining what had triggered his abrupt change of mind.

Rory McIlroy defends brutal way he dumped ex Caroline Wozniacki with  'three-minute call' - The Mirror

READ: Charlie Woods undergoes drastic body transformation as son of gol

“There is no right way to end a relationship that has been so important to two people,” McIlroy said in May 2014, as per the Daily Mail. “The problem is mine.

“The wedding invitations issued at the weekend made me realise that I wasn’t ready for all that marriage entails. I wish Caroline all the happiness she deserves and thank her for the great times we’ve had. I will not be saying anything more about our relationship in any setting.”

Ahead of facing Williams in the 2014 US Open final, Wozniacki gave her version of events: “I was shocked. I thought at least it would be face to face or something but there was nothing. It was a phone call and I didn’t hear from him again,” she told the In Depth with Graham Bensinger show.

“It was very hard because he made it very public from the start. He put out a press release and all of that so it just got put in my face.”

In 2015, McIlroy started dating Erica Stoll, a PGA employee he had met during the 2012 Ryder Cup. The pair became engaged later that year and wed in a ceremony at Ashford Castle in County Mayo in 2017. They welcomed their daughter Poppy in 2020.

Looking back on his previous relationship with Wozniacki, McIlroy revealed why he felt they wouldn’t have been compatible long-term. “I thought at the time that being with someone that was in a similar position to you was the obvious answer,” he told the Irish Independent in 2017.

“But it isn’t, because you can never get away from it. You can never detach yourself and try to come back to the real world.”

The split ultimately proved beneficial for both sporting legends. Wozniacki is now married to former NBA star David Lee, having wed in 2019, and they share three children together.

Last year, McIlroy and Stoll filed for divorce. However, they reconciled in June 2024, with McIlroy telling The Guardian: “Over the past weeks, Erica and I have realised that our best future was as a family together. Thankfully, we have resolved our differences and look forward to a new beginning.”

This year, McIlroy celebrated a career Grand Slam after finally clinching the Masters in April, an event Wozniacki also attended. After initially struggling post-victory, the 36-year-old has shown signs of a return to form at the Irish Open.

On Friday, McIlroy scored six-under-par at the K Club, putting him in contention on seven-under. The Masters champion is currently trailing five shots behind leader Joakim Lagergren, with two rounds left in County Kildare.

Meanwhile, Wozniacki will likely be watching the US Open finals this weekend. Reigning champion Aryna Sabalenka is set to face American Amanda Anisimova for the women’s title tonight, while Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner will vie for the men’s championship on Sunday.

Novak Djokovic will reportedly flee to Greece in his retirement after a falling out with the Serbian government.

The 24-time Grand Slam winner’s father, Srdjan, revealed last year that Djokovic was initially planning on living in Belgrade when he finally calls time on an incredible tennis career.

That’s despite Djokovic owning luxury properties in New York, Monaco and Marbella. Srdjan claimed: “When Novak finishes his tennis career, he will live in his city, Belgrade, his country Serbia. I think there is no greater satisfaction, pride and success than your child spreading the glory of his people and his country all over the world.”

Novak Djokovic Says He Has an 'Up and Down' Relationship with Federer and  Nadal

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Djokovic secured a three-bedroom penthouse in New Belgrade in 2018 for a modest $685,000, which overlooks the scenic Lake Pavlova. However, it now appears as though the 38-year-old may opt to relocate to Greece in his retirement after a reported fall-out with the Serbian government. It comes after John McEnroe praised Djokovic’s response to exiting the US Open.

The tennis great has received a wealth of criticism as a result of supporting student-led protests against Serbian president Aleksandar Vucic in December. The protests came about after the collapse of a railway station in Novi Sad a month prior, in which, 16 people tragically lost their lives.

Writing on social media in support of the demonstrations, Djokovic said: “As someone who deeply believes in the power of youth and their desire for a better future, I believe it’s important that their voices are heard. Serbia has enormous potential, and its educated youth is its greatest strength. What we all need is understanding and respect. With you, Novak.”

While Djokovic has not explicitly spoken out against Vucic or the administration, reports from German newspaper NZZ suggest that his actions have led to the Serbian government “setting their sights” on him, while also accusing him of “fleeing to Greece.”

It comes amid claims that Djokovic is considering moving his family to Greece through a Golden Visa programme, with the tennis ace meeting with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis twice as of late. But Djokovic himself has downplayed any confirmation of a permanent move to the country coming to fruition.

Speaking at Wimbledon this summer, Djokovic said: “Obviously, there’s a lot of speculation, but no, at the moment. But who knows what could happen in the future. Yeah, it could happen.”

Meanwhile, Vucic has insisted that there is no ill will toward Djokovic, despite his support of last year’s protests. He told Informer: “I will never say a bad word against him. He can support my opponents, but to say anything bad about him. I never will. It would be bad, stupid. We will defeat that policy in the elections, but I will always cheer for him with all my heart.”

It comes as Djokovic crashed out of the US Open in the semi-finals on Friday at the hands of ATP No. 2, Carlos Alcaraz. While the Serbian has won four of his 24 total Grand Slams stateside, his Spanish opponent proved too hot to handle by emerging victorious in a 6-4 7-6 6-2 clinic.

Sunday’s final was an instant classic between the Spaniard and world No. 1, Jannik Sinner, with Alcaraz clinching the sixth major title of his own career after beating the Italian 6-2 3-6 6-1 6-4.

Taylor Townsend savored a career-defining US Open campaign, advancing to the second week of singles competition and claiming the doubles runner-up spot alongside Katerina Siniakova.

The world No. 1 doubles player shut down critics following a heated exchange with former French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko, who accused Townsend of having “no class” and “no education” after their second-round battle.

The journey to the top has been challenging for Townsend, who endured body-shaming from the USTA during her junior years before stepping away from tennis temporarily to welcome her first child, son Adyn Aubrey, in 2021. The American tennis sensation has now disclosed that Serena Williams became an unexpected source of support during her pregnancy, despite the pair not being close friends.

Not How This S**T Works' – Taylor Townsend's Aim to Emulate Serena Williams'  Tennis Mom Transformation Comes With a Heavy Price - EssentiallySports

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The two-time doubles Grand Slam winner shared with The Pivot Podcast, “I got the closest with Serena when I was pregnant.

“I went over to her house and she put a whole Amazon list together for me of all the things that I needed to get for the baby, and like those times were, that was the most conversation I had ever had with her.”

However, Townsend, who battled Williams across both singles and doubles courts during her career, acknowledges that their competitive relationship prevented a genuine friendship from developing.

“It’s honestly surreal for me. It was really cool, especially being able to experience that here. Venus and Serena, you know, I’ve looked up to them for years,” she explained.

“But even for so many years on tour, it was never like a friendship. It was, ‘I’m out here and you’re another piece of competition. If I got to take you, I gotta take you out’.

“There’s an aura where it’s like, when we in this arena, we ain’t friends with buddies, and it’s no faking the funk, you know what I’m saying.”

Townsend has also battled Venus Williams twice during recent weeks. The 45-year-old staged a triumphant comeback in Washington this past July, advancing to the second round in both singles and doubles competition.

Venus teamed up with Hailey Baptiste in doubles, where they fell to eventual champions Townsend and Zhang Shuai. Subsequently, at the recent US Open, top seeds Townsend and Katerina Siniakova defeated Venus and Leylah Fernandez in the quarter-finals.

The elder Williams sister also openly expressed her backing for Townsend following her clash with Ostapenko.

“My thoughts about it? It was a lot of drama. It was a lot of drama. I thought Taylor handled it amazing. I really did,” she said.

“I just thought with her as a mom, how she handled it, her son will be watching. Her son is watching. She handled it with class, a situation that was not so classy. Just moved on and won again.

“So she’s handling it amazing. I’m rooting for her. She’s a wonderful person, a great mum. I hope she can keep going.”

American President Donald Trump was a high-profile attendee at the US Open final between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner and his presence caused chaos amid a huge increase in security.

After it was confirmed that Trump would attend the men’s final in New York, USTA officials were forced to embark on a huge security operation to ensure the President was secure as he sat in his box inside a sell-out crowd on Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Trump was the subject of an assassination attempt during his Presidential run last year, with his divisive leadership style ensuring his appearance at major events with huge crowds in attendance represents a major security risk.

President Trump's U.S. Open visit sparks boos and long security lines |  Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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The advance notice that he would be attending heightened the threat level and it explained why thousands of fans were stuck outside the stadium and missed the start of the scintillating final between Alcaraz and Sinner.

A decision was made to delay the start time of the US Open final, with the biggest stadium in world tennis forced to embark on a huge security operation that ensured everyone needed to have their belongings and person checked and checked again before they were allowed to take their seats.

“As a result of the security measures in place, and to ensure that fans have additional time to get to their seats, we have pushed the start time,” US Open organisers said in a statement.

Martina Navratilova, the 18-time Grand Slam champion, expressed sympathy for those stranded outside, with a reference to Trump.

“Let’s spare a thought for the thousands of people waiting outside in the drizzle – it’s been raining on and off – and they’ve paid thousands of dollars for these tickets,” Navratilova said on Sky Sports.

“It’s not that he’s coming, that’s the problem, it’s that they only made one entrance for the whole crowd.”

Rock legend Bruce Springsteen, who has been an outspoken critic of Trump, was among a star-studded audience who watched Alcaraz get the better of Sinner.

Courteney Cox, Sting, Shaggy, Jessica Alba and golfing great Sergio Garcia were also in attendance for a contest that saw Alcaraz win his second US Open title and reclaim the world No 1 ranking from Sinner.

Trump waved to fans as he entered the arena and proudly stood as a member of the US military sang the national anthem.

TV cameras on the global feed did not show too many shots of Trump and his entourage during the match, as he was joined in his box by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, Attorney General Pam Bondi and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, among others.

Serena Williams’s GLP-1 partnership marks a disturbing cultural turning point

Weight-loss drugs have their first global ambassador: Serena Williams. The tennis great has signed on as the face of Ro, a telehealth company prescribing GLP-1 weight loss drugs, and where her husband, Alexis Ohanian, is a board member.

Announcing the partnership, she told Women’s Health: “I am a very good use case of how you can do everything – eat healthy, work out to the point of even playing a professional sport and getting to the finals of Wimbledon and US Opens – and still not be able to lose weight.”

That quote stopped me in my tracks. This is a woman who has spent decades redefining what female strength looks like: powerful, muscular and unapologetic. A 23-time grand slam winner. And yet, she frames her body as having failed her – not because it couldn’t dominate world sport or bear children or inspire millions, but because it wouldn’t shrink on demand. It is a brutal reminder that even the most accomplished women remain trapped by society’s obsession with thinness.

Serena Williams

READ: WATCH: Venus Williams has special message for Serena after reac

Here’s something else I can’t shake about her statement: if even at this point, after years of peak training, discipline and sacrifice, Serena “couldn’t” lose weight, maybe that’s because she wasn’t supposed to. Maybe that was simply her body operating as and where it was meant to. The idea that natural biology is a problem to be solved is precisely what keeps us all – and let’s be honest, mainly women – stuck in relentless cycles of correction.

Serena won’t be the last celebrity to front a weight-loss drug campaign, but she is the first of her magnitude to do so. With 18.2 million followers on Instagram alone and a global reputation as one of the most successful athletes of all time, her influence is seismic. To see her now enlisted to normalise and promote medical weight-loss drugs, complete with a glossy photoshoot showing her injecting the jab into several places in her body, feels like a cultural turning point.

The sight of Serena, whose body has long symbolised defiance of narrow beauty ideals, promoting weight-loss injections compelled me to speak out in a recent video. The video resonated: so many people messaged me with concerns, confusion, even despair – what does this mean for progress? But it also drew criticism. Serena is a Black woman, and I can never fully understand the scale of misogynoir – the specific blend of racism and sexism – that she has endured in her career. Some argued that her decision to front this campaign must be understood within the context of a lifetime spent under the uniquely harsh scrutiny of her body.

This context matters immensely. The pressures Serena has faced are both universal to women and uniquely intensified by racism. Yet acknowledging this complexity doesn’t negate the broader cultural implications of her new role.

The rise of GLP-1 drugs has been meteoric and astonishing. Originally designed for diabetes care, they are now prescribed at scale for weight loss. And society celebrates them, because thinness is seen as universally desirable, something we should all pursue at any cost. So while individual choice and bodily autonomy must always be respected, we also need to be clear: these medications are drugs, not beauty aids or lifestyle accessories. They carry risks, have often serious side effects, and their long-term safety in non-diabetic populations isn’t fully known. Clinical evidence suggests that without addressing a user’s underlying relationship with food and body image, these medications may actually intensify preoccupation with weight and eating.

This unfolds against a backdrop that once seemed hopeful. For a while, it felt as though the tide was turning when it came to beauty standards: fashion campaigns featured bigger bodies, the media embraced body diversity, and conversations about self-worth and liberation from diet culture were breaking into the mainstream. But the pendulum has swung back with force: restriction is in and thinness is once again being loudly celebrated – except this time, it’s being sold through syringes.

The risk is clear: older generations who carry the scars of diet culture are being pulled back into old patterns, while younger generations are watching their idols casually endorse injections to stay slim. They may be savvier, more outspoken about mental health, and more prone to critical thinking than their elders, but they are also vulnerable to these cultural pressures.

So what can we do? We can protect our body image fiercely while questioning the messaging that surrounds us and remember that health, worth and beauty are not synonyms for thinness. Most critically, we must teach the next generation that their bodies are not lifelong correction projects.

Serena Williams is a sporting legend and always will be. But this partnership points to something alarming: a future where medical weight-loss drugs are marketed as casually as makeup and where thinness is no longer an aspiration but an expectation, enforced by a prescription. We have to resist that future. We have to protect ourselves and the next generation from a culture that reduces our worth to our body size and sells weight loss as the ultimate goal.

Serena Williams faces backlash after admitting to weight-loss drug use

Serena Williams has found herself at the center of a heated debate after openly revealing that she turned to weight-loss medication to shed more than 30 pounds.

The 43-year-old tennis icon, who has inspired millions with her dominance on the court, faced immediate criticism online after announcing her new partnership with GLP-1 medicine company Ro.

On Thursday, the brand shared a joint Instagram post showing Williams injecting herself with the weekly treatment. In the video, the 23-time Grand Slam champion explained that the medicine was something her body “needed” following the birth of her two daughters.

Fans slam Serena Williams for pushing 'dangerous' agenda with weight-loss  medication admission: 'Very disappointing'

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Her candid admission, however, drew sharp backlash. Many fans argued that Williams’ endorsement could set a harmful precedent, particularly for young athletes and women struggling with body image.

One commenter wrote, “As an athlete and an influencer, it’s a shame that you’re reiterating the narrative that you need to take medication to be healthy and achieve an acceptable standard of beauty. This video made me really sad and disappointed.” Another added, “‘After kids this is the medicine my body needed.’ Needed? Fantastic, now we can undo all the progression we made on letting women know it’s ok to take time, recover and get back in shape or not to.”

A divisive moment for an inspirational figure

For decades, Williamshas been celebrated for her strength, resilience, and groundbreaking achievements in a sport that has not always been welcoming to women of color. That legacy, critics argue, makes her decision to promote weight-loss injections especially fraught.

“The messaging here is so wrong coming from an athlete like her and very dangerous for society,” one fan commented, while another said, “You can put whatever you want in your body but let’s not call it healthcare! This is so disturbing to me coming from a former elite athlete.”

A fifth person went further, calling it a “terrible message to our youth,” particularly young female athletes who may view Williams as a role model.

Despite the criticism, Williams insists she made the decision for her own health and wellbeing. Speaking to People earlier this week, she said, “I feel great. I feel really good and healthy. I feel light physically and light mentally.”

The four-time Olympic gold medalist revealed that her weight struggles began in 2017 after delivering her eldest daughter, Alexis Olympia, via emergency C-section.

“I never was able to get to the weight I needed to be, no matter what I did, no matter how much I trained,” she admitted. “It was crazy because I’d never been in a place like that in my life where I worked so hard, ate so healthy and could never get down to where I needed to be at.”

Williams said she researched Ro extensively before beginning treatment six months after the birth of her second daughter, Adira, in August 2023.

While her openness has sparked outrage in some circles, it has also fueled broader conversations about postpartum health, the pressures of body image, and the increasing normalization of celebrity endorsements for weight-loss medications.

Whether fans view her choice as empowering honesty or a harmful example, Williams’ revelation underscores the complex intersection of sports, wellness, and cultural expectations around women’s bodies.