The Non-Footy Sports Discussion Thread

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Geez Liverpool are an impressive unit this season. Just been on another level for the first half of the season. That performance against the Spurs was such a good watch.
Spurs tried to play like Liverpool against Liverpool with a bare bones squad and got spanked as expected. Unfortunately I think Ange is being found out thinking his no plan B, C, D or E style of coaching doesn’t matter against the big boys. Nothing wrong with staying in the game for as long as possible against the best team in it and then trying to sneak it late on. Our players were laughing and taking the piss by the end. Still a long way to go but only Liverpool can screw it up from here just like only Liverpool can come back from 3-0 down against Barcelona..
 

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Piss poor.

A doping shadow hangs over the start of tennis’ grand slam season at the Australian Open, with two of the sport’s biggest stars embroiled in a complicated saga that isn’t over yet.

The two players who spent most of the year at world No.1, Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek, both tested positive to a banned substance during the 2024 season - yet both will still be in action at Melbourne Park on Monday.

Swiatek missed a month of tennis, with the International Tennis Integrity Agency accepting she had unintentionally consumed the banned substance trimetazidine (a heart medication) through contaminated sleep assistant melatonin. Her case, while sparking some concern over its initial secrecy, is effectively no longer up for debate.

It’s Sinner, the reigning Australian Open champion, who we really need to talk about. (And who Nick Kyrgios really wants us to talk about.)

Sinner didn’t miss any tennis, though his semi-final result at the Indian Wells event last year was scrapped, and he was technically suspended twice - for a total of four days, both times in-between events.

This is because he tested positive twice; once during Indian Wells on March 10, and once just before the Miami Open on March 18, which he went on to win. He appealed both provisional bans quickly.

On both occasions trace amounts of a metabolite of clostebol, an anabolic steroid which mimics testosterone, were found in the Italian’s system.
In August, he was cleared of wrongdoing - and the tennis world was shocked to learn of his months-long saga (which had been kept quiet).

Sinner successfully argued he bore “no fault or negligence” for the trace amounts of the substance, which is found in many Italian over-the-counter drugs (and has been found in a number of Italian athletes’ systems in recent years).
 
Piss poor.

A doping shadow hangs over the start of tennis’ grand slam season at the Australian Open, with two of the sport’s biggest stars embroiled in a complicated saga that isn’t over yet.

The two players who spent most of the year at world No.1, Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek, both tested positive to a banned substance during the 2024 season - yet both will still be in action at Melbourne Park on Monday.

Swiatek missed a month of tennis, with the International Tennis Integrity Agency accepting she had unintentionally consumed the banned substance trimetazidine (a heart medication) through contaminated sleep assistant melatonin. Her case, while sparking some concern over its initial secrecy, is effectively no longer up for debate.

It’s Sinner, the reigning Australian Open champion, who we really need to talk about. (And who Nick Kyrgios really wants us to talk about.)

Sinner didn’t miss any tennis, though his semi-final result at the Indian Wells event last year was scrapped, and he was technically suspended twice - for a total of four days, both times in-between events.

This is because he tested positive twice; once during Indian Wells on March 10, and once just before the Miami Open on March 18, which he went on to win. He appealed both provisional bans quickly.

On both occasions trace amounts of a metabolite of clostebol, an anabolic steroid which mimics testosterone, were found in the Italian’s system.
In August, he was cleared of wrongdoing - and the tennis world was shocked to learn of his months-long saga (which had been kept quiet).

Sinner successfully argued he bore “no fault or negligence” for the trace amounts of the substance, which is found in many Italian over-the-counter drugs (and has been found in a number of Italian athletes’ systems in recent years).
Sinner considering joining * as a cat B.
 

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