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Nadal wants extra practice before finals

- Associated Press

AUTO RACING: Defending Indy Grand Prix of Alabama champion Josef Newgarden will start from the pole in Birmingham, Ala. Newgarden edged fellow Team Penske driver Will Power in the final qualifying lap Saturday.

BOXING: Former world champion Amir Khan (32-4, 20 KOs) won his first fight in two years by stopping Phil Lo Greco (28-4) in 39 seconds in Liverpool, England. Khan sent Lo Greco to the canvas inside 30 seconds in the catch weight super welterweig­ht bout. Moments later, he pinned the Canadian against the ropes and forced the stoppage. Khan hadn’t fought since he went up two weights and was knocked out by Saul “Canelo” Alvarez in May 2016. He held the WBA super lightweigh­t title from 2009-12. Lo Greco was knocked out for only the second time in his career. He and Khan fought at a catch weight super welterweig­ht.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Memphis forward Karim Sameh Azab announced on Twitter that he has been diagnosed with cancer and has started treatment. “I found out a few weeks ago that I had developed leukemia lymphoma,” Azab wrote. Azab is a 6-foot-10, 270-pound sophomore from Giza, Egypt, who played 15 games last season coming off the bench.

FOOTBALL:

Amnesty

Internatio­nal

gave former NFL quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick its Ambassador of Conscience Award for his kneeling protest of racial injustice that launched a sports movement and might have cost him his job. Onetime 49ers teammate Eric Reid presented Kaepernick with the award during a ceremony in Amsterdam. In his acceptance speech, the award-winner described police killings of African Americans and Latinos in the United States as lawful lynchings. “Racialized oppression and dehumaniza­tion is woven into the very fabric of our nation — the effects of which can be seen in the lawful lynching of black and brown people by the police, and the mass incarcerat­ion of black and brown lives in the prison industrial complex,” Kaepernick said.

SOCCER: A third cup final with Manchester United for Jose Mourinho, more FA Cup semifinal misery for Tottenham. A 2-1 collapse to United at Wembley Stadium left Tottenham reeling from an eighth successive loss in the FA Cup semifinals. “We can’t keep doing this,” Tottenham midfielder Dele Alli said. “We can’t throw it away. We have got to improve.” ... Andres Iniesta scored as Barcelona crushed Sevilla 5-0 in the Copa del Rey final, and became the first team in 85 years to win four straight Copa titles . ... After losing the French title last weekend, Monaco is in danger of throwing away second place after losing at Guingamp 3-1.

MONACO Rafael Nadal’s priority after reaching his 12th Monte Carlo Masters final was to whip out his phone and franticall­y text coach Carlos Moya.

Despite a comfortabl­e 6-4, 6-1 win against No. 5-ranked Grigor Dimitrov, he had a pressing concern given how quickly he was texting.

What frantic emergency could command such attention?

“I was texting Carlos to tell him that we need to book a court quick,” Nadal said. “I wanted to hit some forehands winners that I think I need for tomorrow.”

So the top-ranked Nadal, a 10-time French Open champion with 75 career titles, hurried to another clay court just for forehand practice ahead of today’s final against Kei Nishikori, an opponent he has beaten nine times out of 11.

While it may seem absurd, it is a reminder of the relentless perfection­ist Nadal is even on his best surface.

No matter that he has not dropped a set in six matches since coming back from a recurrence of a right hip injury; he is more focused on ironing out even the smallest of flaws.

Even though he crushed Dimitrov, as he had Dominic Thiem in the quarterfin­als on Friday, Nadal was not satisfied.

“I really had a lot of chances in the first set to have (a) little bit better score. I didn’t convert (them),” he said. “The only way to hold the level, and to hold the chances to keep winning after 10, 12 years, is to improve things.”

He remains on course for a record-extending 11th Monte Carlo title and record 31st Masters. He shares the Masters record with Novak Djokovic, whose 30 wins include two here.

Nishikori, who is making an encouragin­g return from a serious right-wrist injury, beat No. 4 Alexander Zverev 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.

“It’s getting there,” said Nishikori, who has missed the past two majors because of a torn tendon. “Little bit sore still.”

Nishikori won on his first match point when Zverev scooped a backhand wide. The German player looked jaded, having finished a long and grueling quarterfin­al at 9 p.m. on Friday.

Nishikori has never won a Masters and last reached a final two years ago in Montreal. He beat Nadal in their last encounter two years ago to take the bronze medal at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

He knows it will be a different challenge toppling him in Monte Carlo.

“He’s been dominating crazy this week,” Nishikori said. “On clay he’s the king.”

Nadal never looked imperious as he beat Dimitrov for the 11th time in 12 career meetings.

“In the second set, he started to miss more,” Nadal said modestly. “I was there solid. That’s all.

“Being in 12 finals already here is something difficult to imagine,” added Nadal, who has lost only one, to Djokovic in 2013.

Dimitrov came out firing, but he was mostly more Rafael Nadal miss than hit.

The Bulgarian cracked trying to serve for 5-5. He made consecutiv­e double faults and hit a wild forehand long to trail 15-40. He saved one set point but Nadal was in ruthless mode and took the next chance.

Two consecutiv­e love breaks and three easy holds made it 5-0 to Nadal in the second set.

Nadal’s victory at Monte Carlo last year made him the first men’s tennis player in the Open era to win the same title 10 times. He then won a 10th title at Barcelona and at Roland Garros.

Kristina Mladenovic rallied to beat CoCo Vandeweghe 1-6, 6-3, 6-2 and draw France level with defending champion United States in their Fed Cup semifinal on Saturday in Aix-en-Provence, France.

The 20th-ranked Mladenovic dropped serve five times but broke No. 16 Vandeweghe’s serve six times.

Earlier, U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens struggled to put away Pauline Parmentier 7-6 (3), 7-5 at the 6,700-capacity Arena Pays d’Aix on indoor clay.

Stephens saved five set points serving at 5-4 down in the first set, and rallied from 4-3 and a break down in the second set against Parmentier.

Both players made more than 50 unforced errors each in the scrappy 2

match, conceding 25 break-point chances between them.

Stephens converted four of her 11 break chances, while Parmentier took only three of her 14 chances.

The reverse singles are on Sunday, followed by a doubles featuring Mladenovic and Amandine Hesse against Madison Keys and Bethanie Mattek-Sands.

The Americans hold an 11-2 winning record against the French, who won their most recent tie in 2014.

In the other semifinal, Germany trails the Czech Republic 2-0 in Stuttgart.

Belgium is firmly in control of its Fed Cup World Group playoff against Italy after Elise Mertens and Alison van Uytvanck gave it a 2-0 lead in Genoa on Saturday.

Mertens eased past Jasmine Paolini 6-1, 7-5. Paolini, who had never faced a top-20 player before, gained confidence as the match wore on and Mertens had to save a set point.

It was more difficult for Van Uytvanck in the second singles rubber, but she prevailed against Sara Errani 6-4, 6-7 (6), 6-2.

Errani struggled with her serve, hitting 17 double faults to Van Uytvanck’s four, and at one point was given a time violation warning from the umpire after catching three service tosses in succession.

Errani managed to stave off match point to take the second set but Van Uytvanck ultimately clinched her 12th Fed Cup singles victory in her past 13 matches.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP ?? Key Nishikori returns the ball to Alexander Zverev during their semifinal singles match on Saturday.
CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP Key Nishikori returns the ball to Alexander Zverev during their semifinal singles match on Saturday.

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