
I Dig Sports
Edwards up to $285K in fines after latest dock

The NBA fined Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards $50,000 on Monday for "making obscene gestures toward a game official."
It marks the fifth time this season that Edwards has been fined, totaling $285,000.
This latest incident occurred Saturday during the second quarter of Minnesota's 127-125 loss to the visiting Memphis Grizzlies.
Edwards previously cost himself $35,000 when he made an obscene gesture on the court during Minnesota's road win over Sacramento on Nov. 15.
The two-time All-Star and 2023-24 All-NBA selection then was fined three times during December.
He lost $25,000 for using profane language during a postgame interview after the Timberwolves won at Golden State; $75,000 two weeks later when he used profanity while criticizing the officiating from a home loss to the Warriors; and $100,000 for more profanity in an interview Dec. 27 after Minnesota beat Houston.
Edwards, 23, is averaging 25.4 points, 5.7 rebounds and 4.2 assists per game this season.
How last season's indefinite suspension created 'a nicer Draymond'

FOR THE THIRD time in as many matchups this season, Draymond Green found himself tangled up with Memphis Grizzlies center Zach Edey. Edey gave Green a nudge to the back to win an offensive rebound during a Jan. 4 game, and Green wanted to make sure the rookie wasn't rewarded with an easy putback.
Green delivered a hard foul to Edey's right arm before wrapping the Memphis big man with both arms, something the 7-foot-4 rookie took exception to, shoving Green off of him.
The referees handed Green his second flagrant foul of the season on Edey -- the first was upgraded to a flagrant following review for locking his arm around Edey's ankle and tripping him in a 123-115 Warriors win Nov. 15.
Barely 30 seconds after getting tangled with Edey in January, Green was tagged with a technical foul for screaming "boom!" in an official's direction as he headed back down the court following a made 3.
Green was incredulous, but didn't lose his temper. He kept his cool even as Jaren Jackson Jr. scored 19 of his 23 points in the second half against the Warriors and their proud defensive leader.
"Draymond did a great job of staying poised when Jackson was scoring," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said after the 121-113 win. "That's frustrating for Draymond. He takes that very personally, and the fact that he kept his composure; yeah, he picked up the flagrant, [but] I thought it was a questionable call. The tech, he didn't cuss or anything.
"He was emotional. But he kept it on the right side of the line, and that was an important part of the win."
Green crossed that line too many times last season, leading to a five-game suspension for his chokehold on Rudy Gobert and then, perhaps the low point of his career, an indefinite suspension for striking Jusuf Nurkic in the face that ended up costing him 12 games.
Green's career was in the balance, and he wasn't sure how much longer he wanted to keep this fight up with opponents, referees, the league and his emotions.
Green had a newborn daughter, Hunter, and he didn't want his young children to see him losing control like he did with Gobert and Nurkic. He felt as if he was inching closer to retirement when he had one of the most important conversations of his life with NBA commissioner Adam Silver.
"I told him I don't want to do this anymore," Green told ESPN. "This doesn't serve me anymore.
"It wasn't that I was contemplating to do it right then. But I was [thinking] I probably got a year left and I'm done."
But it was during his indefinite suspension that Green began to feel he was making strides. He credits therapy and something Silver and the NBA required him to do -- attend routine NBA-led check-in Zoom sessions with a seven-person panel to ensure he was participating regularly in counseling/therapy sessions -- with helping him grow into a "totally different" player and person. It has helped the Warriors' emotional leader navigate his way through a frustrating Golden State slump the past seven weeks.
"He's always been so passionate," Kerr told ESPN. "And when he goes wrong and his passion gets away from him, it turns into anger. ... He's in a good place family-wise; he's a great dad. He loves his kids. He recognized last year how much his actions impacted his young kids. He doesn't want his kids seeing him in that light. And it's easy for everybody on the outside to say, well then don't do that stuff.
"But he is a force of nature and as competitive as any person I've ever seen. His game lives on the edge of passion and rage, and he has to find that balance. And he's found it this year."
For Green, it was simpler.
"The bulls--- had taken over the love; the drive was gone," Green told ESPN. "And so bulls--- taking over just led me down a bulls--- path. And it just led to more bulls---."
GREEN WAS IN the Footprint Center for a Warriors game against the Suns on Dec. 12, 2023. But mentally, Green was anywhere but downtown Phoenix.
As Brandin Podziemski looked to inbound the ball with 8:23 remaining in the third quarter, Green went to establish position on Nurkic near the Warriors' sideline. Green said Nurkic was pinching his right side and as he tried to free himself from Nurkic, Green spun and flailed his right arm, striking the Suns big man in the face.
Green was ejected for the third time that season for a flagrant foul 2. Nearly a month earlier, Green had been suspended for five games -- but this time, the punishment would be far more severe. The NBA suspended Green indefinitely for his "repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts."
"On that night, I wasn't even at that game," Green told ESPN. "I didn't want to be there. I didn't feel like I was there. My body was there. My mind was not at all. My emotions were not at all. I was not there.
"I was there because I had to be there. I had zero interest in the game, in being on the floor. I was just there."
The indefinite suspension was the sixth career suspension Green had received from the league. There was the five-game ban for his headlock around Gobert's head and neck, a one-game suspension in the 2023 playoffs for stomping on Domantas Sabonis' chest during a first-round game in Sacramento, and the costly suspension during the 2016 Finals for accumulating too many flagrant fouls after he took exception to LeBron James stepping over him and flung his arm up into James' groin during Game 4. Green also has the most ejections (20) of any player over the past 25 seasons, according to ESPN Research.
Then there was the incident he wasn't suspended for. During a preseason practice ahead of the 2022-23 season, Green punched teammate Jordan Poole. He was fined by the team and voluntarily left the team for a stretch but did not miss any games or face any discipline from the league.
While Green called the Poole punch one of his "biggest failures as a vet" on Penny Hardaway's podcast, it wasn't until sometime after the Gobert incident that he began to wonder what he was doing.
"The reality is there's a time for everything," Green said. "So I can still be me and can still mix it up with people, but there's a time to get close to that line. There's even a time to cross the line. But you can't teeter it all the f---ing time. And I was just teetering it all the f---ing time.
"And that just becomes distasteful."
AS GREEN LOGGED into the first NBA Zoom check-in mandated by Silver, he saw seven faces staring back at him.
To ensure that Green was being held accountable and going through with counseling during his suspension, Silver set up a group that was dubbed "The DG check-in calls." The NBA's Kathy Behrens, president of social responsibility and player programs, and David Weiss, executive vice president of operations and administration, represented the league. The Warriors had general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr.; Rick Celebrini, VP of player health and performance; and David Kelly, chief legal officer, on the calls. Chrysa Chin, the National Basketball Players Association's executive vice president of strategy relations, also joined Green's agent, Rich Paul, on the Zoom check-ins.
Memphis' Ja Morant was required to participate in similar calls when he was serving a 25-game suspension to start the 2023-24 season because of conduct detrimental to the league. While Green saw familiar and friendly faces, he admitted he went into the first two calls feeling as if he were standing in front of a tribunal with little interest in participating.
"I think he was mad. He plays with a chip on his shoulder and an edge. And I think he came to the calls initially with that chip and that edge," Behrens, who ran the meetings, told ESPN. "I think he was pissed maybe at himself, maybe pissed at us, pissed at the situation."
There were about a dozen calls in total. They initially took place twice a week. If Green tried to do a call while driving in his car, Behrens made him pull over, and his camera always had to be on.
"We were clear with him that there had to be discipline," Behrens said. "But we also made it clear that we didn't just want it to be about punishment and we'll see you in 10 games, 12 games or 14 games. It was, for all of us, let's make sure that you're getting the help you need and that you feel both the accountability and the support from the systems that are around all players."
It all changed for Green on the third call. He started talking more. And when he began sharing experiences or what was on his mind, the others chimed in with their own personal experiences. Green began to see the calls not as a weekly check-in with authority but rather a healthy weekly discussion with seven of the most successful people in their respective fields.
"The last thing you want is to walk in this meeting saying, 'I f---ed up on blah, blah, blah,'" Green said. "You want to walk into this meeting in a sense unscathed. 'Here's what I've been up to.'
"What I end up finding with these meetings is it's like an accountability panel, but it was also a therapy session because you start to talk about some of the things that I went through with my therapist."
Green was back on the court in Memphis on Jan. 15, 2024, just over a month after he was suspended. By All-Star Weekend, Green had played in 14 consecutive games. At that point, the check-ins went from two a week to once a month. The NBA and Green's panel felt as if the check-ins were no longer needed after he went through half a dozen and showed progress.
"We wanted Draymond to address what he identified as underlying issues surrounding his conduct on the court," Silver told ESPN. "He committed wholeheartedly to that work, including counseling and regular check-ins with the league office and the players' association, which continued long after he was reinstated."
Green wouldn't accept the check-ins coming to an end. He told everyone he wanted to continue the sessions. They've met six more times since last All-Star Weekend, the last coming in October before the season started.
"These meetings became so therapeutic for me," Green said. "It's helping me, and I f---ing love it. My plan is to do these meetings for the rest of my career because they're incredible."
Green knows the NBA check-ins, though, were not true therapy sessions. He sees professionals for that.
Green said he started therapy two years ago -- because he "was dealing with something really f---ing heavy" -- and called it one of the hardest things he had to do. He said it took him years to finally sit down with a therapist because he was "f---ing scared s---less."
"Starting therapy was f---ing hard," Green said. "Because I'm from Saginaw, Michigan. I'm from an all-Black neighborhood that you don't go to therapy or you're f---ing weak. So you're retraining a brain that's been thinking a certain way for 30 years.
"The last thing you do growing up on the north side of Saginaw is [something that is perceived as] weak."
He currently has two therapists, as well as a sports psychologist. He wasn't seeing them "actively" before the indefinite suspension, but he tries to see at least one each month even when the schedule is hectic. There are times when Green gets two sessions in a week.
The Warriors star knows what people are envisioning when he talks about seeing a psychologist -- this generation's Bad Boy lying on a stereotypical long leather couch. But Green doesn't care because he sees and feels the benefits.
"I've never had my feet up on a couch," Green said. "Maybe I should do that."
Steph Curry recaps the Warriors' loss to the Heat and discusses his team's confidence levels going forward.
GREEN REALIZED THIS summer that he had been splitting his on- and off-the-court personalities. He says he is a "really, really, really nice guy" who gives a lot off the court. But come tipoff, he "will fight you tooth and nail to the f---ing bitter end."
Green felt he had to "merge" and "marry" both sides if he was going to grow. Green says he has become a nicer Draymond on the court.
"Things are totally different," Green said. "I'm different."
So far this season, Green has handled a variety of tests. He traded taunts with Poole in November, faced Gobert three times in two weeks in December and has gotten physical with Edey each time they've met on the court. And he continues to bark at referees -- his lone ejection this season is the result of two technical fouls he got in 33 seconds near the end of that win over Memphis in November, and he received the latter while he was on the bench.
Travis Walton, a former Michigan State point guard who has been one of Green's best friends since he started recruiting a then-16-year-old Green to the Spartans 18 years ago, says Green's interaction with officials this season is a clear sign of his biggest progression with controlling his short fuse.
"He's more intentional," said Walton, who is also Green's trainer and chief of staff for Green's The New Media company. "He's more softer with things. Maybe when he's ready to erupt [in a training session], he's like, 'Let me look at it from a different perspective,' [where] the old Draymond would've went off. The old Draymond would've had a lot more to say than the Draymond right now.
"That's a nicer Draymond."
When Green and Gobert met three times earlier this season, hardly anything of note happened outside of a Green foul on Gobert where he unintentionally made contact to Gobert's face Dec. 8. Green would finish that 114-106 Warriors win by blowing by the Minnesota big man for an emphatic one-handed driving dunk -- Green's best highlight of the season.
Gobert, for his part, has moved on from last season's incident.
"It's hard to know what's going on in someone else's mind," Gobert told ESPN's Tim MacMahon. "But I just hope for him that he's happy, because he's a father, he's a husband, he's a leader of this community. Regardless of what happened in the past, I have empathy for everyone. I want to see him be happy and be the best version of himself."
Perhaps nothing has tested Green more than a massive Warriors slump that saw them drift from a 12-3 start into a 7-16 dive. He moved to the bench for a stint last month in full support of Jonathan Kuminga -- something he admits he would "absolutely not" have been able to handle when he was younger -- and yelled at Buddy Hield in an attempt to get the guard to focus during a recent loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers. Green has tried to be a leader.
"I hate losing," Green said. "If I'm losing, you're going to ratchet up everything that you have in order to change that. With that comes high emotion. With that comes an engagement that honestly isn't quite welcome in this league. And so it's a challenge. I just got to understand that [pushing the line] can't be the way, that my teammates need me out there."
After the Miami Heat crushed a listless Warriors team, 114-98, at home on Jan. 7, Green told his teammates in the locker room that they had lost their "soul" and edge, and that it was his fault.
Green was asked how he regains that edge.
"F---ing everybody up!" Green said. "No, I'm just playing. It's just about really being in the mix ... causing havoc, creating turnovers. When things go wrong, who's going to be there to stop the [negative] body language from [becoming contagious]? Having that edge."
It's been a constant process of change for Green since the beginning of the summer. He lost 30 pounds in the offseason to make sure he was as physically prepared for the season as he was mentally, and he feels his game is improving in Year 13.
He's moving better, heavily contesting 3s at the fourth-highest rate in the NBA. The Warriors have also allowed 0.9 points per direct drive when Green is the help defender this season; that ranks fifth among 40 players to help on 250-plus drives, per Second Spectrum tracking. And he is making 1.4 3-pointers per game this season, the most he has averaged in a season in a decade -- he is one of five players with at least 35 steals, 35 blocks and 35 3-pointers this season, according to ESPN Research.
He says he has rediscovered his motivation and no longer contemplates retirement with an assist from therapy and the "DG check-in calls."
"I want people to say, 'Man, right here was a little bleak. But then look where it went from there. And that's due to because he took accountability,'" Green said. "Regardless of how I felt about the Rudy situation, the Nurkic situation ... the Jordan Poole [incident], any situation, I took it on the chin. I took accountability for it, and I moved forward.
"They're my fault. I needed to be better, and I failed. We all fail. But I'm not a failure."
Dodgers the favorites? The next Darvish ... or Clemens? What we know as we await Roki Sasaki's decision

Happy Roki Sasaki Week!
After announcing his intention to come to MLB at the start of the 2024-25 offseason, the 23-year-old Japanese free agent immediately became the most coveted pitcher available this winter thanks to his combination of talent and age, and the parameters of his contract.
With the 2025 international free agent signing period opening Jan. 15 and Sasaki's posting window closing on Jan. 23, we could find out where Sasaki is headed as soon as Wednesday.
Because Sasaki decided to come to the majors before his 25th birthday, he is limited to a minor league deal with a signing bonus coming from a team's international bonus pool (capped at just over $7.5 million). That makes the emerging ace a rare free agent star every team can afford to sign.
As we wait for Sasaki's destination to come into focus, we asked our MLB experts what makes him so good, which major league pitchers he reminds us of, and which teams seem most likely to land him.
What makes Sasaki such a coveted free agent?
Bradford Doolittle: He's young, accomplished and with measurable tools that might make him baseball's top prospect right now. But he's not a prospect in the "maybe he'll be 'X' if he reaches his ceiling" but one that's already been successful in a high-level league and can slide into a big league rotation. A limited workload threshold, for now, is the only thing that's really holding back Sasaki's 2025 projection. With his full collection of team control seasons intact, there is no risk to signing him. And as good as he is now, he has room to grow in terms of his arsenal and how he fills out physically. You just don't get a combination of factors all lining up like this, not the least of which Sasaki was so anxious to make the jump that he was willing to make max earnings a secondary factor.
Buster Olney: As we've seen with Yoshinobu Yamamoto and with Juan Soto -- as we've witnessed all the way back to Alex Rodriguez -- excellence at a young age is everything. Sasaki is expected to be a high-ceiling talent already at 23, and the team that lands him will have years of control while paying him relative pennies.
Kiley McDaniel: In describing his client's upcoming potential nine-figure deal to me this winter, an agent underlined why he was confident that would happen, even if he had a down year, by saying: "age is a hack." Rosters are getting younger, thus teams have more money to spend, but don't want to offer long-term deals to older players, so they are (generally) seeking short-term free agent deals or trades for players with a year or two of control. That means long-term deals are generally acceptable to a large swath of teams only when they can land a standout young star still in his peak years. (like the Red Sox chasing Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Juan Soto, extending Rafael Devers, but not offering huge money to any older players). Sasaki could be under team control for his entire peak of a bona fide ace, at a price every team can afford: a true unicorn of an opportunity for all 30 teams.
David Schoenfield: He is entering his age-23 season and it's not a stretch to say he has the potential to be the best starter in baseball. In four years in Japan, he has a 2.02 ERA, averaging 11.4 strikeouts per nine. He has hit 102 mph and is 6-foot-3 and athletic. You can argue that he's right up there on the Stephen Strasburg/Paul Skenes scale as a pitching prospect, except he has already dominated as a professional.
Which current or former MLB pitcher does he remind you of on the mound?
Schoenfield: With his power fastball/splitter combo, I think of two former MLB greats: Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling. There are certainly some similarities as well to Shohei Ohtani, although Ohtani slowly ramped down his splitter usage and didn't use it much in 2022-23, going more often to his sweeper. In Japan in 2024, Sasaki induced a 57% whiff rate on his splitter, which would have ranked second in MLB behind Reds (now Yankees) reliever Fernando Cruz.
Doolittle: I don't know that there is any one guy. The splitter kind of reminds me of the one Logan Gilbert throws, one with a spin rate so low it's kind of freaky to watch in slow motion. The easy, heavy, hard stuff he offers kind of reminds me of Kevin Brown, only with a different fastball. The thing that's most exciting about Sasaki is that it's hard to call him the next so-and-so. He's his own thing, and novelty is a great and too-rare thing in sports these days.
McDaniel: There isn't a perfect comp, and Sasaki is still changing as a pitcher, so I'll point out some players with qualities that are similar. Hunter Greene had a similar combination of arm speed and hype at the same age, along with some questions on his fastball shape and breaking ball quality. Obviously, Sasaki's standout splitter has a number of comps to former NPB pitchers but only a handful of U.S.-born players, such as Clemens and Schilling. The total package (power fastball, slider, and splitter-ish offspeed pitch) is similar to Paul Skenes', though Sasaki's command and fourth and fifth pitch are areas he'll need to address to have a chance to truly stand up to Skenes' MLB debut.
Buster Olney: He reminds me of Yu Darvish, with his build and his rangy athleticism. He looks like he'll have an ability to make adjustments, as needed. Darvish is known for being able to mimic the deliveries of other pitchers, and watching Sasaki move, it would not surprise me if he had the same gift.
Are there any concerns about how his game will translate from Japan to MLB?
McDaniel: Sasaki's fastball shape and velocity regressed last season, his slider velocity also tailed off even more, he likely needs to add a fourth and maybe fifth pitch, and his execution within the strike zone could be a bit better. These are all simple enough on their own to be addressed in the first half of 2025 as long as Sasaki chooses a strong pitching development club, as I suspect he will. Some mechanical adjustments and mental cues could do a lot of the heavy lifting as these things can all be related. I would expect to see glimpses of Sasaki's potential in 2025 while we wait until 2026 for the first dominating string of five or six starts in a row.
Olney: We really need our colleague Eduardo Perez to jump in here, because he'd be the one to tell us if Sasaki has any blatant tells such as pitch-tipping. That's what Yamamoto experienced in his first months with the Dodgers. But Sasaki could have such excellent stuff that it doesn't matter. His splitter seems to be so good that it won't be hit even if the batter knows it's coming.
Doolittle: Well, the different ball means we don't know exactly how the measurements on his pitches will change, but that's not a major concern. He looked great in the World Baseball Classic which offers a nice preview of that adjustment. It's really durability. He has never thrown a lot of innings, his best pitch is a splitter and his velo was down last season. These things would be much more worrisome if he was getting a Yamamoto-like contract, but he's not. I've seen his splitter carry an 80-grade and when you match that with a triple-digit fastball that moves and a track record of plus command, health is the only thing there is to worry about.
Schoenfield: The same as every starter: Health and durability. He has topped out at 20 starts and 129 innings in Japan, back in 2022. His fastball velocity was down a bit in 2024 as he missed time with a torn oblique and shoulder fatigue. He'll also have to adjust to facing more power hitters than he faced in Japan.
Are the Dodgers the team to beat as his decision approaches?
Doolittle: They always are.
McDaniel: They are the most likely landing spot and have been seen that way for a while, but don't underrate how little we truly know about Sasaki's process of eliminating and ultimately choosing a club. We have some clues and potential leans, but don't truly know very much right now.
Olney: Sure, because they seemingly land every player they want, with a bottomless pit of money. The Dodgers will be the team to beat for years on the field, and off.
Schoenfield: I'll say no. I'm betting on Sasaki wanting to forge his own path and signing with a team that doesn't already have Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
Which other teams do you think have the best chance of landing him?
McDaniel: The Padres, led by their ultra-aggressive GM A.J. Preller, are perceived as the second-most-likely landing spot behind the Dodgers, and San Diego clearly needs Sasaki more: He would change the outlook for the whole franchise. Beyond that, we're mostly guessing from teams we know he has met with that seem to have a good environment for Sasaki to develop and compete in meaningful games: the Giants, Mariners, Mets, Yankees, Cubs, and Rangers seem to come up the most but I can't even say that's a complete list of teams getting a long look.
Doolittle: For me, the Mets stand out. Sasaki and his representation have been pretty opaque when it comes to offering glimpses of his thinking, which has led to a lot of reading between the lines. It's such a rare thing for a player of this caliber to be able to choose any team he wants with money barely being a part of the equation. So who knows? The Mets offer a good pitching environment, a strong possibility of sustained contention and a budding pitching development program highlighted by the pitching lab they built in Port Saint Lucie. Why be another Dodger?
Olney: It's pretty evident that Sasaki is not afraid to ignore conventional wisdom, in the same way Ohtani did when he arrived -- he passed up many, many tens of millions of dollars by pushing to get to the majors now, rather than just waiting. With that in mind, I think the Padres will be the most intriguing alternative to the Dodgers, because of the weather, Darvish's presence and the chance to play against the best, in the same division.
Schoenfield: If Sasaki is primarily concerned with his own development as a pitcher, is there a better place than Seattle? Unlike the Dodgers, the Mariners have kept their young starters healthy. They also play in a great pitcher's park, they play on the West Coast and it's not like Seattle doesn't have a chance to win. But we haven't heard much about the Mariners being in the running.
Sabalenka shows off dance moves in front of Rebel Wilson

Aryna Sabalenka dances on court, with actress Rebel Wilson watching on, after beginning her Australian Open title defence win with a straight-set victory over American Sloane Stephens.
READ MORE: 'Feels like home' - Sabalenka starts title defence with win
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Gauff & Swiatek dedicate wins to LA and firefighters

Coco Gauff dedicated her Australian Open first-round win to Los Angeles and the firefighters who have been tackling the devastating wildfires.
American third seed Gauff, one of the favourites for the title in Melbourne, beat compatriot and 2020 champion Sofia Kenin 6-3 6-3.
Gauff wrote "stay strong LA, thank you firefighters" on the camera lens after her victory.
She and Taylor Fritz have previously donated to a charity effort to help those affected.
World number two Iga Swiatek also signed the camera lens: "Sending my love to Malibu and LA".
The Pole began her Australian Open campaign with a 6-3 6-4 win over Czech Katarina Siniakova.
The fires, which began on 7 January, are being marked as the most destructive in the city's history.
The LA County medical examiner said on Sunday that 24 people have died in the fires, while at least another 16 remain missing.
Donna Vekic, who is coached by American Pam Shriver, also sent a message to the city after her first-round win on Sunday.
Shriver has stayed behind in LA to help her family.

Stefanos Tsitsipas believes his Australian Open first-round exit was "karma" after he withdrew from playing doubles alongside his brother to focus on singles.
The Greek, runner-up in Melbourne in 2023, lost 7-5 6-3 2-6 6-4 to American Alex Michelsen on the second day's play.
The 11th seed had been due to play doubles with his brother, Petros, but withdrew before the tournament began to protect his singles chances.
"It's quite ironic. My whole [idea] was to try to go deep. I knew the first thing I had to consider was not playing doubles," Tsitsipas, 26, said.
"The whole purpose was just to save up on some energy and be fresher hopefully in the deeper draw of the tournament."
"I guess karma hit me. I was not able to deliver or play the way I was hoping to at this year's event.
Tsitsipas has long-been tipped as a future Grand Slam champion, having reached the Melbourne showpiece two years ago and the French Open final in 2021, losing both to Novak Djokovic.
However, he lost in the first round at last year's US Open and in the second round at Wimbledon.
"The most frustrating part about losing in the first round of a Grand Slam is that you have way too much time to recover," Tsitsipas added.
"It just sucks that I'll be hanging around for quite a while now before my next tournament comes in."
Elsewhere at Melbourne Park, world number one Jannik Sinner opened up his title defence with a 7-6 (7-2) 7-6 (7-5) 6-1 victory over Chile's Nicolas Jarry.
Novak Djokovic begins his bid for a standalone record 25th Grand Slam singles title later on Monday, with Nick Kyrgios also making his return to tennis.
'A good decision not to quit' - Burrage secures emotional win

With her powerful groundstrokes and strong first serve, Burrage had too many weapons for 149th-ranked Jeanjean in a performance which oozed confidence.
The British number seven played aggressively, doing particular damage with her forehand as she hit 23 winners.
After securing victory on her first match point with a huge net cord, Burrage instantly covered her face with her hands.
The British fans in the crowd roared their appreciation before Burrage returned to her chair and spent a few moments sobbing under a towel.
Burrage said afterwards she had struggled to eat breakfast because of pre-match nerves.
"All of those emotions from the last nine months I think were bottled up in there," she said.
"I think because I know I have been playing some good tennis, I know what such a good opportunity today was.
"I knew the hard work that went in for the last year."
Burrage first thought about quitting the sport in 2020 after a series of injuries, but fought back to enjoy the biggest successes of her career.
A maiden Grand Slam win came at Wimbledon in 2023 and led to an unforgettable appearance on Centre Court in the second round, while she also won in the first round of that year's US Open.
Burrage was sitting at a career-high 84th in the world when her progress was derailed again.
In February, she needed surgery on a snapped tendon in her wrist - the fourth operation of her career - and she suffered another blow in April when preparing to return to competitive action.
Burrage ruptured an ankle ligament in a practice session with British number one Katie Boulter and, although she did not require surgery, she missed another 10 weeks.
Having made her comeback on the lower-tier ITF Futures Tour, she broke down in tears during a training session and questioned whether it was worth the hardship.
However, she persevered, and has now become the first Briton to win in this year's Australian Open singles.
Table Tennis Sets Sights on Spectacular 2025: World Cups

Macao Ready for World Cup Encore
The Galaxy Arena in Macao is set to welcome back the worlds elite players for the ITTF Mens and Womens World Cup 2025 from 14-20 April. After last years triumphant return, which saw Ma Long secure his third World Cup title in a pulsating final against Lin Gaoyuan, whilst Sun Yingsha claimed the coveted Hammarlund Cup, anticipation builds for another spectacular showcase of individual excellence.
The 2024 edition demonstrated why Macao stands as an ideal host for elite table tennis, combining world-class facilities with passionate crowds. This years format will continue to provide more opportunities for emerging talents to challenge established stars on one of the sports most prestigious stages.
The journey to Macao begins with the Continental Cups in February, where players across five continents will vie for qualification spots. Winners, finalists and semi-finalists from Africa, Americas, Asia, Oceania and Europe will secure their places, alongside additional players selected through the World Ranking system. This comprehensive qualification pathway ensures the World Cup features both continental champions and the worlds highest-ranked players, creating a truly global field ready to make their mark on one of table tenniss most prestigious stages.
Mixed Team World Cup Returns to Chengdu
The Sichuan Gymnasium in Chengdu will once again serve as the backdrop for the ITTF Mixed Team World Cup 2025, following Chinas dominant defence of the Guoliang-Sörling Trophy in 2024. Their impressive 8-1 victory over Korea Republic in last years final, spearheaded by the formidable duo of Sun Yingsha and Wang Chuqin, established a benchmark that competing teams will be eager to challenge in 2025.
The 2024 edition showcased the events growing prestige, with eight days of exhilarating action culminating in Chinas masterful performance. Hong Kong, Chinas bronze medal triumph over Romania highlighted the increasing depth of competition, suggesting an even more compelling tournament ahead as teams prepare for the 2025 edition.
With both Macao and Chengdu ready to enhance their World Cup legacies, 2025s competitions are poised to reach new heights. These events, each with their distinct character and format, continue to exemplify table tenniss ability to innovate whilst honouring its traditions. As defending champions prepare to protect their crowns and challengers aim to make history, the stage is set for another memorable year of World Cup competition.
Weekend review: Atleti are Spain's 'Winter Champions,' United upend Arsenal, Barça pummels Real

There was no Premier League fixtures as the FA Cup took center-stage in England this weekend, with Manchester United's thrilling shootout win over Arsenal stealing the headlines.
The Bundesliga returned with a bang, while Atletico Madrid quietly sealed Spain's "Winter Champions" crown in Barcelona's and Real Madrid's absence.
On the goals front, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Julián Álvarez both scored sumptuous strikes, and Omar Marmoush sparkled with a number of Manchester City scouts watching on.
Sam Marsden, Luis Miguel Echegaray and Constantin Eckner take a look at what you might have missed this weekend.
FA Cup
Top takeaway: Man United slowly learning the Amorim way
The iconic third round of the FA Cup is mostly known for Cinderella stories that pit lower-league hopefuls against more illustrious opposition. And we did see some of them over the weekend, notably with some League One clubs winning against opponents from the Championship. But if we're sticking to Disney movies, this weekend's main headline was less Cinderella and more Brave, because that was exactly what 10-man Manchester United was against Arsenal on Sunday, winning on penalties with guts and resiliency at the Emirates.
Arsenal missed many chances and once again rued the fact they don't have enough quality up front. To make matters worse, striker Gabriel Jesus had to come off on a stretcher after clashing with Bruno Fernandes in the first half. But again, you have to hand it to Manchester United, who are slowly starting to provide the demands of Ruben Amorim's philosophy, which requires undisputed commitment. And that's exactly what happened after the Red Devils were forced to play with 10 men after Diogo Dalot received his second yellow card in the 61st minute. It was a heroic, collective performance, especially from their goalkeeper Altay Bayindir, who was magnificent, making save after save, including a penalty stop in the shootout.
The victory places Man United in the next round at home against Leicester City but, most importantly, it concludes a seven-day period that also included a draw against Liverpool. The continued sentiment remains: there needs to be consistency, but credit is deserved for a hard-fought win.
Arsenal defender William Saliba gives his immediate reaction after going out of the FA Cup on penalties vs. Manchester United.
Best match: Brentford 0-1 Plymouth Argyle
This is less about aesthetics, more about outcome, what the result means to the winner and, to be honest, everything that the FA Cup is all about. Plymouth Argyle -- bottom of the Championship and winless in 11 games prior to this weekend -- delivered an inspiring 1-0 victory against Brentford at the Gtech Community Stadium. The goal was scored by Morgan Whittaker, ironically once reportedly linked with a move to the Bees.
Plymouth had fired Wayne Rooney on New Year's Eve and announced Miron Muslic as their new boss, but he didn't take charge of Saturday's game. So every Plymouth player probably saw it as a great opportunity to impress and press the reset button.
It was a gutsy performance, especially because Thomas Frank's side seldom lose at their home ground. But again, this was all about the narrative and how in football, you can never underestimate anything. For Brentford? Even though Frank rotated his team with six changes and didn't start Bryan Mbeumo or Yoane Wissa, it was not good enough. It's clear this competition is not their priority, but still, you have to play better than this as a Premier League side.
What's Plymouth's reward in the next round? A home game against Liverpool.
Best goal: Trent Alexander-Arnold vs. Accrington Stanley
Given all the rhetoric regarding Alexander-Arnold's future, coupled with his poor performance against Manchester United, the past week has not been easy for the 26-year-old right-back. So, he needed a good game in this competition, even if it was against League Two's Accrington Stanley. And he delivered. His goal was quintessential TAA. A beautiful effort from outside the box, where Stanley's goalkeeper Billy Crellin -- on loan from Everton -- could only act as a spectator. He didn't even move.
"Accrington Stanley? Who are they?" Exactly, thought TAA.
MVP of the weekend: Tamworth
Man United keeper Bayindir is clearly the individual that deserves much praise here, but I am giving the award to the non-league side, who fought valiantly against Tottenham Hotspur. They lost 3-0, but the result flattered Spurs because for 100 minutes, the club from Andy Peaks' National League -- playing against the likes of James Maddison, Brennan Johnson and Son Heung-Min -- took the Premier League team to extra time.
The extra time was the main reason Spurs won. Tamworth simply got tired, and Ange Postecoglou was able to introduce Dejan Kulusevski and the aforementioned Son in the latter stages. Against a bunch of semi-pros, calling on that kind of depth was simply too much. This is the first season of the FA Cup where there are no replays so it's a shame Tamworth suffered as a result of it as it was 0-0 after 90 minutes. But, regardless, they won my MVP vote. -- Echegaray
LaLiga
Top takeaway: Atlético Madrid crowned Spain's 'Winter Champions'
Atlético Madrid took full advantage of Real Madrid and Barcelona playing the Spanish Supercopa this weekend to climb to the top of LaLiga at the halfway stage. Alvarez's second-half goal was enough for them to beat Osasuna 1-0 on Sunday as they extended their winning streak in all competitions to 14 matches.
That impressive run has included eight straight victories in LaLiga as they have hunted down Madrid and Barça. After 19 league games, Diego Simeone's side have lost just once and are one point clear of Madrid and six ahead of Barça -- who they trailed by 10 points at the start of November.
That has earned them the tag of "Winter Champions" -- given to the league leaders in Spain after the first round of fixtures have been completed -- and firmly cemented their title credentials. They have twice pipped Madrid and Barça to the title previously under Simeone, in 2014 and 2021, and look increasingly capable of doing so again this season.
Best match: Sevilla 1-1 Valencia
Luis Rioja's second-half strike looked set to give bottom placed Valencia a much-needed three points at Sevilla. However, after surrendering a lead to Real Madrid last week, they did the same against Sevilla late on. Adrià Pedrosa's 93rd-minute strike wasn't dealt with by Giorgi Mamardashvili and Sevilla stole a point that showed new Valencia coach Carlos Corberán the scale of the task facing him.
Best goal: Julián Alvarez vs. Osasuna
A beautifully worked corner routine sealed Atlético's three points. Antoine Griezmann's short corner was worked back to him and his far post cross was headed back to the unmarked Alvarez to fire home his 13th goal of the campaign.
Julián Álvarez gets Atletico Madrid on the scoresheet vs. Osasuna.
MVP of the weekend: Joan García (Espanyol)
It was two points dropped for Espanyol as they stayed in the bottom three after being held to a 1-1 draw at home to relegation rivals Leganés. However, it would have been much worse if not for goalkeeper García. He made five saves in total as Leganés racked up an xG of 1.99 in Barcelona on Saturday. They could not find a way past García, though, who was wanted by Arsenal last summer and will have a huge role to play if Espanyol are to stay up. -- Marsden
Bundesliga
Top takeaway: Flu outbreak and traffic jams lead to odd restart
After the customary winter break, the Bundesliga was set to resume with a blockbuster clash as Borussia Dortmund hosted reigning champions Bayer Leverkusen on Friday. However, the match unfolded under extraordinary circumstances. In the days leading up to the game, Dortmund were rocked by a flu outbreak that decimated their defensive ranks, leaving them without the majority of their backline.
This isn't the first time football has been hit by viral issues in recent weeks. Tottenham, for instance, recently contended with a sickness bug.
BVB manager Nuri Şahin was forced to field a makeshift back four, with full-back Julian Ryerson and Yannik Lührs, a regular for Dortmund's reserve team in the third division, in the middle. While emergency lineups are sometimes able to write Cinderella stories, Dortmund were outgunned by Leverkusen's firing power, losing 3-2 at home.
But that wasn't the only odd thing concerning the game. The kick off was delayed due to heavy traffic on the roads leading to Signal Iduna Park. You might suspect only fans were held up and in danger of arriving late. But even midfield standout Florian Wirtz and Exequiel Palacios were stuck on a bridge in Cologne long enough to miss the team meeting. Leverkusen manager Xabi Alonso subsequently benched both players. The Spaniard said afterwards that he didn't want to select anyone in the starting XI who wasn't aware of tactical details.
This goes to show that millionaire footballers are only humans, too. They can catch the flu or get stuck in traffic just like countless commuters every day.
Best match: SC Freiburg 3-2 Holstein Kiel
Freiburg continue to be a genuine force at home, with 19 of their 27 points coming at their Europa-Park-Stadion. However, Saturday's win over relegation-threatened Holstein Kiel was suddenly in danger during the final minutes. Kiel striker Phil Harres scored twice in the final five minutes, but the visitors ran out of time to snatch a draw.
Best goal: Frans Krätzig vs. Union Berlin
In Steffen Baumgart's debut as Union Berlin manager, it was another debutant who captured the headlines. Krätzig joined Heidenheim on loan from Bayern Munich in early January and needed only 17 minutes to score a fantastic goal to provide a 1-0 lead against struggling Union. In the lead-up to the goal, Heidenheim broke through on the right side and Léo Scienza found Krätzig in the middle, who fired the ball directly into the left corner of the net.
MVP of the weekend: Omar Marmoush (Eintracht Frankfurt)
There may have been other players who put on better performances than Frankfurt's highly-rated 25-year-old striker. Considering the latest rumours about a potential move to Manchester City, it was impressive how Marmoush performed against St. Pauli, including scoring the only goal of the game. -- Eckner
Omar Marmoush finds the back of the net for Eintracht Frankfurt
What else you missed this weekend
AC Milan continue their slump in Serie A
The week started beautifully for AC Milan, who came back from two goals down to win the SuperCoppa Italiana against their bitter rivals Internazionale on Monday. But on Saturday, the league issues continued as the Rossoneri drew 1-1 at home against Cagliari. It was the third draw in the last four league matches as Milan now find themselves in eighth place with 28 points, 16 behind league leaders Napoli.
It was the league and home debut for their new manager Sérgio Conceição and he did not hold back in the post-match interview.
"I expected a lot more on every level," said the Portuguese manager to Sky Italia. "I have been a coach for 13 years and weighing up the quality of this squad against what I saw, that was the weakest first half since I started coaching."
Milan and Christian Pulisic -- who has been personally shining this season -- took 24 shots against Cagliari but only had Álvaro Morata's goal to show for it. The visitors, who are fighting relegation, equalized four minutes after the Spanish striker's goal in the 51st minute.
Milan have to do better in the league because otherwise, they can forget about Europe. -- Echegaray
Ajax Amsterdam closing in on PSV Eindhoven
We could have a title race on our hands in the Netherlands after all.
Luuk de Jong scored a brace as PSV twice came from behind against AZ Alkmaar to muster a 2-2 draw at home. It's the second time in three games the Eredivisie champions have dropped points.
Their slump in form comes just as Ajax seem to be finding some momentum. Francesco Farioli's side beat RKC Waalwijk 2-1 to make it three wins in a row, cutting what was a nine-point gap down to just four. -- Marsden
Sporting lose Taça da Liga final to Benfica
Another tough break for Sporting CP. Following Amorim's departure to Man United in November, the defending Portuguese champions slumped under interim manager João Pereira -- who was removed from his post after little more than a month and replaced by Rui Borges.
Borges left Guimarães around Christmas to coach Sporting. In his first game in charge in late December, Borges and Sporting won the derby against Benfica. Sporting, however, could not reproduce the result in another meeting with Benfica on Saturday in the final of the Taça da Liga, a cup competition for teams in the top two tiers of Portuguese football.
Benfica opened the scoring in the 29th minute, with Ángel Di María assisting Andreas Schjelderup to dance past defender Eduardo Quaresma and score. Sporting equalized shortly before half-time thanks to a Viktor Gyökeres spot kick. The game was eventually decided in a penalty shootout, where the first 13 were successfully converted, before Francisco Trincão's attempt was saved by Benfica goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin.
It's the 86th trophy in Benfica's history, tied with FC Porto. The debate over which club has won the most silverware has been a controversial topic for many years, because of Benfica's Supertaça de Portugal win in 1980 when the competition was not an officially recognized competition. -- Eckner
'We're going to imagine it's nil-nil' - Bell wants England to forget first ODI blues

Faced with defending a below-par 204 after being bowled out inside 44 overs amid poor shot selection and some smart Australian bowling led by Ashleigh Gardner's 3 for 19, England fell short by four wickets as Gardner and Alyssa Healy mowed down the bulk of the target with 67 balls to spare.
Alice Capsey put down Ellyse Perry off the bowling of Lauren Filer and was probably relieved to see Bell dismiss the allrounder a short time later. Sophie Ecclestone's bizarre fumble, meanwhile, when Gardner was on 31 and Australia needed 22 more runs with six wickets down was impossible to quantify.
"We got 200 on a pitch that I think the par score batting first was about 250, so putting in an effort to almost defend that was, I think you can take a lot of confidence from it," an upbeat Bell said. "There are a few things that we could definitely work on moving forward. Obviously Australia caught very well and we dropped a few in at important moments. Moving forward, there's a few places we can work on and really focus on the next game, but I think as a whole we can take a fair amount of confidence from the game."
Filer started England's defense well with the early wicket of Phoebe Litchfield for just 4 and had in-form allrounder Annabel Sutherland caught in the deep to end the match with 2 for 58 from eight overs. Ecclestone accounted for the key wickets of Beth Mooney and Tahlia McGrath to finish with 2 for 38. But England will need an improved performance all-round if they are to avoid going four points down in the second ODI at Junction Oval on Tuesday.
"We're one game into a pretty long series and we're two-nil down, but we're going to have to start the next game and imagine it's nil-nil and go again," Bell said. That is the beauty of these series. We can come back and we're just going to have to reset and go with our plan and just go again.
"We'll sit down as a team and review. Our batting group will get together and it will obviously be different conditions over in Melbourne, so we'll have to adjust to them. But we'll get together as a group and work out the little bits we can tidy up and hopefully put on a better performance."
With such a tight turnaround between matches a theme throughout the series which consists of three ODIs followed by three T20Is and a four-day Test match in the space of 22 days, any adjustments will need to be made almost on the fly.
"It's definitely tough," Bell said. "We're just going to have to adapt really quickly, communicate with the girls that maybe have played at Junction Oval and try and get as much information as we can about the pitch. Then the opening batters, if we bat first, or the opening bowlers, it's just really important to communicate what the pitch is doing as soon as we get there."
One lesson Bell can take from Sydney is having the courage to stand by her convictions. Her determination that she had trapped Perry directly in front of the stumps was crucial after England had burned a review earlier.
Bell managed to convince captain Heather Knight and wicketkeeper Amy Jones to again call upon the DRS, which confirmed that she had Perry plumb.
"I was obviously really happy to get her and I had to stand my ground a little bit and tell Heather and Amy that I thought it was out," Bell said. "It was two v one. I really, really thought it was out. Heather and Amy weren't sure and I didn't want to be the one to lose our last review, but yeah, I'm really glad I stood firm."
A batting performance in which Knight and Danni Wyatt-Hodge top-scored with 39 and 38 respectively combined with a bowling attack that struggled to combat Healy's smart innings of 70 from 78 balls and needed more support in the field suggests that if England are to overturn the deficit in this campaign, they will need to stand very firm indeed.
Valkerie Baynes is a general editor, women's cricket, at ESPNcricinfo