It's January 2026. The beers are cold, the backhands are blistering, and the boardrooms are bloodier than a UFC cage. Why this summer feels less like a celebration and more like a hostile takeover.
She sold her skin for crypto, fled a war zone, and is now terrorising the defending champion at the Australian Open. Meet the most unconventional player in Melbourne.
It’s January in Australia. The tennis is scorching, the cricket is winding down, and yet, the biggest sports story on your feed involves a gridiron coach, a blizzard (metaphorical), and a whistle that shouldn't have blown. Why has Sean McDermott hijacked our summer?
Forget the Ashes for a second. In the heat of Dubai, a shift in the cricketing tectonic plates is happening, and if you aren't watching Afghanistan take the West Indies to school, you're missing the romance of the decade.
While the cameras were fixed on Djokovic's strapped leg, the real story was brewing on the other side of the net. Here is what the betting algorithms saw before the public did.
She’s fresh off an Adelaide title and cracking the Top 10 like it’s backyard cricket. But before we crown Mirra Andreeva the new Queen of the Court, let’s talk about the cliff edge she’s sprinting towards.
She stood on a podium in Mallorca next to Rafa Nadal and Iga Świątek, just a graduate with a diploma. Two years later, she’s beating the world’s best, and 115 million hearts are beating with her.
She walked onto Rod Laver Arena as a 100-to-1 underdog with a new flag next to her name. She left having silenced the tennis world and sent Coco Gauff packing. Here is the backstage story of the first earthquake of 2026.
It used to be that 5 AM on a Monday was for bakers and shift workers. Now? It’s for the cult of the 'Crocodile Punter' and the new gridiron faithful. Here is why this morning’s clash changed the game down under.
Forget the old European rivalries. The real tectonic shift in football is happening right here, between the meticulous laboratories of Rabat and the endless talent factories of Dakar. It’s more than a match; it’s a clash of philosophies.
It is the most played fixture in English football history, but looking at the record books won't explain the chasm opening up between Birmingham and Liverpool. One club has cracked the code; the other is holding on by its fingernails.
Why is North Melbourne's livewire trending everywhere this Sunday? It’s not a transfer rumor. It’s the terrifying story of a holiday flu that turned into a litre of infected fluid and a mercy dash to Perth.
Wolves played like heroes. Newcastle played like forensic accountants. Guess who walked away with the points? At Molineux, the 'moral victory' narrative officially died, leaving behind a cold, hard tactical autopsy that Rob Edwards might not survive.
TV executives claim the numbers are booming, but the empty plastic seats at the SCG tell a different story. Is the BBL still a sporting contest, or just a content filler waiting for the tennis to start?
It’s not every day you see a match where one player was winning Grand Slams before the other was even born. Here is why the algorithm is obsessed with this Melbourne Park clash.
She walked onto the Rod Laver Arena as a mystery to most, her name a tongue-twister for commentators and her official profile a blank silhouette. Here is the story of the French-Malagasy prodigy who forced the world to pay attention.
He carries physics textbooks in his racquet bag and just eliminated Lleyton Hewitt's son from the Australian Open. Meet the world's most overachieving uni student.
He stands six-foot-eight, serves like a trebuchet, and moves like a lightweight boxer. Gabriel Diallo isn't just another tall guy on the ATP Tour—he's the prototype for a terrifying new breed of tennis giant.
As Melbourne Park buzzes for another local hope, we strip away the green-and-gold optimism to look at the cold hard data. Is Gibson ready for the world stage, or just the next victim of our desperate search for a new champion?
It’s official: the gridiron giants are coming to the MCG in 2026. But the NFL’s obsession with Australia goes deeper than one blockbuster game. It’s a story of converted rugby stars, a punting factory in Melbourne, and a strategic invasion that’s changing the global sports map.