Aja Evans, Olympic medalist bobsledder, suffers facial cuts in training accident

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U.S. bobsled push athlete and Olympic hopeful Aja Evans was hospitalized in Germany on Friday after she suffered facial lacerations during a training accident.

Evans is expected to be released Saturday, though it is unclear when she will be able to return to racing.

But to U.S. coach Mike Kohn, that is a secondary part of the story.

Evans was with a handful of U.S. push athletes — Lolo Jones, Lauren Gibbs and Lake Kwaza among them, Kohn said — when she got hurt at the track near Altenberg, Germany. They were the ones who sprang into action, making phone calls to alert coaches, rushing to Evans’ side to provide comfort, even administering the initial rounds of first aid before more help could arrive.

“I’m just really impressed with this team and so proud to be its coach today,” Kohn said. “This is the American spirit, beyond what most people are doing in this world. This was unbelievable. They inspired me today. I never thought I would see those four girls, all hugging, in tears, to support a teammate. Incredibly inspirational.”

Further complicating matters for the U.S. team on Friday was that skeleton athlete Austin Florian had gotten hurt, around the same time of Evans’ mishap. Florian crashed in the men’s World Cup race at Altenberg, and he needed about a half-dozen stitches over his eye.

Evans needed about 30 stitches for an array of cuts, Kohn said.

“I don’t know if it was instinct or just came to us automatically,” Jones said. “We all had our different strengths in that moment. We never came more together as a team. Lauren was comforting Aja, I was on the phone calling people for help, Lake was the glue going back and forth between all of us.”

Jones and bobsled pilot Kaillie Humphries, who returned to Germany on Friday after becoming a U.S. citizen and clearing the last big hurdle she had to gain Olympic eligibility for this winter’s Beijing Games, paid to bring massage therapist Don Butzner on the World Cup circuit to help with their training and recovery this season.

By pure luck, Jones invited Butzner to the push track on Friday. She warned him that it would be cold and probably boring, but he decided that beat the alternative of sitting in a hotel room.

Butzner had a first-aid kit with him, and that proved invaluable in the immediate moments after Evans got hurt.

Olympic years tend to be challenging in terms of team camaraderie. Sliders are all part of the U.S. team, but they are all simultaneously competing with one another for spots in World Cup races and on the Olympic team.

“And then you get a day like this, that brings a team together,” Kohn said. “This is the American spirit at its best, by far. I am so proud of these athletes, this team. I am just beaming with pride because of this group. They were unbelievable today. Unbelievable.”

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2023 French Open men’s singles draw, scores

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The French Open men’s singles draw is missing injured 14-time champion Rafael Nadal for the first time since 2004, leaving the Coupe des Mousquetaires ripe for the taking.

The tournament airs live on NBC Sports, Peacock and Tennis Channel through championship points in Paris.

Novak Djokovic is not only bidding for a third crown at Roland Garros, but also to lift a 23rd Grand Slam singles trophy to break his tie with Nadal for the most in men’s history.

FRENCH OPEN: Broadcast Schedule | Women’s Draw

But the No. 1 seed is Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz, who won last year’s U.S. Open to become, at 19, the youngest man to win a major since Nadal’s first French Open title in 2005.

Now Alcaraz looks to become the second-youngest man to win at Roland Garros since 1989, after Nadal of course.

Alcaraz missed the Australian Open in January due to a right leg injury, but since went 30-3 with four titles. Notably, he has not faced Djokovic this year. They could meet in the semifinals.

Russian Daniil Medvedev, the No. 2 seed, was upset in the first round by 172nd-ranked Brazilian qualifier Thiago Seyboth Wild. It marked the first time a men’s top-two seed lost in the first round of any major since 2003 Wimbledon (Ivo Karlovic d. Lleyton Hewitt).

All of the American men lost before the fourth round. The last U.S. man to make the French Open quarterfinals was Andre Agassi in 2003.

MORE: All you need to know for 2023 French Open

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2023 French Open Men’s Singles Draw

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Coco Gauff, Iga Swiatek set French Open rematch

Coco Gauff French Open
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Coco Gauff swept into the French Open quarterfinals, where she plays Iga Swiatek in a rematch of last year’s final.

Gauff, the sixth seed, beat 100th-ranked Slovakian Anna Karolina Schmiedlova 7-5, 6-2 in the fourth round. She next plays the top seed Swiatek, who later Monday advanced after 66th-ranked Ukrainian Lesia Tsurenko retired down 5-1 after taking a medical timeout due to illness.

Gauff earned a 37th consecutive win over a player ranked outside the top 50, dating to February 2022. She hasn’t faced a player in the world top 60 in four matches at Roland Garros, but the degree of difficulty ratchets up in Wednesday’s quarterfinals.

Swiatek won all 12 sets she’s played against Gauff, who at 19 is the only teenager in the top 49 in the world. Gauff said last week that there’s no point in revisiting last year’s final — a 6-1, 6-3 affair — but said Monday that she should rewatch that match because they haven’t met on clay since.

“I don’t want to make the final my biggest accomplishment,” she said. “Since last year I have been wanting to play her, especially at this tournament. I figured that it was going to happen, because I figured I was going to do well, and she was going to do well.

“The way my career has gone so far, if I see a level, and if I’m not quite there at that level, I know I have to improve, and I feel like you don’t really know what you have to improve on until you see that level.”

FRENCH OPEN DRAWS: Women | Men | Broadcast Schedule

Also Monday, No. 7 seed Ons Jabeur of Tunisia dispatched 36th-ranked American Bernarda Pera 6-3, 6-1, breaking all eight of Pera’s service games.

Jabeur, runner-up at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open last year, has now reached the quarterfinals of all four majors.

Jabeur next faces 14th-seeded Beatriz Haddad Maia, who won 6-7 (3), 6-3, 7-5 over Spaniard Sara Sorribes Tormo, who played on a protected ranking of 68. Haddad Maia became the second Brazilian woman to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal in the Open Era (since 1968) after Maria Bueno, who won seven majors from 1959-1966.

Pera, a 28 year-old born in Croatia, was the oldest U.S. singles player to make the fourth round of a major for the first time since Jill Craybas at 2005 Wimbledon. Her defeat left Gauff as the lone American singles player remaining out of the 35 entered in the main draws.

The last American to win a major singles title was Sofia Kenin at the 2020 Australian Open. The 11-major drought matches the longest in history (since 1877) for American men and women combined.

In the men’s draw, 2022 French Open runner-up Casper Ruud reached the quarterfinals by beating 35th-ranked Chilean Nicolas Jarry 7-6 (3), 7-5, 7-5. He’ll next play sixth seed Holger Rune of Denmark, a 7-6 (3), 3-6, 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (7) winner over 23rd seed Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina.

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