Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "More About Kurt Streeter"


9 mentions found


Dearborn, a suburb of roughly 110,000 people bordering Detroit, has one of the highest percentages of Arab Americans among U.S. cities. Census figures show that it is roughly 54 percent Arab American, a figure experts believe is a significant undercount. When he took office in 2022, Mr. Hammoud — the son of Lebanese immigrants, raised in the city’s working-class east side — became the first Arab American Muslim mayor in Dearborn history. This is a community suffering intensely as it beholds the carnage wrought by the war between Israel and Hamas. The recent pause in fighting brought a respite, but Mr. Hammoud, like many in Dearborn, believed it would only be temporary.
Persons: Hammoud, , indignantly, Mr, Organizations: American Muslim, Hamas Locations: Detroit, U.S, American, Dearborn, Israel
Everyone on hand was part of NewGround, a nonprofit fellowship program that has helped more than 500 Los Angeles Muslims and Jews learn to listen, disagree, empathize with one another — and become friends. Ms. Hasan, whose family roots run through Palestine, runs NewGround. Ms. Hodos, once a resident of Israel, has been her associate director since 2020. “But it’s never been this bad,” they said, practically in unison, during a recent interview at a Los Angeles cafe. Never had they held this much dread, or found this kind of hopeful, grounding solace in the interfaith bonds their labor has created.
Persons: Aziza Hasan, God, , Andrea Hodos, , Gabrielle, Raphael, Hasan, Hodos, it’s Organizations: Angeles, Israel Locations: Israel, Gaza, Los Angeles, NewGround, Palestine, United States
That thought flashed through my mind as I sat courtside at Arthur Ashe Stadium last week, watching Coco Gauff poleax the backhand passing shot that sealed the U.S. Open and her first Grand Slam title. My thoughts were as much about the in-sync way Gauff struck that last ball as how the moment had lined up for this column. Gauff — a sensation now at 19, much as Venus and Serena Williams were at the same age — stepped closer to her destiny. The Open was the last event I will cover as the Sports of The Times columnist. I’m moving to our National desk, where I’ll write feature stories about America’s wonder, complexity, trouble and promise.
Persons: Arthur Ashe, Coco Gauff, Serena Williams, , I’m Organizations: U.S ., Sports, The Times
Led by Coco Gauff and a cast of charismatic upstarts, tennis hit a sweet spot at this year’s U.S. Open with a diverse blend of old and right now, signaling the game is freshly and firmly energized as it enters a new era. At this tournament, the commanding arrival of Gauff, who won the women’s singles title Saturday evening, along with memorable performances by Ben Shelton and Frances Tiafoe, proved that thinking wrong. At the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, a quartet of legends no longer stifled the game, overshadowing the sometimes stalled forward motion of the young players coming behind. You could feel it on the grounds, which filled with so many spectators that it often appeared there was no space to move without bruising a shoulder. This year’s event set attendance records nearly every day.
Persons: Coco Gauff, Serena Williams, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Daniil Medvedev, Gauff, Ben Shelton, Frances Tiafoe, Billie Jean King Organizations: Billie Jean King National Tennis Center Locations: U.S
I thought I had seen it all on a tennis court until I watched Carlos Alcaraz at the U.S. Open on Monday. No, I’m not talking about the speed and punch of his forehand. I’m talking about his audacious creativity: As Alcaraz worked his way into the net early in the match, Matteo Arnaldi lifted a lob over the Spaniard’s head. Alcaraz is not most pros. A backhand, overhead drop shot winner in front of a packed house at Arthur Ashe Stadium?
Persons: Carlos Alcaraz, I’m, Alcaraz, Matteo Arnaldi, whirled, Arthur Ashe Organizations: U.S
The Tennis Education of Ben Shelton
  + stars: | 2023-09-02 | by ( Kurt Streeter | More About Kurt Streeter | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
He did not play any of the significant junior grand slam events that have operated as springboards for many pros. Shelton went to the University of Florida, where the men’s tennis coach happened to be Bryan Shelton, who is well respected in tennis circles for emphasizing a mastery of the game over chasing victories. There was no grand plan to move Ben quickly up the tennis ranks. “You work on something, you work on something, you keep working on it, and then, six months later, you see that you can do it,” the younger Shelton told me this week. Then he began running roughshod in ATP Challenger tournaments, the tennis equivalent of Triple-A baseball.
Persons: Shelton, Bryan Shelton, Ben, Organizations: American, University of Florida, Florida, ATP Challenger, Triple
Novak Djokovic had dominated all of the most significant moments of the first half of this tennis season. After winning his 10th Australian Open, he emerged with the Roland Garros crown, his 23rd Grand Slam tournament title, tied for the career record. A win at Wimbledon, on tennis’s most hallowed ground, would have put him three-quarters of the way to becoming the first man to achieve a calendar Grand Slam in 54 years. Carlos Alcaraz, surprising the tennis world with a championship match victory over Djokovic on the slick Wimbledon grass, a surface assumed to have been the Spaniard’s kryptonite. But when the final was over, as Alcaraz lofted the greatest trophy in tennis skyward, a budding tug of war had morphed into a full-blown rivalry for men’s tennis supremacy.
Persons: Novak Djokovic, Roland Garros, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Carlito, a.k.a, Carlos Alcaraz Organizations: Wimbledon, Djokovic
Of course America loved “The Blind Side,” the 2009 movie about a homeless and hapless Black teenager rescued from a bleak future by a wealthy, white family. It was based on the true story of the Tuohy family, led by Sean and Leigh Anne, who took the future N.F.L. player Michael Oher into their home and raised him proudly as he made it to college and beyond. The film took in over $300 million and Sandra Bullock won an Oscar for her portrayal of Leigh Anne Tuohy, self-possessed belle of the New South. But “The Blind Side,” based on the best-selling book by Michael Lewis, renders a complicated reality in the most digestible format.
Persons: , Sean, Leigh Anne, Michael Oher, It’s, Sandra Bullock, Leigh Anne Tuohy, Michael Lewis Organizations: Oher Locations: America
Why I’m Rooting for Haiti
  + stars: | 2023-07-26 | by ( Kurt Streeter | More About Kurt Streeter | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
If you’ve read this column regularly over the last few years, my rooting interests should be clear by now. The players and teams who toil hard for the simple chance, however slim, of winning. With the Women’s World Cup now in full flight, most attention has gone to the venerable teams like France, Brazil and Germany. Hats off to all those teams, each talent-blessed and well-funded by their national soccer federations and by business conglomerates. But through the early goings of this year’s group stage, with eight teams making their World Cup debuts, long shots have been having their moments.
Persons: Alex Morgan, Megan Rapinoe Organizations: United, Zealand Locations: France, Brazil, Germany, United States, Philippines, Nigeria
Total: 9