American world number four Taylor Fritz said Thursday he will donate his $82,000 first-round prize money from the Australian Open to help victims of the Los Angeles wildfires, calling the devastation "insane".
Experts say it is only a matter of time until major Australian cities experience “house-to-house ignition” on a similar scale to Los Angeles.
American tennis player Taylor Fritz is donating the prize money he earned for his first-round victory at the Australian Open — about $82,000 — to relief funds to help people affected by the wildfires
Some 6.5 million people remain under a critical fire threat and ideal fire conditions of high winds and low humidity are forecast to return.
For more stories about the Los Angeles fires, go to pdne.ws/4fQHrZc MELBOURNE, Australia — American tennis player Taylor Fritz said Thursday he is donating the prize money he earned for his first-round victory at the Australian Open — about $82,000 ...
World no. 4 tennis player Taylor Fritz announced on Thursday that he plans to donate his first-round prize money of $82,000 from the Australian Open to support those affected by the wildfires in Los Angeles.
This year’s February art fair calendar looks a lot like last year’s, which is somewhat surprising. There’s still plenty of uncertainty when it comes to the full impact of the L.A. wildfires on artists and arts institutions,
Jannik Sinner sniffed out and exploited weakness in Alexander Zverev like a starving predator, pouncing for a straight sets victory to defend his Australian Open title Sunday in Melbourne.
Please put Los Angeles under consideration,” Ryan Becker, Visit California’s senior vice president of communications and strategy, told news.com.au while visiting Melbourne this week.
A year after earning his first Grand Slam title at the same event, Sinner became the youngest man to leave Melbourne Park with the trophy two years in a row since Jim Courier in 1993.
It might have little to do with its namesake Hollywood hotel Chateau Marmont, but it’s serving the Playboy bunny of cornbread, all sexed up and lascivious.
The 29-year-old from Rock Island, Illinois, beat the No. 1-ranked woman and two-time defending Australian Open champion at Melbourne Park Saturday night.