18:00ZRNINTELFrench officials investigate Israeli organization Blackcore for meddling18:00ZRNINTELParties finalize text of peace deal, set aside controversy18:00ZPRESSTVHamas says Israel expanding 'yellow line' in Gaza threatens ceasefire talks17:58ZRNINTELFinal peace deal text agreed by parties, source confirms17:58ZRNINTELFrench officials investigate Israeli organization Blackcore17:56ZTASNIMNEWSMemorial ceremony held for anniversary of Iranian General Hasan Mohaghegh's death17:56ZTASNIMNEWSOne dead, 11 injured in Midland, Texas shooting, authorities say17:55ZFARSNAIran marks first anniversary of those killed in 12-day war in Khorramabad18:00ZRNINTELFrench officials investigate Israeli organization Blackcore for meddling18:00ZRNINTELParties finalize text of peace deal, set aside controversy18:00ZPRESSTVHamas says Israel expanding 'yellow line' in Gaza threatens ceasefire talks17:58ZRNINTELFinal peace deal text agreed by parties, source confirms17:58ZRNINTELFrench officials investigate Israeli organization Blackcore17:56ZTASNIMNEWSMemorial ceremony held for anniversary of Iranian General Hasan Mohaghegh's death17:56ZTASNIMNEWSOne dead, 11 injured in Midland, Texas shooting, authorities say17:55ZFARSNAIran marks first anniversary of those killed in 12-day war in Khorramabad
Sabalenka Warns of Grand Slam Boycott as Tennis Players Push for Revenue Share Reform
Aryna Sabalenka has become the highest-profile player to publicly entertain the possibility of a boycott, arguing that collective action may be the only lever players have to secure a larger share of tournament revenues.
By Moemedi Michael Poncanainternational1-minute read6 May 2026☆ Save↗ Share⎙ Print
This publication covered the boycott threat from the perspective of player agency and economic leverage rather than from the tournament-governance angle that dominated initial wire framing.