18-YEAR OLD VICKY MBOKO HAS WON THE NATIONAL BANK OPEN IN MONTREAL 🇨🇦 pic.twitter.com/iW1lgYCMKO
— TSN (@TSN_Sports) August 8, 2025


HOW DID MBOKO GET THAT ????
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) August 8, 2025
She shows off unbelievable court coverage for the @BetMGM shot of the day!#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/QjtEX6DQ6S
Magnificent
— wta (@WTA) August 6, 2025
Marvelous
Mboko ??#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/7x6C0USulT
Suddenly, Mboko -- 23-6 in her last 29 matches, over three surfaces since the start of April -- will climb *sixty* spots in the new rankings, rising from #85 to #25. She'll be a seeded player at Flushing Meadows, and has edged ahead of Fernandez as the new CAN #1. She was ranked #333 (CAN #9) in the opening week of the year, just ahead of fellow Canadian Cadence Brace, but behind (mostly doubles specalist) Camilla Rosatello (ITA). Meanwhile, if there's a will there's always a way to bring Serena into the conversation...
Youngest women in the Open Era to defeat four Grand Slam champions in a single tournament:
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) August 8, 2025
17 years 11 months - Serena Williams, US Open 1999
18 years 11 months - Victoria Mboko, Montreal 2025
HERSTORY. pic.twitter.com/JRYzv4oVs0
Elena Rybakina's 2025 season has been an everlasting nightmare:
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) August 7, 2025
? Dubai SF (break in the third)
? Roland-Garros R16 (set and a break)
? Berlin QF (four consecutive match points)
? Washington SF (serving for the match)
? Montreal SF (serving for the match twice, match point)
It's nothing that one *big* result won't suddenly paper over, make look better and provide a heap of benefit of the doubt (see Iga winning at SW19), and such a result *could* have come in Montreal for Rybakina. And yet, still no.
BRILLIANT ?
— wta (@WTA) August 5, 2025
Clara Tauson | #OBN25 pic.twitter.com/2TMKI8WyGE
While Tauson, for various reasons, doesn't *always* bring her best game to the court, Montreal proved to *not* be one of those instances. The Dane produced her second career SF+ result in a 1000 event (w/ her Dubai RU earlier this year), putting together back-to-back Top 10 wins for the first time with victories over Iga Swiatek and Madison Keys in a pair of straight setters as she reached the final four without dropping a set. In the same match-up from January's final in Auckland, when Tauson won the title when Naomi Osaka retired after losing the opening set, the Dane fell in straights, but not until she pressured Osaka and forced her to rally to avoid going to a 3rd. Tauson staged a comeback from 4-2 down, getting the set back on serve with a game 7 break on her sixth BP, then forced a tie-break. She led it 6-4, but couldn't put away either of two SP on serve before seeing Osaka surge to a 9-7 win. Tauson will be up to a career high #15 in the new rankings.
Playing her best tennis ?
— wta (@WTA) August 5, 2025
Clara Tauson has won 32 WTA level main draw matches in 2025, more than in the previous three years combined (2022, 2023 and 2024).#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/sETWrQwfzY
In fine form ??@Madison_Keys battles past Muchova 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 for a place in the quarterfinals!#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/HIvcQISn2a
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2025
Elina Svitolina uzupelnila stawke cwiercfinalistek WTA 1000 w Montrealu.
— Z kortu - informacje tenisowe (@z_kortu) August 4, 2025
Ukrainka pokonala Amande Anisimova 6:4, 6:1. O awans do najlepszej "4" powalczy z Naomi Osaka.#OBN25 | #czasnatenis pic.twitter.com/097LP2Eeg8
A former Canada winner (2017), Svitolina hadn't advanced out of the 2nd Round in Montreal/Toronto since 2019, with 1r/2r exits since her return to the tour in 2023. So her QF run in Montreal this time around is a big step back in the right direction, accomplished with victories over Kamilla Rakhimova, Anna Kalinskaya and Amanda Anisimova. Faced with an in-form and growing-more-confident Naomi Osaka, though, she was able to record just four total games. Svitolina's only '25 title came in a smaller event in Rouen this past spring, but she's managed to post QF+ results in a series of 1000-or-higher level tournaments this year, including a SF in Madrid, and additional QF at the AO, RG, Indian Wells and Rome. Though Svitolina has worked to play a more aggressive style of game since her return from materity leave, she still has yet to win a title above the 250 level since her WTA Finals title back in 2018, nor reached anything bigger than a 250 final since she returned to the WTAF title match in her defense attempt the following season. At the time of her '19 WTAF final appearance, eight of her last nine finals had come in 500+ events between 2017-19. Meanwhile, did you notice it, and how quickly did you realize why? From the start, it was clear that Svitolina looked *different* in Montreal, and after a few moments of questioning why I realized that it was because she wasn't wearing her customary visor/headband on court. Though she's always seen *off* court sans headwear -- and she's seen quite often due to her activities since the start of the war -- it's remarkable how different a player can look between the lines with just one alteration from the norm.
A happy Elina Svitolina celebrates reaching the Montreal quarter-final. pic.twitter.com/ccaIwHXoi6
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) August 4, 2025
Trying to remember the last time I saw Svitolina on court without a visor. She looks so different. pic.twitter.com/oBV2Xgz6vF
— Stephanie Myles (@OpenCourt) August 2, 2025
Naomi Osaka is an unbelievable ball striker.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) August 3, 2025
Effortless pic.twitter.com/4MVfFbwTiS
What a forehand from Osaka! ??@naomiosaka | #OBN25 pic.twitter.com/BPDTgskXAS
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2025
On the runnnnn ??@naomiosaka | #OBN25 pic.twitter.com/L6Xr8iUSTr
— wta (@WTA) August 6, 2025
Finding a comfort zone and wave of confidence on hard court, in her first event with Tomasz Wiktorowski (former WTA Coach of the Year) alongside for a coaching trial, Osaka blew through a series of opponents after having escaped a 6-4/5-3 (w/ 3 MP saved) hole vs. Veronika Kudermetova in the 2nd Round, dispatching Alona Ostapenko (6 games allowed), Anastasija Sevastova (1 game), Elina Svitolina (4 games) and Clara Tauson in straight sets to reach the final, her first in a 1000 event since Miami in 2022. Her second tour-level final of '25, it's the first time she's reached multiple WTA finals in a season since 2020.
Naomi didn’t come to play ??@naomiosaka puts on a clinical showing to secure her spot in the Montreal final, defeating Tauson 6-2, 7-6(7)!#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/GMIq5FRjub
— wta (@WTA) August 7, 2025
Prior to Tauson's 2nd set comeback, which fell short of forcing a 3rd but *did* potentially plant a worrisome seed of doubt in the mind of Osaka, the four-time slam winner had looked as if she might romp to the title. But while Osaka's groundstrokes sometimes looked like those of the "player of old," unfortunately, her "bizarro Ostapenko" tendencies since her return from maternity leave returned in the latter stages in Montreal, as well. Like Ostapenko, a confident Osaka in top form can look positively awesome for an extended period of time, but while the Latvian can quickly forget about a few bad moments in a match (sometimes by the time she returns to the baseline) the current version of Osaka can't seem to let them go, sometimes carrying them with her for several points, or games or, in the case the final vs. Victoria Mboko, from some point in the 2nd set all the way through to a three-set loss. Osaka had looked like she could sweep through the teenager, quickly taking the 1st set, but once things got sticky in the 2nd she visibly lost the confident streak she'd been playing with throughout the tournament. The seed of doubt only grew as Mboko remained relentless, quickly overcoming any stuttering moments that occasionally came up, as Osaka slipped all the way back down the mountain in a 6-1 final set defeat. She remains without a tour title since she claimed consecutive majors (US/AO) in NYC/Melbourne in 2020-21. Osaka will rise from #49 to inside the Top 25, and will be seeded at the U.S. Open, but she'll continue to walk a dangerously (too?) fine line if she's going to let her (should be) temporary disappointment in herself due to losing a key point/game or two linger for so long. If she's going to need *unlimited* perfection to remain confident enough to reclaim some of her past glory, well, it just might stay unclaimed.
China's Wang Xiyu rallied to defeat Indonesia's Janice Tjen 3-6, 6-2, 6-4 in the W75 Lexington final on Sunday, claiming her first title of the season. After the match, Wang posted on social media about the importance of patience and persistence and thanked Lexington. pic.twitter.com/CK7BaLwWv6
— Sports China (@PDChinaSports) August 4, 2025
fun two weeks here in Montreal, glad I got to leave here with another one for the cabinet #10dubs ?? thank you McCartney playing with me and for being so clutch haha & thank you guys for the support #CoKart ??? pic.twitter.com/TmLNnAOijL
— Coco Gauff (@CocoGauff) August 7, 2025


Pressure? What pressure ??
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2025
Victoria Mboko reaches her first ever WTA 1000 quarterfinal after taking out the top seed Gauff 6-1, 6-4.#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/S3X8ttdadw
?? Fought her way to QFs! Madison Keys defeats Karolina Muchova in 3 sets 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 #NBO25
— Omnium Banque Nationale (@OBNmontreal) August 3, 2025
Quarts de finale atteintes ?? Madison Keys défait Karolina Muchova en trois manches 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 #OBN25 pic.twitter.com/kSPPuhCz2n
Clara Tauson picks up her first career win over Swiatek and moves into the quarterfinals!#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/MthAOUzRYj
— wta (@WTA) August 4, 2025
RYBAKINA WITH THE FOREHAND OF THE YEAR
— TENNISCentel (@TennisCentel) August 7, 2025
HOW?!?!??! ???????? pic.twitter.com/kAk3vXN6X9
Rybakina held for 4-2 after saving two BP, and seemed on the cusp of the final as she served at 5-4 and held a MP. She dropped serve, but was given a reprieve when Mboko DF'd on BP a game later to give Rybakina another chance to serve for the win. She was broken, at love. Tied up at 3-3 in the deciding TB, Rybakina ultimately lost her last three serve points, and four of the final five points of the match, to fall short for the fourth time this year in five SF appearances.
IT'S MBOKO MANIA IN MONTREAL ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) August 7, 2025
Victoria Mboko defeats Elena Rybakina 1-6, 7-5, 7-6(4) to reach her maiden tour-level final!#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/BbMEr9UOV8
? First WTA Tour title
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) August 8, 2025
? First WTA 1000 ??
? All in your home country ????
Victoria Mboko’s Montreal triumph is already one of the year’s standout moments ?? pic.twitter.com/ZUGxbcH0xV
"I wanna thank every single one of you who came to support me" ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) August 8, 2025
Victoria Mboko addresses her home crowd as the new queen of Canada ??#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/5aW83eVMDp
As for the (too?) disappointed Osaka, well, let's just say she kept it "short and sweet," and was (naturally) bashed afterward for not mentioning her opponent.
It’s absolutely shameful that Naomi Osaka knows that Victoria Mboko idolizes and look up to her, and she couldn’t even congratulate her or even mention her name.
— Mayowa. (@Wana____) August 8, 2025
Disgusting, sore loser behaviour. She earned a hater in me today.
pic.twitter.com/pbzwTk3aqT
Again, I'm not going to kick up any non-story story dust regarding post-match emotions, but I will note that Osaka *did* say afterward that she'd forgotten to say anything about Mboko... so hopefully we won't be getting any make-up TikTok videos in Cincinnati. (Crossing fingers.) Meanwhile, here's a fun little way to show how stupid it is to have been playing both the Montreal/Toronto finals at the same time (the men's started early in the women's 3rd set). There's something poetic -- and maybe emblematic of the many disconnects within the sport -- about Shelton not understanding what was going on...
This is spectacular.
— Devin Heroux (@Devin_Heroux) August 8, 2025
The men’s match in Toronto tonight interrupted by a roaring crowd as they found out Mboko had just won in Montreal.pic.twitter.com/NFWcW0nxJ8
Jessica Bouzas Maneiro playing her first ever WTA 1000 quarter-final in Montreal. pic.twitter.com/mBeoK9mz4Y
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) August 5, 2025
Midnights ?
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2025
Jessica Bouzas Maneiro is into her first WTA 1000 quarterfinal after defeating Zhu Lin in a three set thriller! #OBN25 pic.twitter.com/IJZwvtGq21

Coming up clutch ??
— Cincinnati Open (@CincyTennis) August 7, 2025
Jessica Bouzas Maneiro takes the opening round win against Venus Williams 6-4, 6-4. pic.twitter.com/yfKVOhzP00
Another good effort from Venus Williams, who loses in Cincinnati's R1 to top 50 Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, 6-4, 6-4.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) August 7, 2025
Recovered from early breaks in both sets but ended up getting broken both times at 4-4 with a couple of costly errors. pic.twitter.com/YEQxcFHNK0

I know some people have taken issue with the two-week 1000/Masters format all along, but I've never had a problem with it. And then came Canada, and the transition into Cincinnati. Once again, while the tennis in Montreal (and I guess Toronto?) was often great, the players, fans and the sport were once again victimized by the numbskulls who make decisions for both tours. So, a big thumbs-up -- oh, wait, that's the wrong finger -- for the suits and numbers-crunchers who put together this new summer hard court schedule that insisted on acting as if two events in different cities were actually one, even while scheduling them as if they're separate *and* an ocean apart (and maybe on another planet). All the players on both tours who pulled out of Canada in favor of playing Cincinnati were the only people in this mix with any sense, as the two-city Canada swing does not fit in any way into the (nearly) two-week 1000 format (at least not in the "second week"), and then they bent over backwards to make it fit *even worse*, eliminating day sessions down the stretch (making both events a virtual no-news ghost town all day long) and then playing the relatively few matches (all at night) down the stretch simultaneously. It's an insane series of decisions for a sport that should want to get as many eyes on its product as possible. So, in other words, the usual sort of mind-bending mess where the tennis tours are concerned. And whoever came up with the "let's play the finals on a Thursday!" idea should be banned from ever having a say in the sport again. It actually makes the upcoming *Monday* finals for Cincy (which has *already* started playing 1st Round matches) look perfectly reasonable, even though they're totally uncecessary other than as an excuse to try to squeeze out a few more bucks from paying customers at the expense of anything making much sense, neither athletically-speaking nor when it comes to broadcast coverage, marketing or fan accessibility (99.999% of which is off-grounds).

Diana Shnaider to work with Sascha Bajin, per @achakv87 and Dinara Safina's Telegram channel.https://t.co/zumqWY2RUn
— Oleg S. (@AnnaK_4ever) August 4, 2025

Imagine you're a casual fan, interested in learning more about this hyper-talented teenager on the cusp of a huge upset...and seeing this: pic.twitter.com/FkhKzKQMAn
— Jon Wertheim (@jon_wertheim) August 3, 2025
And it's not as if Mboko just appeared out of nowhere. She'd posted MD wins in the last two majors, and was already in the Top 100 before Montreal. And I've known about this for a long time, but don't think I ever noted it. When a player retires it doesn't take long for the tour site to soon wipe clean their entire match record, as if they never player on the WTA tour at all (and you have to go to the ITF site or elsewhere to see the records of players who were still playing seemingly a few minutes ago)...
Imagine being a young tennis fan and reading something about Chris Evert.. of course, you check her WTA profile to see the matches and everything, only to find thishttps://t.co/QBcYjTSV4B
— YoungTennisGuns (@YoungTennisGuns) August 3, 2025
Yeah - the minute someone's been out a year or so - not even retired, their match results disappear.
— Stephanie Myles (@OpenCourt) August 3, 2025
Blame @pulselive, the agency that made it all worse. Not a clue on the culture of women’s tennis or its fans. pic.twitter.com/VFlHExBSD4
— Alyssa Williams ???????? (@AlyssaW667) August 3, 2025
Finally, after being (sorta) publicly shamed (haha, as if that's possible)...
Hey! The WTA finally got a pic of Victoria Mboko up on her webpage (not a great one tbh) ahead of her quarterfinal in Montreal tonight. pic.twitter.com/QlNVp9GaR6
— Stephanie Myles (@OpenCourt) August 4, 2025
Later, they tour finally got up to speed (but don't expect such a thing to be a regular occurrence, at least not without a lot of shouting and embarrassment occurring beforehand)...

"The way you talk to women—to mothers—is SHAMEFUL."
— TENNIS (@Tennis) August 6, 2025
Elina Svitolina opens up about the online abuse she faced after her Montreal quarterfinal loss to Naomi Osaka. https://t.co/qS0jxKReWo
Elina Svitolina showed the abusive & horrific messages she received from bettors after her loss to Naomi Osaka in Montreal.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 6, 2025
Her response to them:
“To all the bettors: I'm a mom before I'm an athlete. The way you talk to women - to mothers - is SHAMEFUL. If your moms saw your… pic.twitter.com/nG7jA87Bw3

Eva broke the air conditioning on the bench ?????? pic.twitter.com/LDheS8nxGn
— Owen (@kostekcanu) August 7, 2025

Emma Raducanu will begin working with new coach, Francisco Roig, in Cincinnati.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 4, 2025
Roig previously worked as a part of Rafa Nadal’s coaching team for 18 years.
Exciting partnership. ??
(via @matthewrlambert) pic.twitter.com/9khNvQZfiF



Victoria Mboko - Masters 1000 Champion ??? pic.twitter.com/dXB6feZH6n
— J. (@osorieescu) August 8, 2025
Serving on and off the court ?? pic.twitter.com/HueGYkwfJX
— Cincinnati Open (@CincyTennis) August 7, 2025
Normal Muchova moment pic.twitter.com/xPsFq4Fb7k
— Owen (@kostekcanu) August 3, 2025
Magnificent from Muchova ??#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/NF0lsHNhDM
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2025
Am I a big fan of Iga Swiatek? Yes!
— Orest (@orezteja) August 2, 2025
Do I want to be associated with great part of her fanbase? No thanks! pic.twitter.com/m9Gw6XB7nh
Canada has a new teenager burst onto the scene every odd year summer and I think that's amazing pic.twitter.com/2XkjufcB3N
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) August 3, 2025
What Dreams Are Made Of ??
— Made In Canada (@MadelnCanada) August 8, 2025
Congrats Victoria Mboko ?????? pic.twitter.com/wwuqnjlTNx

*2025 FIRST-TIME WTA FINALISTS*
Polina Kudermetova, RUS (#107/21 = Brisbane)
Emiliana Arango, COL (#133/24 = Merida)
Maya Joint, AUS (#78/19 = Rabat)-W
Wang Xinyu, CHN (#49/23 = Berlin)
Alex Eala, PHI (#74/20 = Eastbourne)
Lois Boisson, FRA (#63/22 = Hamburg)-W
Anna Bondar, HUN (#77/28 = Hamburg)
VICTORIA MBOKO, CAN (#85/18 = Montreal)-W
*2025 YOUNGEST WTA SINGLES CHAMPIONS*
17 - Mirra Andreeva, RUS (Dubai)
17 - Mirra Andreeva, RUS (Indian Wells)
18 - VICTORIA MBOKO, CAN (Montreal)
19 - Maya Joint, AUS (Rabat)
19 - Maya Joint, AUS (Eastbourne)
*2025 QUALIFIERS/WILD CARDS/PR IN FINALS*
Brisbane - Polina Kudermetova, RUS (Q)
Abu Dhabi - Belinda Bencic, SUI (WC)-W
Merida - Emiliana Arango, COL (Q)
Bogota - Katarzyna Kawa, POL (Q)
London - Tatjana Maria, GER (Q)-W
Rosmalen - Gabriela Ruse, ROU (Q)
Berlin - Marketa Vondrousova, CZE (PR)-W
Berlin - Wang Xinyu, CHN (Q)
Eastbourne - Alex Eala, PHI (Q)
Hamburg - Lois Boisson, FRA (seeded WC)-W
Montreal - VICTORIA MBOKO, CAN (WC)-W
*2025 TITLES FROM MATCH POINT DOWN*
Auckland - Clara Tauson (1 MP vs. Kenin, 2r)
Australian Open - Madison Keys (1 MP vs Swiatek, SF)
Bogota - Camila Osorio (1 MP vs. Bektas, 2r)
Rosmalen - Elise Mertens (11 MP vs. Alexandrova, SF)
Eastbourne - Maya Joint (4 MP vs. Eala, F)
Montreal - VICTORIA MBOKO (1 MP vs. Rybakina, SF)
*2025 MULT. DIFFERENT WTA CHAMPIONS BY COUNTRY*
6 (USA) Anisimova,Gauff,Kessler,Keys,Navarro,Pegula
3 (RUS) Alexandrova,M.Andreeva,Potapova
2 (CAN) Fernandez,MBOKO
2 (CZE) Bouzkova,Vondrousova
*MOST TOP 10 WINS in 2025; (#)-win over #1*
8 - Sabalenka
7 - Gauff(1)
6 - M.Andreeva(1), Swiatek
5 - Alexandrova(1), Anisimova(1), Keys(1)
4 - Ostapenko(1), Samsonova, Svitolina, Tauson(1)
3 - Bencic, Kessler, Noskova
*MOST WTA SF in 2025*
9 - Aryna Sabalenka (7-2)
7 - Iga Swiatek (2-5)
5 - Jessie Pegula (5-0)
5 - ELENA RYBAKINA (1-4)
5 - Ekaterina Alexandrova (1-4)
4 - Amanda Anisimova (3-1)
4 - Madison Keys (2-2)
4 - CLARA TAUSON (2-2)
4 - Jasmine Paolini (1-3)
*2025 WTA FIRST-TIME DOUBLES CHAMPIONS*
Brisbane - Mirra Andreeva, RUS (17)
Brisbane - Diana Shnaider, RUS (20)
Cluj-Napoca - Magali Kempen, BEL (27)
Cluj-Napoca - Anna Siskova, CZE (23)
Rabat - Maya Joint, AUS (19)
Iasi - Veronika Erjavec, SLO (25)
Iasi - Panna Udvardy, HUN (26)
Montreal - McCARTNEY KESSLER, USA (26)
*2025 WTA DOUBLES FINALS*
5 (2-3) = Alona Ostapenko
5 (1-4) = ZHANG SHUAI
5 (1-4) = Anna Danilina
4 (3-1) = Sara Errani
4 (3-1) = Jasmine Paolini
4 (3-1) = TAYLOR TOWNSEND
4 (0-4) = Hsieh Su-wei


"I read its tales of trauma, loss and shame. The book my body wrote became my guide, exposing feelings that I couldn’t hide." --from poem no. 4, "Corona of Fragmentation" www.amazon.com/Cant-Recall-... #poetry #poetrycommunity #WritingCommunity #Divorce
— Diane Elayne Dees (@womenwhoserve.bsky.social) August 3, 2025 at 12:09 PM
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This is modern art I can get with pic.twitter.com/GDmtwhII1L
— internet hall of fame (@InternetH0F) July 27, 2024

Wholesome Thread on animals to brighten your day????
— Vertigo_Warrior (@VertigoWarrior) August 3, 2025
1. Little Kitty found the ideal spot ??????pic.twitter.com/EKc2IPfEXU

Facts you didn't know about the film industry.
— Today In History (@historigins) August 3, 2025
A thread ??
1. They shut down 20 blocks of Times Square, spent $1 million, and filmed for 3 hours all for one of the craziest scenes in movie history pic.twitter.com/OXVwCFVuHP
Pretty good recap of what it felt like to walk through Times Square during the pandemic. ??
— Sameena Azhar ????? (@SameenaAzhar) August 4, 2025
Can't believe that all of us in New York City lived through that mayhem.
Books will be written about the strange mix of sadness, solace and solitude during those Apocalyptic times. https://t.co/fZ9DzjO4bz
A Monday morning drive through Times Square shows nearly deserted streets amid the coronavirus pandemic. Find @AP's latest on the outbreak here: https://t.co/MXfwp77exR pic.twitter.com/WNV0Ji9Quz
— The Associated Press (@AP) March 23, 2020

10 Iconic moments from the Past ??
— Lost Temples™ (@LostTemple7) August 3, 2025
1. When Muhammad Ali snuck up on Sylvester Stallone at the 1977 Oscarspic.twitter.com/BbmXVsOg1z
15. Atlanta Olympics 1996 featured the iconic moment when the legendary Muhammad Ali, despite suffering heavily from Parkinson's, lit the Olympic flame to begin the gamespic.twitter.com/wIgSG1bHFk
— Lost Temples™ (@LostTemple7) August 3, 2025

This horse waited his whole life for this moment
— Science girl (@gunsnrosesgirl3) August 5, 2025
pic.twitter.com/vWvkFsXSF4

The painting was sold for $40 at a charity auction at the St Vincent de Paul auction house in San Diego in the mid-1990s to art collector Michael Hempstead.He sold it to an antique store in Pasadena, California, for $400, which was the going rate for a Berény at the time. The…
— ???a (@_dreamer__neha) August 4, 2025