
BY: Justin Birnbaum
On the famed red clay of Roland-Garros in August, Jasmine Paolini could hardly contain her excitement as she tossed her racket high in the air, pumped both of her fists and embraced her doubles partner, Sara Errani. Just seconds earlier, the Italian duo had made history, defeating Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider to claim their nation’s first-ever Olympic gold medal in tennis.
“We were playing good, so I was repeating to myself, ‘Maybe we can have a chance,’” Paolini tells Forbes, a few weeks removed from the Paris Games. “But I was hoping for this gold medal.” Admittedly, even Paolini couldn’t have predicted this breakthrough moment, let alone the banner year that has undoubtedly transformed her life.
SOURCE: https://www.forbes.com
Please join Mia Maria Order Sons of Italy in America Lodge #2813 as we host the 2015...
For Italians, and Romans in particular, the Open is not just a tennis tournament where cha...
The National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame is proud to announce its inductees and h...
He just turned 30. He bats left-handed. He boasts a career 124 OPS+ — the same as Nolan Ar...
Francesco Molinari clinched a two-stroke victory at the Arnold Palmer Invitational when he...
The long-anticipated documentary about late Pittsburgh wrestler Bruno Sammartino is being...
The forward only scored seven goals for Italy but six arrived during the 1990 World Cup, e...
After years starring at Millburn High School, Short Hills resident Peter Serruto is living...