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Russian-born tennis player Anastasia Potapova switches nationality to Austrian

Sport

Russian-born tennis player Anastasia Potapova switches nationality to Austrian
Sport

Sport

Russian-born tennis player Anastasia Potapova switches nationality to Austrian

2025-12-05 19:23 Last Updated At:19:30

VIENNA (AP) — Russian-born Anastasia Potapova has switched allegiance to Austria, clearing a path for the 51st-ranked player to compete in the Billie Jean King Cup.

Potapova will become Austria's highest-ranked women's player, ahead of No. 94 Julia Grabher, with the nationality switch, which she announced on social media.

“Welcome to the team,” the Austrian tennis federation said in a statement that also confirmed her move.

The 24-year-old Potapova played at the Billie Jean King Cup in 2018 and 2019, but Russia has been banned from team competitions since the invasion of Ukraine.

“Austria is a place I love, is incredibly welcoming and a place where I feel totally at home,” Potapova wrote on Instagram on Thursday. “I love being in Wien and look forward to making my second home there. As part of this, I am proud to announce that starting from 2026 I will be representing my new homeland Austria in my professional tennis career from this point onwards.”

Potapova's highest ranking was No. 21 in June 2023. Her best Grand Slam result is reaching the fourth round at the 2024 French Open. She has won three singles titles.

As a youth player, she was the 2016 girls champion at Wimbledon.

Potapova was criticized in 2023 for wearing a Spartak Moscow soccer club T-shirt during a warmup at Indian Wells.

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

FILE -Anastasia Potapova, of Russia, during the first round of the U.S. Open tennis tournament, Aug. 24, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Vera Nieuwenhuis, File)

FILE -Anastasia Potapova, of Russia, during the first round of the U.S. Open tennis tournament, Aug. 24, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Vera Nieuwenhuis, File)

LONDON (AP) — Germany’s president is set to lay a wreath Friday at Coventry Cathedral in central England, symbolically atoning for the atrocities of World War II as his country and the United Kingdom seek to bolster an alliance to combat the new war raging in Europe.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier’s pilgrimage commemorates the Nazi bombing of Coventry on the night of Nov. 14, 1940, which destroyed the 14th-century Gothic cathedral, leaving behind a roofless ruin that stands as a reminder of the ravages of war. At least 568 people were killed and more than half of Coventry’s homes were damaged or destroyed in what was the single most concentrated attack on a British city during the war.

Britain will be represented at the event by the Duke of Kent, who has long fostered British-German reconciliation. He served as the royal patron of the Dresden Trust, which seeks to build bonds between the people of Britain and Dresden following the Allied bombing that destroyed the German city’s historic center and killed an estimated 25,000 people in February 1945.

Steinmeier’s appearance wraps up a three-day state visit to Britain, the first by a German head of state in 27 years.

During a lavish banquet on Wednesday night at Windsor Castle, Steinmeier and King Charles III put on a show of Anglo-Saxon unity, exchanging toasts that celebrated the cultural and historic ties between their nations and highlighted efforts to build a common front against Russian aggression in Ukraine.

In his toast, Steinmeier described Coventry as a symbol of the bonds that grew out of the war that ended 80 years ago.

“Flourishing cities grew out of the ashes. Enemies became friends,” he said. “That is our common history — and it shows what is possible when people have the courage to pursue reconciliation.”

The state visit comes as European nations bond together to support Ukraine and confront Russian efforts to destabilize western democracies through so-called hybrid attacks such as election interference, disinformation and sabotage. Shaken by what they see as U.S. President Donald Trump’s lack of reliability, European nations are increasing military spending and boosting military cooperation.

Earlier this year, Britain and Germany signed a treaty pledging to deepen cooperation on a range of issues, including defense, migration and the fight against climate change.

Martin Farr, an expert in modern British history at Newcastle University, said Steinmeier’s visit highlights the fact that European nations are working together much more that at any time since 1815. That was the year that the continent’s major powers set up the Concert of Europe, a set of practices and principles designed to keep the peace after the Napoleonic Wars.

“War’s been mentioned in this visit,’’ Farr said. “War, in some part, has occasioned the visit and its importance. And so the historical echoes are really very profound, I think.”

The pomp and ceremony of Steinmeier’s visit to Britain is part of that.

While state visits are hosted by the king, they are scheduled at the request of the elected government to reward friends — and sometimes nudge reluctant partners — with the red carpet treatment only the British royal family can provide.

On Wednesday, Charles welcomed Steinmeier and his wife, Elke Büdenbender, with a warm handshake before bundling them into a horse-drawn carriage for the ride to Windsor Castle, where a military band played the national anthems of both countries and Steinmeier inspected the assembled troops.

For the banquet, Queen Camilla and the Princess of Wales donned glittering tiaras and flowing evening gowns as they escorted their guests into St. George’s Hall for a sumptuous meal served on 200-year-old silver. The hall was decorated with a 6-meter tall (nearly 20 feet) Christmas tree adorned with thousands of lights.

Steinmeier also held talks with Prime Minister Keir Starmer, laid a wreath at the tomb of the late Queen Elizabeth II and addressed Parliament.

During his speech to lawmakers, Steinmeier described Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as an attack on the rules-based order that was built in Europe following World War II.

“We are seeing the resurgence of imperial ambitions, the attempt by destabilizing forces to divide us and pit us against one another,” he said. “And that is precisely why we must stand united. We need to stand up as one for what defines us.''

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaks to a joint session of Members of Parliament, in the Royal Gallery, at the Palace of Westminster, as part of his State Visit to the United Kingdom, in London, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, Pool)

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaks to a joint session of Members of Parliament, in the Royal Gallery, at the Palace of Westminster, as part of his State Visit to the United Kingdom, in London, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, Pool)

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