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Norwegian rookie Reitan wins PGA Truist Championship
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Knicks sweep past 76ers into NBA Eastern Conference finals
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Aussie Herbert wins LIV Golf Virginia title
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Le Garrec guides La Rochelle past Racing in Top 14
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PSG all but secure Ligue 1 title with two games to spare
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UK, France to host defence ministers meeting on Hormuz
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Key factors behind Barca's La Liga title triumph
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Snedeker captures PGA Myrtle Beach Classic title
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Barca claim La Liga title with Clasico win over Real Madrid
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Trump rejects Iran peace terms, Tehran warns of new attacks
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Iran Nobel winner released on bail for medical treatment: supporters
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Arsenal glimpse title glory as VAR 'earthquake' rocks Premier League
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Wizards win NBA Draft Lottery to capture first pick
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Iran responds to US peace proposal, warns against new attacks
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Leaders Bengaluru edge to last-ball win over Mumbai
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Jeeno defends title at LPGA Mizuho Americas Open
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Plane with hantavirus evacuees lands in Netherlands
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Poland's wanted ex-minister confirms he fled to US from Hungary
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Arteta praises 'brave' officials after ruling out West Ham equaliser for 'clear foul'
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West Ham's Bowen slams decision to rule out Wilson goal against Arsenal
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Arsenal on brink of Premier League title, Villa slip up in Champions League chase
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Arsenal survive VAR drama to move closer to title with dramatic win at West Ham
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Macron arrives in Kenya ahead of Africa summit
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French evacuee from hantavirus-hit ship has 'symptoms': French PM
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'Devil Wears Prada 2' holds strong at N. America box office
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Record-equalling Patel sets up Chennai victory over Lucknow in IPL
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French rookie Magnier wins his second stage of Giro d'Italia
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Iran responds to US peace proposal as drones hit Gulf
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Jorge Martin wins French MotoGP and Ogura ends Japan's drought
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Bangladesh-Pakistan Test evenly poised after Mehidy takes 5 wickets
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Prizmic follows up on Djokovic exploit by reaching Italian Open last 16
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Drones target Gulf vessels as Tehran warns US
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Adam Yates out of Giro d'Italia with concussion after crash
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Barcelona need a point against Real Madrid to win La Liga
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Evacuation of hantavirus-hit ship begins in Canary Islands
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Anxiety, anticipation as World Cup one-month countdown begins
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Militia kill at least 69 in DR Congo: local, security sources
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Turkey show displays photo master Ara Guler's Cannes shots
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Hantavirus-hit cruise ship arrives in Spain's Canary Islands
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South Korea welcomes rare baby bump as population shrinks
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Japan baseball umpires wear 29 in tribute to unconscious colleague
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Thunder top Lakers for 3-0 NBA series lead, Cavs claw back against Pistons
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No trees, no fans: surviving extreme heat in India's salt pans
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Soaring energy profits reignite calls for windfall tax
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Japan's Mitoma injured as World Cup looms
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Eurovision fever hits host city Vienna
Wimbledon cancer survivor Peniston says illness 'blessing in disguise'
Ryan Peniston described his childhood battle with cancer as "a blessing in disguise" on Tuesday as he marked his Grand Slam debut by reaching the Wimbledon second round.
The 26-year-old Briton defeated Switzerland's Henri Laaksonen 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 in a rock-solid performance.
Peniston overcame cancer at the age of two and underwent gruelling chemotherapy and surgery.
"It made me definitely tougher as a player and a person I think. It's a blessing in disguise really," said Peniston, the world number 135.
"It definitely affected my growth. I was a really late bloomer. I didn't start growing until 15, 16," he said.
"I was always about a foot smaller than all my peers. They all were growing and getting bigger serves and everything. I was struggling just trying to run around and get the balls."
Now standing at six feet tall (1.83 metres) with a muscular frame, Peniston is thriving in his late-developing career.
His struggles are in the past now for a man who arrived at Wimbledon having made four successive grass-court quarter-finals.
At the Queen's Club lead-up event, he knocked out French Open runner-up Casper Ruud, currently ranked sixth in the world, in the first round.
"For this to happen is just is crazy for me," he said.
"When I was younger, like a teenager, you always have people ask, 'You play tennis. I'll see you at Wimbledon one day.' I'd always say, 'Yeah, yeah, hopefully, hopefully.' Yeah, now to just say it's happened is unbelievable."
R.J.Fidalgo--PC