TORONTO – TSN and RDS deliver live coverage of the 2014 CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN giving Canadians access to more than 16 hours of Canadas national womens open golf championship tournament in both English and French across multiple platforms. The networks coverage of the 2014 CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN begins on Thursday, Aug. 21 at 12 noon ET live from the London Hunt and Country Club in London, Ont. TSNs live coverage of the CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN is also available to TSN subscribers for live streaming and on demand viewing through TSN GO. "We are thrilled to partner with TSN and RDS in delivering the excitement of the CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN and the LPGA Tour to television and online audiences across the country in both French and English," said Scott Simmons, Executive Director and CEO, Golf Canada. "Together with our partners at Canadian Pacific and the LPGA Tour, we look forward to working with Canadas leading sports networks to elevate the profile of the CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN and showcase this elite event to millions of golf enthusiasts." This marks the first time in nine years that TSN has broadcast all four rounds of Canadas national womens open golf championship, and the first time since 2011 that RDS has broadcast the event. TSNs coverage is led by Rod Black along with veteran golf analyst Judy Rankin. They will be joined by analysts Bob Weeks, Gail Graham, TSNs Cory Woron and The Golf Channels Jerry Foltz. The CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN features the worlds best womens golfers – including two-time defending champion Lydia Ko, top-ranked golfer Stacey Lewis, and Canadian teenage sensation Brooke Henderson. The fully customizable TSN Golf app also features up-to-the-minute news and analysis from the CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN. In addition to domestic coverage from TSN and RDS, the CANADIAN PACIFIC WOMENS OPEN will also be broadcast on The Golf Channel in the United States and by LPGA international broadcast licensees around the world. Broadcast Schedule Thursday, Aug. 21• 12 noon ET – First Round – Part I (TSN / RDS2)• 3 p.m. ET – First Round – Part II (TSN / RDS2) Friday, Aug. 22• 12 noon ET – Second Round – Part I (TSN / RDS2)• 3 p.m. ET – Second Round – Part II (TSN / RDS2) Saturday, Aug. 23• 2 p.m. ET – Third Round (TSN2 / RDS2) Sunday, Aug. 24• 2 p.m. ET – Final Round (TSN2 / RDS2) *Schedule subject to change Nike Air Zoom Ofertas . The team announced that it exercised the options on 15 players including goalkeepers Evan Bush, Maxime Crepeau and Troy Perkins, defenders Matteo Ferrari, Karl W. 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The fourth-seeded Chinese star beat Dominika Cibulkova 7-6 (7-3), 6-0 at Rod Laver Arena to capture her first Australian Open title on Saturday. Li played in her third final in four years at Melbourne Park. She lost to Kim Clijsters in 2011 and Victoria Azarenka last year before finally breaking through at the seasons first Grand Slam event against the 20th-seeded Cibulkova. "After I win the match, I really, really exciting," Li said. "I think I have drops still coming down, you know. I try to have hug with the team, but is too high. I cannot catch it (laughter)." Her win came at the end of a fortnight featuring an array of surprising results on the womens side. It was the first time since 1997 that none of the top three seeds made the semifinals. Li committed 25 of her 30 unforced errors in a competitive opening set before she unexpectedly breezed through the second. She had a 34-11 advantage in winners, many coming on her lethal backhand, and converted half of her 10 break-point chances. The second double fault by Cibulkova in the matchs opening game gave Li an early break. A double fault then hurt Li as Cibulkova gained a break to level the first set at 3-all. Li earned a break point with a strong backhand winner in the ninth game, but two of her forehands flew long and Cibulkova was able to hold for a 5-4 lead. After closing out a relative easy service game with an ace to extend the set, Li earned two break points when she followed up Cibulkovas sixth double fault with a blistering ccrosscourt backhand.dddddddddddd Cibulkova then netted a backhand to give Li a 6-5 lead before she broke back to force a tiebreak. Li raced out to a commanding 5-1 lead in the tiebreak and she later claimed the 70-minute first set when Cibulkova dumped a backhand into the net. The second set lasted only 27 minutes and ended with Cibulkova sending a ground stroke long. "You know, it was my first Grand Slam finals and Im just proud with the way I handle it," Cibulkova said. "You know, I just went on the court. I wanted to play my best tennis. It wasnt easy against her because she was playing extremely well. So Im quite happy." Li, who turns 32 next month, captured her second Grand Slam title, adding to her victory at the 2011 French Open, and improved to 9-11 in career finals. She also is just the fourth woman to win the Aussie Open crown after saving a match point. She fought off the match point in the third round against Lucie Safarova and joined Monica Seles (1991), Jennifer Capriati (2002) and Serena Williams (2003 and 2005) to accomplish the feat. "Yeah, start of tournament everybody talking about the age," Li said. "I would like to say age is nothing. Still can win the Grand Slam. So pretty happy about my age. I got more experience on the court." Cibulkova, who stands just 5-foot-3, knocked off No. 3 seed Maria Sharapova in the fourth round and No. 5 seed Agnieszka Radwanska in the semifinals to become Slovakias first Grand Slam finalist. The 24-year-old fell to 3-6 in her career title tilts and 0-5 against Li. ' ' '