

ARYNA SABALENKA RULES THE CALIFORNIA DESERT 🏆🎉#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/hXATU01DEg
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 15, 2026
Stunning point from Rybakina 🤩#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/MCvn7urNLd
— wta (@WTA) March 15, 2026
A moment Linda Noskova will never forget ✨👏
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 12, 2026
She ends Gibson's run to reach her 1st career semifinal in #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/A3eAhfv1l5
Meanwhile, Noskova is the most underrated player in the Top 20, but she remains one truly big result from climbing into the Top 10. The Czech continually posts good results -- adding an Indian Wells SF this week to previous slam QF (AO24) and 4r (WI '25) results, six tour single finals (one at a 1000 in Beijing) and eleven Top 10 wins -- but that one *big* result has remained out of reach, hence her being "stuck" between #12-14 for the past five and a half months. Her six finals (all since the start of '23) have produced just one title, and while she *did* manage a #1 win over Iga Swiatek at AO24, Noskova has often come up *just short* of some other potentially course-altering upsets (eight of her eleven Top 10 wins have come vs. players ranked #7-10). She took Swiatek to three sets in a Miami loss two years ago, then did it again in Doha last year. Additional, gave-it-a-go-but-couldn't-quite-get-it-done three-set defeats have come since the start of last year vs. Jessie Pegula ('25 Bad Homburg SF), Amanda Anisimova ('25 Wimbledon 4r, and in last year's Beijing final when the Czech was going for a third Top 10 in the tournament) and Mirra Andreeva (a 7-5 3rd set loss in January in Brisbane). Indian Wells followed a similar pattern, as Noskova posted her third career 1000 QF+ result with a SF after wins over Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, Sorana Cirstea, Alex Eala (6-2/6-0) and Talia Gibson (someone had to do it eventually, right?), but couldn't get past a very in-form Aryna Sabalenka a round from what would have been her most important career match. Noskova's big game (esp. on serve) will give her many more chances for "the big one," but if she's going to get over that proverbial hump she might have to work on closing up some of the identifiable holes (such as, as Lindsay Davenport pointed out during the match on Tennis Channel, her slow reaction and poor percentage in getting back wide returns of her second serve, which serves to blunt some of the in-match effectiveness of her good first serve results) that might be keeping her continued climb up the tour ladder at bay (for now). As usual, Noskova will remain in her current ranking "box" come Monday, and will pull into Miami at #13.
The defending champion is out 🤯@K_Siniakova takes out Andreeva 4-6 7-6(5) 6-3 to reach the fourth round!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/ip2PHChefR
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 9, 2026
After coming back from a set down to defeat Sofia Kenin, Siniakova won out over Leylah Fernandez in 3:28 battle in the 2nd Round, recovering from being 3-1 down in the 3rd set, saving 4 BP to hold for 4-4 with the match hanging in the balance and then dominating a deciding tie-break. With her momentum at full blast, she upset defending champion Mirra Andreeva despite squandering a 1st set lead and then nearly letting the match slip away in the 3rd after losing break leads on three different occasions. Unfortunately, Siniakova didn't have a good end in the desert, as her previous tears of joy turned into the "regular" kind when she was forced to retire with a hip injury against Elina Svitolina in their 4th Round match.
Medical time out for Katerina Siniakova
— edgeAI (@edgeAIapp) March 11, 2026
Treatment on right thigh / hip area
Elina Svitolina just won first set 6-1 pic.twitter.com/zyQ1ML0xYF
Teamed once again with Taylor Townsend, Siniakova had also reached the doubles semis, in which she was able to play a day later, finishing off a win over #1 seeds Errani/Paolini to reach the final.
The perfect finish ✨@TaylorTownsend | @K_Siniakova | #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/gnQDePz09q
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 13, 2026
Meanwhile, after a successful first week in the desert, Gibson's run from the qualifying rounds to the best big event result of her career continued well into week two. The Aussie had saved a pair of MP in a Q-win over Elvina Kalieva, then knocked off Ann Li and Ekaterina Alexandrova to reach the 3rd Round. She was just getting started. Gibson ran her streak of Top 20 wins to two with an upset of Clara Tauson on Sunday to reach her first 1000 Round of 16, then added still more decoration to her unexpected mini-masterpiece with her maiden Top 10 win against Jasmine Paolini to become the first qualifier since 2015 (Lesia Tsurenko) to reach the Indian Wells QF, and the first Aussie since 2015 (Casey Dellacqua). NOTE: In case you were wondering, Ash Barty's best I.W. result was a 4th Round in 2019. In a wild series of events, it came in what was her last of just two appearances in the event. Remember, the tournament was cancelled in 2020 due to the pandemic, then moved to October in 2021 (Barty had ended her season after the U.S. Open and gone back to Australia). In March 2022, new AO champ Barty withdrew from both Indian Wells and Miami, then soon after announced her retirement from the sport. Barty spent 121 official weeks (more in real time, as the rankings were frozen for six months in '20) and won three majors after her '19 MD run, but never appeared in Indian Wells as the #1 ranked player. In fact, she was just the #16 and #12 seed in the two events she played.
Talia Gibson's FIRST quarterfinal 🥹
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 10, 2026
The qualifier, No. 112 in the WTA Rankings, stuns No. 7 seed Paolini 7-5 2-6 6-1!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/rQTLAtax5G
Gibson lost in three sets to Linda Noskova in the QF, but will now make a huge jump from #112 all the way to about #67 on Monday. At 17-6 in 2026, she's the new AUS #3, and will find herself only a few spots behind AUS #2, Dasha Kasatkina. AUS #1, Maya Joint, is off to an horrendous 2-8 start to her season, with six straight losses heading into Miami.
Worth the wait ⏳@ElinaSvitolina defeats Swiatek 6-2 4-6 6-4 for her first Indian Wells SF since 2019!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/8mEZMUPzo7
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 13, 2026
Kalinina wins her fourth WTA 125 title beating Zidanšek 6-0 6-3 in Antalya III final. 14–1 (five sets dropped) and 331 points to cap three weeks in Turkey.
— Patrick Ding (@PatrickDing0915) March 15, 2026
WTA 125 singles titlists in b2b calendar weeks:
Bencic (2017)
Parks (2022)
Sherif (2023)
Erjavec (2025)
KALININA (2026) pic.twitter.com/WT2bEPVxlV
Gutsy match from Francoise Abanda..she was fired up! #RogersCup #WTA pic.twitter.com/Q7HNUEiADR
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) August 5, 2014
While Bianca Andreescu's comeback gets more attention, that of fellow Canadian Franckie Abanda is taking place quite a bit farther off the beaten path, well under the radar, and from much further outside collective tennis consciousness. (Catch the date on the above photo... Abanda was once a thing, but it's been quite a while.) More than a decade ago, Abanda was part of the first wave of new Canadian tennis singles stars (just behind Bouchard & Raonic, and slightly ahead of the likes of Andreescu, Fernandez and FAA -- while Mboko was 6 years old when Abanda's name starting making headlines in majors), shining in Fed Cup play and looking like a name to keep an eye on at tour-level. A former junior #4, she reached the girls' SF at both Wimbledon (2012) and Roland Garros (2014), cracked the Top 200 (climbing to #111 at age 20) and posted women's MD wins at two majors (RG/WI) in 2017. But her tennis journey has been nothing short of disastrous ever since due to shoulder and back injuries. Since her breakout back-to-back results in slams in '17, Abanda hasn't played a single MD match in a major (or even any in qualifying since '19). Between 2021-24 she played in a combined total of 28 singles matches, and when she appeared in a draw at a $15K in Antalya last season it was to play her first match in more than two years. She ultimately played 19 singles matches in '25 (going 10-9). Flashforward nearly a year and Abanda, now age 29 and ranked #1007, suddenly played her way into the singles *and* doubles finals in the Gonesse (FRA) $15K this past week, winning six straight matches from qualifying to reach her first singles final since 2019 (and just her second since 2016, when she claimed her most recent singles crown). Abanda won the doubles (w/ Lucie Nguyen Tan), picking up her first WD title on any level since 2015, but fell in the singles title match to Spain's Maria Garcia Cid, 7-5/6-1. Even so, Abanda is off to a 17-4 start in '26 and (shhhh) not experiencing the sort of physical difficulties that have sidelined her once-promising career for much of the past decade. Crossing fingers.
Ranked # 333 last year…
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 12, 2026
top 10 this year 😎 Victoria Mboko 👏 pic.twitter.com/lkPgyiRyPw
Vicky Enjoying Flawless Run in Indian Wells 💪
— Tennis Canada (@TennisCanada) March 11, 2026
Victoria Mboko 🇨🇦 is through to her second WTA 1000 quarterfinal of 2026 after a 6-4, 6-1 win over Amanda Anisimova 🇺🇸 at the BNP Paribas Open.
She faces World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka next 🍿
Read more 👉 https://t.co/1SCaEfth3W pic.twitter.com/Nsq27BBRG3
Mboko fell in straights sets for the second time in two meetings with Aryna Sabalenka, but once again took the world #1 to a 1st set tie-break (for a second straight set, after doing so in the 2nd set at the AO) and battled on in the tight 6-4 concluding set of their QF match-up. The Canadian seems to improve with every big event, match and opponent she plays, and with the majority of the season still ahead of her -- without a truly big points defense other than her career-changing 1000 title run in Canada (she won just three combined MD matches at RG, SW19 and the U.S.) -- she's staring at a points-galore situation where the sky would seem to be her only limit for the remainder of '26.
Wow.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) March 10, 2026
Sonay Kartal, who beat Emma Navarro in R2, defeats 2025 semifinalist Madison Keys 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 to reach the last 16 at Indian Wells.
One of the biggest wins of her life.
Keys hit over 50 winners but over 50 unforced errors as well. pic.twitter.com/WEhsQ9VtKN
Though her run ended via retirement, it's likely safe to say that Kartal got the most out of her in the desert that she could have, even if the Brit wasn't able to remain healthy enough to see it through to the very end. With a Round of 16 at Wimbledon under her belt from last season, as well as a 4th Round (I.W., as a LL) and QF (Beijing) in 1000 events over the past year, it's no longer a *shock* to see the 24-year old playing into the second week of a big event. Her second straight such run in the desert came after wins over Lanlana Tararudee and Emma Navarro (against whom Kartal saved a MP), and was highlighted by an upset of Madison Keys. Kartal retired with a lower back injury vs. Elena Rybakina in the 4th Round after having managed to stay close to the AO champ (at 6-4, 4-3) despite playing through pain.
Naná é campeã 🏆 também de simples no J300 Porto Alegre 🇧🇷, é o quarto título seguido da brasileira em 2026, somando simples e duplas, venceu a Welles Newman 🇺🇸 por 6/1 7/5.
— NANÁ | Nauhany Vitoria Updates (@nauhanyupdates) March 15, 2026
Entra pela primeira vez no TOP 20 ITF JUNIORS.
DALHEEEE
pic.twitter.com/NpjQkiYjjM
Talk about a dream team 💫
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 14, 2026
Townsend/Siniakova win their second WTA 1000 doubles title as a team 🏆🏆#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/QfmC7ZK2E1
Your 2026 Indian Wells Doubles Champions! 🏆@K_Siniakova x @TaylorTownsend | #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/IFJbagMpiV
— wta (@WTA) March 14, 2026
Meanwhile, Danilina/Krunic's seventh final together since last June (including two in majors), their third in a 1000 event, increases their season Doubles Race lead. The top-ranked duo leads #2 Dabrowski/Stefani by a healthy 1500 points (approx.) and holds a 1700-point edge on #3/AO champs Mertens/Zhang.

WHAT A MOMENT. WHAT A MATCH. 😱🏆
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 15, 2026
Aryna Sabalenka is victorious at Indian Wells for the first time with a thrilling 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(6) victory! 💫#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/uN9smmJlxt
"Aryna Suh-Blanka"
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) March 15, 2026
💀💀💀💀💀💀 pic.twitter.com/Tr2cuZldFo
On the CHARGE 😤
— wta (@WTA) March 12, 2026
It's a 4th consecutive Indian Wells semifinal for @SabalenkaA, as she defeats Mboko 7-6(0), 6-4 👏
#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/BjSjPeFbwa
I N C R E D I B L E 🌟
— wta (@WTA) March 10, 2026
Talia Gibson qualifies for her first WTA 1000 quarterfinal in her first main draw appearance 👏#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/5lKcKZHdXN
Sealed with a kiss 😚@ElinaSvitolina | #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/RYGFPTFUnK
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 13, 2026
It's Svitolina's 47th career Top 10 victory, 26th vs. the Top 5 and 11th over the Top 2. It's just her second in six meetings against Swiatek, with the other coming at Wimbledon in 2023. She'd been 0-2 vs. the Pole on hard court, and hadn't won a set in their three meetings since SW19 three seasons ago. For Swiatek, on the other hand, the loss is her fifth straight vs. Top 10 competition going back to last year (0-3 in '26), and drops her to 1-4 vs. the Top 20 this year. She's gone 1-7 against the Top 10 since her title run in Cincinnati last summer. Scenes like this have become more and more commom with Swiatek the last couple of seasons...
Też bym się wściekała więc frustracja Igi wcale mnie nie dziwi..
— Ania (@eni_87ch) March 13, 2026
🎥Canal+Sport2 pic.twitter.com/sW5N5Ktfj3
You gotta wonder if if *something* might come to a head with Team Swiatek if things don't a decidedly experience an upward turn by sometime this summer.
COBOLLI & BENCIC ARE THE MIXED DOUBLES CHAMPIONS AT INDIAN WELLS!!!
— The Tennis Eagle (@SoaringTennis) March 14, 2026
6-3 2-6 10-7 over Glasspool & Dabrowski
Awesome duo. pic.twitter.com/tYOj6q6RfX
Your mixed doubles champions 👏@BelindaBencic & @cobollifla take the title with a 6-3 2-6 10-7 win over Dabrowski/Glasspool!#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/GaHeu0HoaC
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 14, 2026
What a Thai-m to be alive! 🇹🇭🏆
— 🎾nebby🎾 (@1gamesetmatch) March 14, 2026
Lanlana Tararudee wins the biggest title of her young career in Austin 125k against Bianca Andreescu in three sets ✨ pic.twitter.com/Ypi2iWKSNZ
Not the ending we wanted to see 💔
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 9, 2026
Coco Gauff is forced to retire against Alex Eala after feeling persistent pain in her arm. 😓
Wonderful sportsmanship from both 🤝 pic.twitter.com/chxwX99aUT

Wow Katerina Siniakova took out the defending champ Mirra Andreeva! Mirra smashed her racket twice, was rude to her box and also had some inaudible words and gestures to the crowd on her way out the stadium.
— LeDerius (@LeDerius) March 9, 2026
You really just did that @K_Siniakova 🥹#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/GvMtHtSRnF
— wta (@WTA) March 9, 2026
At the end of the match, we got a literal "welcome to the crazy women's tennis tour" crash of moments, from Andreeva's anger to Siniakova's tears to Andreeva's cursing at the fans and one fan's "oh-my" reaction to it all.
Mirra Andreeva loves a choke 🥴 pic.twitter.com/Eu2Mj47SbJ
— Nick Ally ✝️ (@nick_ally1986) March 9, 2026
No pudo contener la calma😔
— Iván Aguilar (@ivabianconero) March 9, 2026
Mirra Andreeva🇷🇺 falla en l defensa del título y cae en la tercera ronda de Indian Wells al ser superada por Ekaterina Siniakova🇨🇿 4-6 7-6 y 6-3#TennisParadise
pic.twitter.com/Jcc3Tokekz
Mirra Andreeva to the crowd ( or to her box ? ) after losing her match in Indian Wells
— 🦖 (@RamoFootball) March 9, 2026
« f*** you all. »
🇷🇺😭pic.twitter.com/Qx4Gxp58MW
Mirra Andreeva is a sore loser ? pic.twitter.com/sKsNEc7V6A
— Nick Ally ✝️ (@nick_ally1986) March 9, 2026
Oh my stars, Marvin. Did she just... pic.twitter.com/FFRTS5lWKt
— Nigel Tufnel Overdrive (@roprey) March 10, 2026
And here is where we respectfully recognize that not all teenagers arrive with the temperament of a Coco Gauff. It's hard not to push back -- by at least two majors -- the date of Andreeva's "inevitable" slam triumph every time her immaturity "escapes its container" like this.
Naomi Osaka is so funny bc Aryna Sabalenka was always the tiger on tour. And here come Naomi with her Nike “huntress” leopard kit. Round 4 is looking lively 🍿 pic.twitter.com/PEWMGqr08A
— 💜 (@kingdeelia) March 9, 2026
The week of celebrations continue for @SabalenkaA 🥳👏
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 10, 2026
The World No. 1 defeats Osaka in straight sets ⏩ #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/ot9WgnMbUM
Since Osaka won the title in the desert in 2018, the stripes of her results have changed dramatically. She's yet to reach the QF in any of her returns to Tennis Paradise. Along with two DNPs in the years since, she's posted 4r-3r-2r-1r-4r results, following up her seven-win title run with a combined 7-5 record. But, you know, she managed to get her photos posted all over social media last week due to her outfit and various pieces of jewelry, so there's that, I guess. Osaka's last tour-level singles title is now more than five years in the rearview (AO21).

The updated Top 5 WTA rankings after Indian Wells.
— Pavvy G (@pavyg) March 15, 2026
1. @SabalenkaA 11025
2. Elena Rybakina 7783
3. @iga_swiatek 7413
4. @CocoGauff 6748
5. @JPegula 6678
Sabalenka is over 3000 points clear at the top, she's going to the Number 1 for a very long time. 👏 pic.twitter.com/cL9Yn0A6nu

Peyton Stearns confirms split with Rafael Font de Mora, who denies all wrongdoing while under WTA investigation of misconduct allegations from earlier in his career.
— James Hansen (@jameskhansen) March 8, 2026
Stearns declined to "dive in" to split during Indian Wells interview with @CDEccleshare https://t.co/A64frAZtZf

desirae's filipina mom forgetting her own daughter's match because she is too busy stanning alex eala is hilarious! 😂 watch the full video and give the girls a sub: https://t.co/sRFYjhCzH1 pic.twitter.com/SohXPJSzKS
— a cat out of the bag (@acatoutofthebag) March 10, 2026

67 years ago today, the first @Barbie went on display at the American Toy Fair.
— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) March 9, 2026
Barbie was created by Ruth Handler as a symbol of freedom and possibility for girls.
It is such an honor to have my own Barbie in the Inspiring Women collection.
Thank you, @Mattel. pic.twitter.com/11Uk87L5x7


“Say hi to Louie Alex Saville 🤍 6 March 2026.”
— The First Serve (@TheFirstServeAU) March 9, 2026
Congratulations Daria and Luke 🥰 pic.twitter.com/wXtcCoJnVI

Getting engaged ✔️
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 15, 2026
Getting a puppy ✔️
Getting a trophy ✔️
Needless to say it’s been a good week for Aryna Sabalenka ☺️#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/t2BM65r4a4
Some crystal to go with that diamond 💍🏆#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/oT0gE18hqW
— BNP Paribas Open (@BNPPARIBASOPEN) March 15, 2026
California Dreamin' 🏆🐶💍@SabalenkaA | #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/cVqvy5kYTl
— wta (@WTA) March 15, 2026
You know, just @karomuchova7 things 🙂↕️#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/m6MX6hDcN6
— wta (@WTA) March 9, 2026

When Alex Eala met Maria Sharapova :-) pic.twitter.com/WTgQ0FJBrg
— Jimmy (@Racquetechie) March 9, 2026
Masha Sharapova is at Indian Wells😍🌴⛰️🎾 @MariaSharapova pic.twitter.com/jiZYNiNc7w
— Lina Shokh (@LinaShokh) March 13, 2026

*2020-26 WTA SINGLES TITLES*
25 - 1/2/8/6/5/3/0 = Iga Swiatek
18 - 3/2/0/3/4/4/2 = ARYNA SABALENKA
11 - 1/0/1/2/3/3/1 = Elena Rybakina
10 - 0/1/0/4/3/2/0 = Coco Gauff
9 - 0/0/1/2/2/3/1 = Jessie Pegula
8 - 1/5/2 = Ash Barty (ret.)
8 - 0/3/2/2/1/0/0 = Barbora Krejcikova
*MOST WTA FINALS in 2026*
3 - ARYNA SABALENKA (2-1)
2 - ELENA RYBAKINA (1-1)
2 - Elina Svitolina (1-1)
2 - Victoria Mboko (0-2)
[2020-26]
34 - 3/3/3/6/7/9/3 = SABALENKA (18-16)
29 - 1/2/9/8/5/4/0 = Swiatek (25-4)
22 - 5/0/3/4/5/3/2 = RYBAKINA (11-11)
19 - 1/0/2/5/4/6/1 = Pegula (9-10)
14 - 0/4/2/2/6/0/0 = Kasatkina (6-8)
13 - 0/1/1/4/3/4/0 = Gauff (10-3)
*MOST 2020-2026 ALL FINAL MATCHUPS*
6...RYBAKINA/SABALENKA - 2023,24,25,26(2) = Rybakina 4-2
5...Sabalenka/Swiatek - 2022,23,24 = Swiatek 4-1
3...Gauff/Sabalenka - 2023,25 = Gauff 2-1
3...Pegula/Sabalenka - 2024,25 = Sabalenka 3-0
3...Pegula/Swiatek - 2023,25 = Swiatek 2-1
*MOST WTA SF in 2026*
4 - ELINA SVITOLINA (2-2)
3 - ARYNA SABALENKA (3-0)
3 - Jessie Pegula (1-2)
2 - Victoria Mboko (2-0)
2 - ELENA RYBAKINA (2-0)
2 - Iva Jovic (1-1)
2 - Karolina Muchova (1-1)
2 - Kimberly Birrell (0-2)
*MOST TOP 10 WINS in 2026*
5 - Rybakina
4 - Mboko, Pegula, Svitolina
3 - Kostyuk, Sabalenka
2 - Bencic, Eala, Muchova, Sakkari
*WON/LOST OF TOP 10-RANKED PLAYERS IN 2026*
19-4 - Elina Svitolina*
17-1 - Aryna Sabalenka*
17-4 - Elena Rybakina*
16-3 - Jessie Pegula*
16-5 - Victoria Mboko*
12-5 - Iga Swiatek*
12-5 - Mirra Andreeva*
11-5 - Coco Gauff*
9-3 - Belinda Bencic#
9-5 - Amanda Anisimova*
7-6 - Jasmine Paolini*
7-4 - Madison Keys#
4-7 - Ekaterina Alexandrova#
[Top 20-ranking only in '26]
14-3 - Karolina Muchova#
14-6 - Iva Jovic#
10-5 - Elise Mertens#
9-5 - Linda Noskova#
8-7 - Clara Tauson#
7-6 - Diana Shnaider#
5-2 - Naomi Osaka#
5-3 - Marta Kostyuk
4-7 - Liudmila Samsonova
4-8 - Emma Navarro
--
* - current Top 10 (week of March 16); # - current #11-20
*2020-26 WTA DOUBLES TITLES*
27 - KATERINA SINIAKOVA (1/6/6/3/5/4/2)
15 - Barbora Krejcikova (1/5/3/4/1/1/0)
15 - Elise Mertens (1/4/2/2/3/2/1)
13 - Luisa Stefani (1/1/2/3/1/4/1)
13 - TAYLOR TOWNSEND (1/0/0/3/3/4/2)
12 - Gaby Dabrowski (0/1/3/2/2/3/1)
12 - Anna Danilina (0/1/2/1/5/2/1)
12 - Hsieh Su-wei (4/2/0/2/3/0/1)
12 - Nicole Melichar-Martinez (2/2/2/0/3/3/0)
12 - Erin Routliffe (0/1/1/3/3/4/0)
*2026 WTA DOUBLES FINALS*
3 (1-2) = ANNA DANILINA
3 (1-2) = ALEKSANDRA KRUNIC
2 (2-0) = KATERINA SINIAKOVA
2 (2-0) = TAYLOR TOWNSEND
2 (2-0) = Zhang Shuai
2 (1-1) = Cristina Bucsa
2 (1-1) = Hsieh Su-wei
2 (1-1) = Alona Ostapenko
[2026 finals - duos]
3...DANIILINA/KRUNIC (1-2)
2...Hsieh/Ostapenko (1-1)
*CAREER WTA DOUBLES TITLES - active*
36 - Sara Errani
36 - Hsieh Su-Wei
34 - KATERINA SINIAKOVA
30 - Bethanie Mattek-Sands
30 - Kristina Mladenovic
29 - Timea Babos
24 - Elise Mertens
22 - Venus Williams
*CAREER TITLES AT I.W., MIAMI and HC SLAM*
Victoria Azarenka (AO)
Kim Clijsters (AO/US)
Steffi Graf (AO/US)
Martina Hingis (AO/US)
Martina Navratiova (AO/US)
ARYNA SABALENKA (AO/US)
Monica Seles (AO/US)
Iga Swiatek (US)
Serena Williams (AO/US)
[recently active players w/ 2 of 3]
Andreescu: IW + US
Barty: MIA + AO (ret)
Kuznetsova: MIA + US (ret)
Osaka: IW + AO/US
Rybakina: IW + AO
Stephens: MIA + US
V.Williams: MIA + US
*INDIAN WELLS FACTS 1989-present*
=SINGLES=
[recent finals]
2018 Naomi Osaka def. Dasha Kasatkina
2019 Bianca Andreescu def. Angelique Kerber
2020 DNP
2021 Paula Badosa def. Victoria Azarenka
2022 Iga Swiatek def. Maria Sakkari
2023 Elena Rybakina def. Aryna Sabalenka
2024 Iga Swiatek def. Maria Sakkari
2025 Mirra Andreeva def. Aryna Sabalenka
2026 Aryna Sabalenka def. Elena Rybakina
[Most Singles Titles]
2 - Victoria Azarenka, BLR
2 - Kim Clijsters, BEL
2 - Lindsay Davenport, USA
2 - Mary Joe Fernandez, USA
2 - Steffi Graf, GER
2 - Daniela Hantuchova, SVK
2 - Martina Navratilova, USA
2 - Maria Sharapova, RUS
2 - Iga Swiatek, POL
2 - Serena Williams, USA
[Consecutive Titles]
2 - Martina Navratilova (1990-91)
[Most Finals]
6 - Lindsay Davenport (2-4)
3 - Victoria Azarenka (2-1)
3 - Steffi Graf (2-1)
3 - Maria Sharapova (2-1)
3 - Serena Williams (2-1)
3 - Martina Hingis (1-2)
3 - Aryna Sabalenka (1-2)
3 - Caroline Wozniacki (1-2)
3 - Svetlana Kuznetseva (0-3)
2 - Kim Clijsters (2-0)
2 - Mary Joe Fernandez (2-0)
2 - Daniela Hantuchova (2-0)
2 - Martina Navratilova (2-0)
2 - Iga Swiatek (2-0)
2 - Ana Ivanovic (1-1)
2 - Jelena Jankovic (1-1)
2 - Elena Rybakina (1-1)
2 - Monica Seles (1-1)
2 - Amanda Coetzer (0-2)
2 - Maria Sakkari (0-2)
[Consecutive Finals]
3 - Lindsay Davenport (2003-05)
2 - Martina Navratilova (1990-91)
2 - Monica Seles (1991-92)
2 - Amanda Coetzer (1993-94)
2 - Lindsay Davenport (1997-98)
2 - Svetlana Kuznetsova (2007-08)
2 - Ana Ivanovic (2008-09)
2 - Caroline Wozniacki (2010-11)
2 - Maria Sharapova (2012-13)
2 - Aryna Sabalenka (2025-26)
[Consecutive Match Wins]
10 - Martina Navratilova (1990-91)
10 - Ana Ivanovic (2008-09)
10 - Iga Swiatek (2022-23)
10 - Iga Swiatek (2024-25)
[Unseeded Singles Champions]
1999 Serena Williams, USA
2005 Kim Clijsters, BEL
2018 Naomi Osaka, JPN
2019 Bianca Andreescu, CAN (WC)
[Youngest Singles Champions]
17y,166d - Martina Hingis (1998)
17y,169d - Serena Williams (1999)
17y,321d - Mirra Andreeva (2025)
18y,90d - Monica Seles (1992)
18y,274d - Bianca Andreescu (2019)
[Youngest Singles Finalists]
17y,91d - Monica Seles, 1991
17y,166d - Martina Hingis, 1998 (W)
17y,169d - Serena Williams, 1999 (W)
17y,283d - Kim Clijsters, 2001
17y,321d - Mirra Andreeva, 2025 (W)
[Oldest Singles Champions]
36 - Martina Navratilova (1991)
35 - Martina Navratilova (1990)
32 - Flavia Pennetta (2014)
[9/36 Champions Have Won No Slam Titles]
1989 Manuela Maleeva, BUL
1993 Mary Joe Fernandez, USA
1995 Mary Joe Fernandez, USA (2)
2002 Daniela Hantuchova, SVK
2007 Daniela Hantuchova, SVK (2)
2009 Vera Zvonareva, RUS
2010 Jelena Jankovic, SRB
2017 Elena Vesnina, RUS
2021 Paula Badosa, ESP
2025 Mirra Andreeva, RUS
[6 Champions Have Never Reached Slam Finals]
1989 Manuela Maleeva, BUL
2002 Daniela Hantuchova, SVK
2007 Daniela Hantuchova, SVK
2017 Elena Vesnina, RUS
2021 Paula Badosa, ESP
2025 Mirra Andreeva, RUS
[Only 10 Finalists Have Never Reached a Slam Final]
1989 Manuela Maleeva (best slam: SF)
1989 Jenny Byrne (3rd)
1997 Irina Spirlea (SF)
1993/94 Amanda Coetzer (SF)
2002/07 Daniela Hantuchova (SF)
2018 Dasha Kasatkina (SF)
2021 Paula Badosa (SF)
2022 Maria Sakkari (SF)
2024 Maria Sakkari (SF)
2025 Mirra Andreeva (SF)
[Only 1 Finalist Has Never Reached a Slam SF]
1989 Jenny Byrne (3rd)
=DOUBLES=
[recent champions]
2018 Hsieh Su-wei/Barbora Strycova
2019 Elise Mertens/Aryna Sabalenka
2020 DNP
2021 Hsieh Su-wei/Elise Mertens
2022 Xu Yifan/Yang Zhaoxuan
2023 Barbora Krejcikova/Katerina Siniakova
2024 Hsieh Su-wei/Elise Mertens
2025 Asia Muhammad/Demi Schuurs
2026 Katerina Siniakova/Taylor Townsend
[Most Titles]
7 - Lisa Raymond, USA
6 - Lindsay Davenport, USA
4 - Hsieh Su-wei, TPE
3 - Martina Hingis, SUI
3 - Elise Mertens, BEL
3 - Elena Vesnina, RUS
2 - Sania Mirza, IND
2 - Virginia Ruano Pascual, ESP
2 - Katerina Siniakova, CZE
2 - Samantha Stosur, AUS
2 - Rennae Stubbs, AUS
2 - Paola Suarez, ARG
2 - Helena Sukova, CZE
2 - Natasha Zvereva, BLR
[Most Titles - duos]
2 - Davenport/Raymond, USA/USA
2 - Davenport/Zvereva, USA/BLR
2 - Hsieh/Mertens, TPE/BEL
2 - Ruano Pascual/Suarez, ESP/ARG
2 - Raymond/Stosur, USA/AUS
[Consecutive Titles]
1994-95 Raymond/Davenport
1997-98 Davenport/Zvereva
2002-03 Lisa Raymond
2004-05 Ruano Pascual/Suarez
2006-07 Raymond/Stosur
[MX Champions]
2024 Storm Hunter/Matthew Ebden, AUS/AUS
2025 Sara Errani/Andrea Vavassori, ITA/ITA
2026 Belinda Bencic/Flavio Cobolli, SUI/ITA
*REACHED AO-IW-MIA FINALS IN A SEASON*
1991 Monica Seles (W-L-W)
1994 Steffi Graf (W-W-W)
2000 Lindsay Davenport (W-W-L)
2000 Martina Hingis (L-L-W)
2012 Maria Sharapova (L-L-L)
2023 Elena Rybakina (L-W-L)
2025 Aryna Sabalenka (L-L-W)
--
2026: Rybakina (W-L) and Sabalenka (L-W) in AO/IW finals
*MOST EVENTS BEFORE TWO-TIME CHAMP TO START SEASON, since 1987*
--[w/ first to win two titles]--
1987 - 5th - Hana Mandlikova - Brisbane/AO
1988 - 4th - Pam Shriver - Brisbane/Sydney
1989 - 5th - Martina Navratilova - Sydney/Tokyo
1990 - 3rd - Natasha Zvereva - Brisbane/Sydney
1991 - 12th - Jana Novotna - Sydney/OKC
1992 - 5th - Gabriela Sabatini - Sydney/Tokyo
1993 - 7th - Monica Seles - AO/Chicago
1994 - 5th - Steffi Graf - AO/Tokyo
1995 - 13th - Steffi Graf - Paris Indoors/Delray
1996 - 4th - Monica Seles - Sydney/AO
1997 - 5th - Martina Hingis - Sydney/AO
1998 - 8th - Patty Schnyder - Hobart/Hanover
1999 - 6th - Martina Hingis - AO/Tokyo
2000 - 13th (w/ 1 DNP F) - Lindsay Davenport - AO/IW
2001 - 3rd - Justine Henin - Gold Coast/Canberra
2002 - 7th - Martina Hingis - Sydney/Tokyo
2003 - 8th - Serena Williams - AO/Paris Indoors
2004 - 6th - Justine Henin - Sydney/AO
2005 - 14th - Maria Sharapova - Tokyo/Doha
2006 - 8th - Amelie Mauresmo - AO/Paris Indoors
2007 - 14th - Justine Henin - Dubai/Doha
2008 - 8th - Justine Henin - Sydney/Antwerp
2009 - 3rd - Elena Dementieva - Auckland/Sydney
2010 - 6th - Elena Dementieva - Sydney/Paris Indoors
2011 - 6th - Petra Kvitova - Brisbane/Paris Indoors
2012 - 5th - Victoria Azarenka - Sydney/AO
2013 - 4th - Aga Radwanska - Auckland/Sydney
2014 - 6th - Li Na - Shenzhen/AO
2015 - 9th - Simona Halep - Shenzhen/Dubai
2016 - 11th - Sloane Stephens - Auckland/Acapulco
2017 - 9th - Karolina Pliskova - Brisbane/Doha
2018 - 9th - Petra Kvitova - Saint Petersburg/Doha
2019 - 19th - Petra Kvitova - Sydney/Stuttgart
2020 - 12th - Sofia Kenin - AO/Lyon
2021 - 12th (w/ 1 DNP F) - Dasha Kasatkina - Phillip Island/Saint Petersburg
2022 - 6th - Ash Barty - Adelaide 1/AO
2023 - 5th - Aryna Sabalenka - Adelaide 1/AO
2024 - 7th - Alona Ostapenko - Adelaide/Linz
2025 - 5th - Madison Keys - Adelaide/AO
2026 - 13th - Aryna Sabalenka - Brisbane/Indian Wells
*2026 WC EVENT CHAMPIONS (100+/jr.majors)*
Sydney 500: Yui Kamiji/JPN
Melbourne 500: Wang Xiying/CHN
Melbourne 1000: Yui Kamiji/JPN
AO: Li Xiaohui/CHN
AO Juniors: Luna Gryp/BEL
Rotterdam 500: Diede de Groot/NED
Bolton 100: Pauline Deroulede/FRA
Bolton 175: Angelica Bernal/COL
Rome USA 500: Lizzy de Greef/NED


Ossoff: "The WH put out a video depicting this war as a video game. When service members are returning in flag-draped coffins, & even more have lost limbs or suffered brain injuries or are fighting for their lives, this WH treats war like a game. It's a disgrace. And it speaks to a moral rot."
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) March 13, 2026 at 7:41 PM
[image or embed]

"He wants to be helpful," President Trump says regarding his conversation with President Putin and Iran, despite reports that Russia was providing intel to Iran on US military targets.
— Kaitlan Collins (@kaitlancollins) March 9, 2026
It’s almost like Trump planned all this from the very beginning.
— Jon Cooper (@joncooper-us.bsky.social) March 12, 2026 at 5:15 PM
[image or embed]

The is the federal government telling news stations to provide favorable coverage of the war or their licenses will be pulled.
— Chris Murphy 🟧 (@ChrisMurphyCT) March 14, 2026
A truly extraordinary moment.
We aren't on the verge of a totalitarian takeover. WE ARE IN THE MIDDLE OF IT.
Act like it. https://t.co/3w4kpzray7

At this point, you have to be delusional to think Trump is gonna leave office willingly. He’s drunk on power. He’s basically immune from criminal prosecution. He already got away with one insurrection. He’s using the military in brazen & illegal ways.
— Danny Miller (@DanielMillerEsq) March 8, 2026
It’s time to face reality.
Bondi, Stephen Miller, Marco Rubio; Kristi Noem, Pete Hegseth.
— Laura Rozen (@lrozen) March 11, 2026
Army Sec Dan Driscoll & Navy Secretary John Phelan all living on military bases. https://t.co/Ignj7cj28n

According to media reports, Donald Trump has been buying $145 Florsheim dress shoes for allies in his inner circle, and people are reportedly “afraid not to wear them.”
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) March 11, 2026
Marco Rubio was photographed wearing a pair Trump ordered for him by just guessing his size. They looked… pic.twitter.com/V7BKhPbhEb

Dehydrating sauce into leather for easy storage and backpacking meals that can be rehydrated later.
— Science girl (@sciencegirl) March 10, 2026
📹thruhikers
pic.twitter.com/nFHRAe028m

The Kallima inachus butterfly
— Science girl (@sciencegirl) March 10, 2026
camouflaging as a dead leaf
pic.twitter.com/9EPFHNSWrA

After traveling 9 years and covering 3 billion miles, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft got this shot.
— Curiosity (@CuriosityonX) March 10, 2026
Behold! The icy mountains of Pluto.pic.twitter.com/oTcFRBszMh

Watch until the end.. 😂 pic.twitter.com/7g0i5ImwDr
— Buitengebieden (@buitengebieden) March 8, 2026

Mount Everest contains marine rocks, proving that the highest point on Earth was once at the bottom of the ocean. Damn! pic.twitter.com/LQ4yrEo37I
— Nature is Amazing ☘️ (@AMAZlNGNATURE) March 8, 2026

he went to study abroad https://t.co/ijpEG8Vinn
— horse (@horsetwting) March 12, 2026

❄️ FROZEN FRENZY RESCUE!💥
— 🚫👁️🧪Louise 💙 (@louisedbegin) March 11, 2026
A runaway sled. One musher dangling for dear life across the ice.
Then SHE charges in lightning commands, husky thunder, zero hesitation. In seconds she snatches her from the jaws of disaster and turns terror into triumph! 🔥
Raw courage.… pic.twitter.com/rsbWFB5ZkE


