

| #1 - AND JUST LIKE THAT | ...Iga Swiatek re-writes the script of her season and grass court career, completing her Career Surface Slam with her maiden Wimbledon title. Her first tour-level singles title in more than a year ('24 RG) didn't include a win over a Top 10 player, but concluded with a 6-0/6-0 vicotry in the final (the first double-bagel title match at SW19 since 1911) vs. incoming Top 10er Amanda Anisimova. |
| #2 - A SWEET SONG IN THE KEY OF MADISON | ..."new Madi" rules Down Under, as Madison Keys expertly weathers between-the-lines storms and claims her first major title in her last slam before her 30th birthday. The third oldest first-time major winner, in her 46th slam MD (the third longest wait), she saved a MP in the semifinals vs. Iga Swiatek (reaching her first major final since 2017), then a round later became the first player in fifteen years to win a major with victories over both the #1 and #2-ranked players in the world with her three-set win over top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka. Keys' title run in Melbourne represented the biggest jewel in what was her 18-1 start to the season. |
| #3 - MBOKOMANIA! | ...18-year old Canadian Victoria Mboko brings her lower-circuit success to the WTA tour in Montreal, with her relentless power-and-speed game helping her upset four former slam champions (Kenin, Gauff, Rybakina and Osaka), saving a MP vs. one and showing preternatural big match mettle while coming back from a set down in the SF and Final to claim a 1000 title in just her seventh tour-level MD |
| #4 - THE RISE OF FRANÇAISE FOREHAND | ...a year after missing out on her slam debut at RG due to a knee injury, #361-ranked French wild card Lois Boisson makes an historic run to the semifinals in Paris in just her second tour-level MD event, upsetting three seeds and two Top 10 players (#3 Pegula, #6 Andreeva), then making a subsequent 296-spot jump in the WTA rankings to #65, the tour's largest rise into the Top 100 this century |
| #5 - TEENAGE DESERT QUEEN | ...17-year old Mirra Andreeva puts her stamp on the season's early stage, winning Indian Wells to claim a second consecutive 1000 title (w/ Dubai). In the California desert, she notched her second wins over her 1000 two-fer stretch vs. both Iga Swiatek and Elena Rybakina, as well as a first over Aryna Sabalenka for her maiden career #1 victory, rallying in the title match from a set down. The youngest I.W. finalist since 2001, Andreeva's win made her the third youngest champion in the event behind only back-to-back 1998-99 winners Martina Hingis and Serena Williams. Her wins over both of the top two ranked players made her the youngest to do so in the same event since Tracy Austin almost 46 years earlier. |
| #6 - PEAK THUNDER | ...Alona Ostapenko takes her first clay title since the 2017 Roland Garros, becoming the first player in thirteen years to defeat the world #1 (Aryna Sabalenka) and #2 (Swiatek, improving to 6-0 vs. Iga) in the same event on clay |
| #7 - EYE OF THE TIGRESS | ...Aryna Sabalenka ends her slam-less 2025 streak, reaching her sixth straight hard court slam final (3 con. in New York), fourth in the last five majors, and becoming the first woman to defend a U.S. Open title since 2014 (S.Williams). 39-3 in AO/US action since the start of 2023, she's won four combined titles in Melbourne and Flushing Meadows. |
| #8 - BUTTONING DOWN IN THE STRETCH DRIVE | ...Elena Rybakina proved over the final weeks of the '25 season that there is much to be said for having something to play for down the stretch. With a few weeks left in the season, the Kazakh was on the outside looking in at the WTAF field, and needed her QF-W-SF regular season finish to become the last player to qualify for Riyadh. Once she arrived in the KSA, no one could touch her as she blitzed the competition with five straight wins to take her biggest title since Wimbledon in 2022. Rybakina's two biggest wins saw her dominate the world #2 (Iga Swiatek, with a 6-1/6-0 2nd/3rd set finish) and #1 (Aryna Sabalenka, closing her season by defeating the Tie-Break Queen in a 7-0 breaker to win in straight sets) as she coasted over the finish line. |
| #9 - COCO COUTURE | ...Coco Gauff completes her Madrid-Rome-Paris final appearance trifecta with a win in the Roland Garros title match over #1 Sabalenka to claim her second major crown |
| #10 - LIVE LIKE PAOLINI! | ...Jasmine Paolini becomes the first Italian woman to win Rome in forty years (Raffaella Reggi), then claimed the doubles title (w/ Sara Errani), as well, to complete the first Italian Open sweep since 1990 (Monica Seles) |
| #11 - SOUTH BEACH SABALENKA | ...Aryna Sabalenka, the WTA's best hard court player, had somehow managed to never win neither Indian Wells *nor* Miami, the two biggest non-major hard court events on the regular tour schedule. Not only that, but this year the world #1 had reached but lost *both* the Australian Open and Indian Wells finals, too. Her third event proved to be the charm, as the world #1 *finally* grabbed her first end of the Sunshine Swing in Miami -- avoiding becoming the second woman to ever lose all three events in a single season -- by taking the title in her "home away from home" without losing a set. |
| #12 - QUEEN CITY JAZDA | ...Iga Swiatek, still riding the wave of momentum from her Wimbledon title run, sweeps through Cincinnati without dropping a set, winning her first hard court crown in a year and a half ('24 I.W.) and reclaiming the #2 ranking |
| #13 - AMANDA'S ASIAN ASCENDENCY | ...despite having already had a career-season, with a pair of slam final runs in London and New York, Amanda Anisimova hadn't won a title since February when she finally added one more great late season run in Beijing. An authoritative 6-1/6-2, 58-minute SF victory over Coco Gauff, followed by a win over Jessie Pegula in the final, made Anisimova the only player this season to post wins over each member of the season's final Top 3: Sabalenka, Swiatek and Gauff. |
| #14 - AVE MARIA | ...in the first Queen's Club women's event since 1973, 37-year old Tatjana Maria goes from qualifier to the fourth-oldest singles champion in WTA history on the strength of her confounding slice-and-dice game that set some of the best players in the world back on their heels, posting wins over Elena Rybakina, Madison Keys and, in the final, Wimbledon-finalist-to-be Amanda Anisimova |
| #15 - EALA IN THE AIR | ...ranked #140, 2022 U.S. Open junior champ Alex Eala came into Miami having recorded just two career WTA MD wins in her career. But the 19-year old wild card proceded to produce an historical accompolishment during a two-week run that saw her produce upset wins over slam champions Alona Ostapenko (the first Top 30 victory by a PHI player), Madison Keys (the first *Top 10* win) and Iga Swiatek (world #2). Against Jessie Pegula, the Filipina led 5-2 in the 1st before dropping a TB and went on to fall in three sets. |
| #16 - ITALIANS IN THE DIRT | ...Sara Errani & Jasmine Paolini sweep the doubles titles in Rome and Roland Garros, succesfully defending their Italian Open crown and then losing just one set in Paris (in the final) as the duo wins their first slam title as a pair. The RG win was the first slam title in Paolini's career, while it's Errani's eighth women's doubles major win (her first Rome/RG sweep since she won both with Roberta Vinci in 2012). Meanwhile, Errani also won the RG MX title alongside Andrea Vavassori. |
| #17 - LOOK WHO'S BACK, BACK AGAIN | ...healthy after yet another injury break, Marketa Vondrousova claims Berlin -- w/ wins over Madison Keys and Aryna Sabalenka (at #164, the Czech is the third-lowest player to ever defeat a world #1) -- to win her first tour title since Wimbledon in 2023 |
| #18 - RISING TO THE TOP OF THE HEAP? | ...Gaby Dabrowski & Erin Routliffe win their second U.S. Open in three years, with 2023 and '25 bookending a '24 season during which Dabrowski was diagnosed with breast cancer. After winning the title in Cincinnati, the duo arrived in New York as the #3-seeded team and knocked off both #2 Errani/Paolini (SF) and #1 Siniakova/Townsend (F) en route to the title. |
| #19 - THE FIRST, PART II | ...Wang Ziying wins Wimbledon to become the first Chinese wheelchair slam singles champ (denying Yui Kamiji the only major title she's yet to claim), six months after she and Li Xiaohui became the first Chinese WC slam doubles champs in Melbourne. Wang swept the s/d titles at SW19. |
| #20 - DOUBLES QUEENS IN THE KINGDOM | ...Veronika Kudermetova & Elise Mertens weren't top of mind when WTA Finals round robin play began in Riyadh, but they turned out to be the last team standing when all was said and done, recovering from a first match loss (via MTB) to Hsieh/Ostapenko to go on to win four straight matches en route to the title, defeating the top two seeded teams -- #1 Errani/Paolini to win a head-to-head battle for a SF slot, then #2 Siniakova/Townsend in the SF, saving a MP in a 2nd set TB and then winning a MTB -- before a straight sets win the final over Babos/Stefani. The win is the duo's second WTAF title in four years. |
| *ADDITIONAL NOMINEES* | Amanda Anisimova: Anisimova rebounds from her 6-0/6-0 loss in the Wimbledon final to Iga Swiatek to reach her second straight major final at the U.S. Open, avenging her SW19 loss to Swiatek in the QF and rallying from a set down to put an end to Naomi Osaka's 13-0 career slam mark from the QF forward (SF). At the WTA Finals, Anisimova defeats Swiatek again with a SF berth on the line, winning eight of the final ten games after being down 7-6/4-4 to reach the final four in the debut appearance. Belinda Bencic: her Abu Dhabi title run was laced with grit, and was sometimes brilliant. After a win over Rebecca Sramkova in three, she double-bageled Veronika Kudermetova and handled Marketa Vondrousova in straights. Comebacks from a set down vs. defending champ Elena Rybakina in the SF, then Ashlyn Krueger in the final, provided a nice finishing touch to a week where nothing was given to, but much was gained by Bencic. The Swiss woman had only returned from maternity leave in October '24, and this had been her first WTA final appearance since Charleston two years ago. Sara Errani: the Italian wins her second MX slam of '25, defending her title with Andrea Vavassori in New York while upholding the honor of all the doubles players who'd been blocked from participating in the "re-imagined" U.S. Open Mixed Doubles (Invitiational) that was actually more like an insult to the idea of what an actual slam event should be (no matter how "successful" the big money qualifying week show was deemed to be), winning the title in the two-day, shortened-sets competition via a MTB win in the final (after having been unable to serve things out at 6-3/5-4) vs. Iga Swiatek/Casper Ruud to produce the only moderately face-saving result that could have occurred, allowing the final result to have a little smaller asterisk next to it, at least. Aryna Sabalenka: a year after not repeating as champion in Madrid despite hold three MP in the final vs. Iga Swiatek, Sabalenka takes care of unfinished business by winning her third title at the event. She dropped just one set en route, twice fighting off surges from Coco Gauff in the final to win in straight sets. Laura Siegemund: the 37-year old German becomes the oldest first-time Wimbledon quarterfinalist, and comes up just short of being the oldest first-time major semifinalist in the Open era, holding a GP for 5-3 in the 3rd vs. Aryna Sabalenka Lilli Tagger: the #235-ranked 17-year old from Austria, this year's RG girls' champ, reaches her maiden WTA final in Jiujiang in what was her tour-level MD debut. In the SF vs. Viktoriya Golubic, Tagger rallied from 5-2 down in the 3rd, where the Swiss veteran served for the match at 5-3 and then held triple MP at love/40 on Tagger's serve at 5-4. Tagger held serve with five consecutive points and swept the final thirteen points of the match to get the win. Clutch. Dasha Vidmanova: the Czech claims the NCAA singles championship and leads the University of Georgia to the women's team title, completing (w/ her NCAA doubles title from '24) the rare "Triple Crown" for her college career. She's just the third woman to do it at the Division 1 level. |
==RECENT "TOP PERFORMANCE" WINNERS==
2015 Belinda Bencic (Toronto)
2016 Monica Puig (Olympics)
2017 Alona Ostapenko (Roland Garros)
2018 Naomi Osaka (U.S. Open)
2019 Simona Halep (Wimbledon)
2020 Iga Swiatek (Roland Garros)
2021 Emma Raducanu (U.S. Open)
2022 Iga Swiatek (U.S. Open)
2023 Coco Gauff (summer hardcourts)
2024 Aryna Sabalenka (AO/US HC slam sweep)
2025 Iga Swiatek (Wimbledon)


8?? match points saved! ??
— TENNIS (@Tennis) September 1, 2025
Barbora Krejcikova wins a three-hour marathon against Taylor Townsend—including a 25-minute tiebreaker—and will face Jessica Pegula in the #USOpen quarterfinals.https://t.co/raG0Gba2Ju
btw a pretty remarkable stat: Barbora Krejcikova has a win-loss record of 12-6 this season, THREE of her 12 wins (25%) have been while saving match points.
— The Racquet Will Talk Podcast (@racquetwilltalk) August 31, 2025
13 match points saved across those three matches.
Still buzzing from her early-round run-in with Alona Ostapenko and the off-court aftermath, Townsend had played her way into her second career slam Round of 16, and here had a stadium full of supporters (save, maybe, for one very committed Krejcikova fan) on Armstrong as she took a 6-1 1st set and pushed toward a straight sets victory. At 5-4, she held a MP on the Czech's serve. Krejickova saved it, and Townsend had no idea what she'd unleashed. Having been unable to corral the "W" on her first opportunity, Townsend saw Krejcikova then get a break to take the lead and serve for the 2nd set at 6-5. But Townsend bounced back to break and force a TB, where the Czech took an early 3-1 lead before Townsend ran off five straight points to reach triple MP at 6-3. On the surface, Townsend *seemed* close to victory, and a passel of kids were let loose by an overconfident usher to bound down the Armstrong stadium steps with their oversized fuzzy tennis balls to be signed immediately after the match. That sort of moment *could* have been close, but it really wasn't. Actually, it was an instant where it was time to recall the longtime catch phrase of just-retired ESPN personality Lee Corso, "Not so fast, my friend!"
When these lovelies were allowed to invade at 6-6 in the breaker = all the motivation Krejcikova needed. pic.twitter.com/Q2eFYULDsg
— Amy Lundy Dahl (@AmyLundyDahl) September 1, 2025
For the remainder of what turned out to be a 25-minute tie-breaker, Krejcikova would keep her wits and play her very best points of the match with her fate in it literally on the line should she take a false swing. Krejcikova saved those three MP, as well as three more (running her total to eight), one (#7) with a second serve return winner after Townsend had only narrowly missed on what would have been a match-ending (and Armstrong-erupting) ace only seconds earlier.
Krejcikova’s EIGHT MPs saved
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) August 31, 2025
1 - Krejcikova FH winner
2 - Krejcikova FH winner
3 - Krejcikova FH approach unturned
4 - Townsend BH UE
5 -Krejcikova BH winner
6 - Krejcikova volley winner
7 - Krejcikova FH winner
8 - Krejcikova big unreturned serve pic.twitter.com/jcC2fooV27
Townsend, too, saved three SP over a span of five points (from #15-19) in the middle of the breaker, but Krejcikova finally converted on her fourth to win 15-13 and push the contest to a 3rd set with a virtual wind suddenly behind her back.
Everyone watching this Townsend-Krejcikova tiebreak ?? pic.twitter.com/shuJFFx3qx
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 31, 2025
The momentum carried the Czech to a 4-2 lead in the decider before Townsend broke back to keep her hopes (and that of the majority of the fans, many of whom were living and dying with every point) alive. But with the match clock ticking over the three-hour mark, Krejcikova (who this summer built back her physical resilience, while never having lost her psychological sharp edge, since returning from an early-season back injury) was the one of the two with the experience and mettle to "run through the tape." The Czech immediately broke Townsend to regain her break edge, then served out the victory (w/ one final mini-comeback from 15/30 down) on her second MP.
Barbora Krejcikova completes the comeback! pic.twitter.com/Ryp2pKjVvL
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 31, 2025
When Barbora Krejcikova was recently sidelined with injury, she didn't know if she'd be back to experience moments like this ??? pic.twitter.com/iKi3e1PXzF
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 31, 2025
That moment of triumph for Barbora Krejcikova ?? pic.twitter.com/c6Y7Tun7pf
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 31, 2025
Rules are rules unless you’re Iga Swiatek pic.twitter.com/3UzgmujeFA
— _ (@cfcj_j) January 23, 2025
It was a 3rd that raised between-sets questions about how Swiatek would respond to being run over (again) by a big hitter and whether Keys could keep her game at such a high level long enough without something going haywire and, thus, pull off the upset. The truth turned out to be that both would respond quite well as the match became an instant classic. With both women playing extremely high quality tennis, the break-fest that was two-sided for half of the 1st set, then one-sided in the 2nd, didn't occur in the third stanza. The first *ten* games featured holds of various stripe. Keys opened with an ace and quick game win at 15, while Swiatek staved off break chances in games 4 and 8. Keys saved BP in games 5 and 9 (four in the latter, after trailing love/40 at the end of a 7-pt. losing sttreak). It was Iga who finally broke the ice, taking a love/30 lead in game 11. A Keys DF put her down love/40 again. She saved two BP, but Swiatek reached a Keys drop shot and fired a winner down the line to take a 6-5 lead and served for the final. But just when it looked as if Keys had tripped up in a big stage match once again, she had another table to (over)turn. At 6-5, Swiatek reached MP, but Keys' return down the center of the court tied up Swiatek, keeping her hopes alive.
Down match point? No worries ??@bondisands • #BondiSands • #StayCool • #AusOpen • #AO2025 • @wwos • @espn • @eurosport • @wowowtennis pic.twitter.com/2TYZ04NnvZ
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 23, 2025
A sharply-angled return got Keys a BP chance, and Swiatek DF'd as things went to a MTB (ala Keys' last major SF two seasons ago in New York). Swiatek opened her serve in the breaker with a second straight DF that gave back a mini-break lead (1-1). It would be the first of four times in the MTB when Iga held a mini-break lead only to see Keys raise her game and take it back. Tied at 7-7, Swiatek pulled off a brilliant volley to lead (on serve) 8-7 and finally see the finish line again.
Can’t get this volley out of our heads ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) January 23, 2025
Watch our @BetMGM shot of the day from @iga_swiatek ??#AO2025 pic.twitter.com/bLAuU7kV6T
But as glorious as that shot was, it'd be the last that Swiatek would score on the night. Keys followed up wth an ace to tie the score again, then Iga fired a return long that gave Keys her first MP at 9-8. A Swiatek forehand error would end things, as Keys recorded quite possibly the *most important* win of her career in a thriller that sent her into her second major final (the first since the 2017 U.S. Open more than seven years ago) and preceded what would become her maiden slam crown.
?? She's done it! @Madison_Keys wins four of the final five points of the super tiebreak to book her place in Saturday's final!@wwos • @espn • @eurosport • @wowowtennis • #AusOpen • #AO2025 pic.twitter.com/k7gVLVtibZ
— #AusOpen (@AustralianOpen) January 23, 2025
"Victory belongs to the most tenacious"
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 1, 2025
It's right on top of the building, and she's living it. pic.twitter.com/OJetpA3lVv
Elena Rybakina speeds through the opening set, 6-1! #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/KMslu2UGGq
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 1, 2025
Swiatek double-faulted to lose the opening game of the set at love, then saw Rybakina hold at love to lead 2-0. Was this how the streak was going to end, with a funereal silence on Chatrier and all the headlines and dark comments about Swiatek's ongoing plight that would come along with it? But then something weird happened. Swiatek tried something different. She took a few steps back to return Rybakina's big serve, giving herself time to get a look at it and get into the rally, where she likely could carve out an advantage. It seems like a small, sensible and common in-match alteration of tactics against a big hitter when things aren't going well, but Swiatek has seemingly (stubbornly) refused to do it in such situations for well on more than a year, hoping to outduel her opponent or betting on her cracking in order to turn the tide. It's worked out for her on occasion, but why not give it a chance more often? It's been a lingering mystery, through two different coaching regimes, as Swiatek has often fallen victim, or struggled to pull out victories, against foes who hit deep and hard and don't give her much time to react. Apparently, the notion of being embarrased and ridden out of Roland Garros in a clown car was finally enough to properly view what has been a reality all along. With her blinders finally off, though Rybakina didn't suddenly become a pushover as a result, things started to slowly turn in Swiatek's favor. She reached BP on Rybakina serve in game 4. The Kazakh erased it with a big serve, but on BP #2 Rybakina avoided hitting an overhead volley into the open court and instead tried to direct the ball behind a scrambling Swiatek on the baseline. The ball flew out, putting the 2nd back on serve. A game later, Swiatek held in a long service game in which she faced an early BP, had multiple DF (plus two more BP) and traversed six deuce points en route to a hold and her first lead at 3-2. Another break of Rybakina's serve made it 4-2, as the Pole won the set 6-3 to knot the match. Rybakina seemed to push Swiatek near the match edge in the 3rd, and briefly had a chance to force the four-time champ to a familiar place where she's often looked panicked in the past against big hitters like herself. She just needed a lead that would make Swiatek play from behind, vs. a streaking opponent, with almost-sure defeat "visible from here" without a tennis miracle suddenly taking place. Rybakina held for 3-2 when Swiatek netted an easy volley, then violently slammed her racket down in anger on the net cord (she received no warning from chair umpire Kader Nouni). Rybakina grabbed a 15/40 lead on Iga's serve in the following game, one point from a 4-2 and serving for 5-2 edge that would *truly* test Swiatek's mettle. If she could only...
Rybakina painting the line ???#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/XThAW5XXte
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 1, 2025
But rather than "put Iga in the corner," Rybakina saw Swiatek fight her way out of one, saving three BP and tie the score at 3-all. Reinvigorated, Swiatek fired a series of deep returns (two off the baseline) and took at 15/40 lead in game 7, breaking to assume the overall match lead for the first time at 4-3. Rybakina still had time of her own, and took advantage with a love/30 lead, then BP chances at 15/40 after stepping in and whacking a return winner. A Swiatek DF on BP #2 put the set back on serve, giving the Kazakh another chance to see the finish line and dare Swiatek to keep her crossing it. Rybakina nearly gave the break back, DF'ing on BP only to see Nouni overrule the call and present her with a lifeline. She grabbed it, holding to take a 5-4 lead. But after maneuvering her way through what had become a tricky spot, Rybakina threw in a clunker of a game at precisely the worst time. A poor drop shot attempt landed at mid-court, allowing Swiatek to put it away for a 15/40 lead. Rybakina's forehand error a point later gave Iga a 6-5 lead and put the match on her racket. Having overcome a would-be disastrous start, and having survived nearly slipping down another frustration-filled hole that again put her on the brink of defeat in the 3rd set, Swiatek now only needed to hold to keep her latest Roland Garros dream alive. She did just that, winning 7-5 in the decider.
Her house!
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 1, 2025
Epic comeback from defending champ Iga Swiatek after dropping a quick first set against Elena Rybakina firing on all cylinders. pic.twitter.com/goP2Uto20v
Swiatek didn't go on to win another Roland Garros, and instead went out in a love 3rd set vs. Aryna Sabalenka in the semis, but the lesson she learned vs. Rybakina -- to try something different, to have and *go to* a Plan B, and to trust in her coach that something *more* might be necessary to win, and then to have it all work out, would serve her well during the grass season that turned around her year.
Even we need a breather after that ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) April 30, 2025
Sabalenka saves a set point to take the 80-minute opener in a tiebreak.#MMOpen pic.twitter.com/q7IbG230AD
The heart of a fighter! ??@SabalenkaA passes Kostyuk's test and is into the semifinals! #MMOpen pic.twitter.com/XtAXeXfPwp
— wta (@WTA) April 30, 2025
The level from these two is INSANE ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/AOaczYiGUx
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 12, 2025
The will to win ??@SabalenkaA defeats a resurgent Kostyuk after a nail bitting second set, 6-1, 7-6(8)!#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/tmMBIl1LZg
— wta (@WTA) May 12, 2025
A masterclass in turning a match around ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) February 12, 2025
Iga Swiatek’s continues her reign in Doha as she defeats Linda Noskova 6-7(1), 6-4, 6-4.
°#QatarTotalEnergiesOpen pic.twitter.com/7arKMBHK9R
Hell of a performance from Linda Noskova who was on fire tonight, serving 16 aces on her way to almost upset the three-time Doha champ. pic.twitter.com/lrT0YVlRVm
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) February 12, 2025
Saving break point in style ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 16, 2025
Today's @BetMGM Shot of the Day is from Mirra Andreeva ??
#TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/VVuwsDvGa1
Sabalenka saved a SP and held for 4-5, but Andreeva serve out the set a game later, then broke to take charge in the first game of the 3rd. Sabalenka prevented Andreeva from a game 2 hold despite three GP chances, including one in which the world #1 framed her return, hit the baseline, then saw the teenager commit an error. Two points later the set was back on serve at 1-1, but Sabalenka dropped served again in the next game and Mirra's path was suddenly very clear. Ultimately, Andreeva didn't need to serve things out. Up 5-3, her second serve return winner down the line gave her a 15/30 lead on Sabalenka's serve, then a great defensive get forced a made-to-hit-one-more-shot Sabalenka UE that handed the teenager her first MP. She wouldn't need a second.
To be the best you have to beat the best ... AND SHE DID ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 16, 2025
Mirra Andreeva defeats Aryna Sabalenka 2-6, 6-4, 6-3 ?? #TennisParadise pic.twitter.com/QFMlBplvzh
Conchita #Andeeva pic.twitter.com/Pkt7YSD6qj
— Tennis GIFs???? (tip jar????) (@tennis_gifs) March 16, 2025
A roar of relief ???#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/nMX5hRVpcK
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 8, 2025
We’re on upset watch ????
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) July 8, 2025
Aryna Sabalenka is in danger as Laura Siegemund takes the first set.#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/mu9UbL1SvE
Sabalenka took an early break lead at 2-0 in the 2nd, but Siegemund handled a big serve and elicited a responding error from Sabalenka to get back on serve a game later (breaking her for the fourth time on the day). Sabalenka got the break back at 4-2, despite Siegemund taking a 40/love lead, then had to save a BP and get a hold for 5-2. It was clear that if Sabalenka found a way through this one, she might need a "mental health day" to recover. She got the break to take the 2nd set (again it wasn't easy), taking a breath and heading to the 3rd. Sabalenka held at love to open the decider, only to then see Siegemund go up 40/love in her first service game. Sabalenka close to 40/30, but the German held with net cord shot (of course she did), the broke at love a game later, utilizing a drop shot one one point, then winning a net battle on the next. Down on the scoreboard, Sabalenka led love/30 in game 4, then pushed a shot ball wide that would have given her a BP chance. Siegemund held for 3-1. On the opening point for game 5, Sabalenka raced to antoher drop shot but hit it outside the line. Sabalenka whacked the top of net with a hard swing of her racket, but managed to hold serve (w/ the help of a missed overhead from Siegemund at 15/15). Sabalenka got things back on serve a game later (w/ the help of a DF from Siegemund that had given her a BP), only to then see her own unforced error total take a sudden jump in the next game. Down love/30, Sabalenka netted a down the line backhand on a mid-court ball, DF'd on GP, then netted a backhand near the service "T" off a Siegemund slice shot. Siegemund broke to take the lead again, at 4-3. The sixth break of Sabalenka's serve on the day equaled her total through the first four rounds of play. In game 8, Siegemund had a GP for a 5-3 lead. The game saw Sabalenka win a "battle of slices" on one point, Siegemund hit the baseline with an overhead that produced a Sabalenka error on BP. On another BP chance, Siegemund fired a shot long off a Sabalenka return and things we knotted up again at 4-4. It was then that Sabalenka finally found *it*, whatever *it* is. Dare one say it, the scene was very "Serena-like," as she blasted her *first* ace of the match to go up 40/love in game 9, then #2 on her second GP to take a 5-4 lead. Suddenly serving to stay in the match, Siegemund opened her serve game with an error and fell behind love/30. Down 15/40, she saved a Sabalenka MP with a drop shot, but on MP #2 Sabalenka took control of the rally and finally got a setter at the net. She put it away to close out the victory, and surely paused to take stock and try to make sense of how she'd survived seeing her Wimbledon life flash -- in bright lights -- before her eyes.
Comeback complete ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 8, 2025
World No.1 Aryna Sabalenka defeats Laura Siegemund 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 to reach her third #Wimbledon semi-final. pic.twitter.com/VBfLu53Evz
A fitting applause for Laura Siegemund who played her part in an enthralling Centre Court encounter ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 8, 2025
Congratulations on a brilliant run at The Championships ?? pic.twitter.com/6wmbPP0Hd5
Aryna keeps her title defense ALIVE ??
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) September 5, 2025
Sabalenka prevails in a three-set showdown with Pegula to return to the US Open final! pic.twitter.com/jq8hepDUZ3
BREATHTAKING ??
— wta (@WTA) October 11, 2025
Jess Pegula battles back from a set down against Sabalenka to win the deciding tiebreak 7-2. An absolute classic in Wuhan!
#WuhanOpen pic.twitter.com/bEXfnfZKnC
Alexandra Eala won this match
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 24, 2025
?????????????????????? pic.twitter.com/8NZFwi3oZV
After a personal history of being the upset *maker* in the opening rounds of majors, #14-seed Tauson felt the cold reality of the *other* side of the equation vs. Eala, who became the first Filipino player to record a 1st Round slam win. After dropping the opening set, Tauson had rebounded well, taking the 2nd and racing to a 5-1 lead in the 3rd, only to soon fall victim to an unbowed Filipina, as well as her own tendency to let her emotions interfere in a match and turn what seemed like a good day into a series of mopey stretches that eventually led her down the path to defeat. The Dane twice served for the match, at 5-2 (30/30) and 5-4, and after an argument over a disputed call that put her down 15/40, DF'd to tie the set. Tauson fell behind 6-5 and saved a MP two games later, managing to get things to a deciding MTB. Eala took an 8-4 lead, but Tauson staved off three MP at 9-8, 10-9 and 11-10 before Eala's fifth MP proved to be the charm as she won the breaker 13-11 to get her first career slam match win.
Alexandra Eala’s reaction after beating Tauson at the U.S. Open.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) August 24, 2025
She falls flat on her back & bursts into tears. ??
Down 1-5 in the 3rd set
The first Filipino player to win a main draw match in a Slam in the Open Era.
Proud. ??
??????
pic.twitter.com/7D5xkJ97tR
Alexandra Eala makes history at the US Open ??
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) August 24, 2025
She becomes the first player representing the Philippines to win a major singles match in the Open Era ???? pic.twitter.com/fPgDWzFsm8
Alexandra Eala felt the ???? support today at the US Open ??? pic.twitter.com/jlFmsex4tZ
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 24, 2025
THREE-SET THRILLER ??
— wta (@WTA) July 28, 2025
Laura Siegemund was the eventual winner against Maria 7-5, 6-7(6), 7-6(2)!#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/ulwc8YoaVG
The commentator is going nuts for Lilli Tagger 🔥
— til polarity's end 🎾⚡#SpalettiIN⚡⚫⚪ (@lildarkcage) November 1, 2025
"Stop it! Stop it!... Behave!" 😂😂😂 pic.twitter.com/fWfvIRGFVp
Hey Siri, define clutch. 👋
— Tiče (@Titche14) November 1, 2025
Siri : « Just look at what Lilli Tagger did. » pic.twitter.com/FGqBauCqee
3 - In the past two decades, Lilli Tagger is now the third player under the age of 18 to reach the final at her first WTA-level event after Donna Vekic (Tashkent 2012) and Olga Danilovic (Moscow 2018). Start! #JiangxiOpen | @WTA pic.twitter.com/egQcDSo0Ge
— OptaAce (@OptaAce) November 1, 2025
INCREDIBLE 3RD SET IN EASTBOURNE.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) June 28, 2025
19yo Maya Joint saves FOUR MATCH POINTS and wins her first career title.
12-10 in the 3rd set tiebreak over Alex Eala.
What a final! pic.twitter.com/Q5x8zjs9SQ
Like??? ??
— grass szn ?? (@VenusGauff) June 28, 2025
pic.twitter.com/2BvQDDhxBi https://t.co/nl2mPofCqJ
Maya Joint's reaction to being handed a huge bottle of sparkling wine ?? pic.twitter.com/bfM78i6gyI
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) June 28, 2025
Another extended tiebreak won ??@BKrejcikova | #KoreaOpen pic.twitter.com/1DSUtJ3sQ8
— wta (@WTA) September 18, 2025
Closing out the comeback with an ACE ??@BKrejcikova moves past the No.8 seed Raducanu in three sets!#KoreaOpen pic.twitter.com/g7Lnhxn6Px
— wta (@WTA) September 18, 2025
Krejcikova ultimately won 16 matches in her abbreviated season, with four of them -- that'd be a quarter of the her total -- coming after she'd faced down a MP.
How about that game from Emma and Aryna ?? pic.twitter.com/hJespgSmQe
— Cincinnati Open (@CincyTennis) August 11, 2025
Sabalenka held from 15/30 in the next game, then in the deciding TB -- after Raducanu had gotten things back on serve at 4-4 -- the Belarussian once more powered her way to another breaker victory, firing an ace on MP #2.
Grit and determination ??
— wta (@WTA) August 11, 2025
Defending champion @SabalenkaA battles it out to win 7-6(3), 4-6, 7-6(5) against Raducanu.#CincyTennis pic.twitter.com/cghDnHca1P
Coco & Danielle had never played before and their first one definitely was not short of drama for almost three hours. pic.twitter.com/EL26MgYfSq
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) July 30, 2025
Coco Gauff is OUT OF THIS WORLD ????#OBN2025 pic.twitter.com/cYUDv4HrWb
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) July 30, 2025
In the next game, Collins nearly squandered a 40/love lead, saw Gauff twice get a point away from reaching MP, but then held to knot the score. Collins then took a love/40 lead in game 11, breaking Gauff to get the chance to serve for the match. Then Gauff turned the dial up to "11," taking a 15/40 lead and denying Collins (who twice was within two points of the win) with a break on her fourth BP of the game, forcing a deciding TB. Having survived the earlier fight, Gauff took the breaker 7-2. So, willl there be a meeting #2?
Never count her out ?????@CocoGauff regroups to defeat Collins in an exhilarating first encounter, 7-5, 4-6, 7-6(2).#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/XA7ei8Wsuj
— wta (@WTA) July 30, 2025

@/iganation https://t.co/LMN8gSjTZ6 pic.twitter.com/SLZrKALcYh
— ?? (@VenusGauff) July 17, 2025
Players with a 5-0 record against Iga Swiatek:
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) February 14, 2025
Jelena Ostapenko.
End of list. pic.twitter.com/qGOTAg3x0M
In a phrase, Ostapenko kicked her butt. Again. And she relished it, too, as the smirk/smile rarely ever left her face, and certainly not after being renewed by Swiatek's growing frustration.
Jelena Ostapenko's reaction to Iga Swiatek throwing her racquet in Doha
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) February 14, 2025
?????? pic.twitter.com/EvIjoEtKBx
Ostapenko's easy win ended Swiatek's three-year title run and 15-match winning streak in Doha, improving her career mark in the series to an astounding 5-0. Over the years, the Lavtian has posted wins over Iga when the Pole was ranked #65, #4, #9, #1 and now #2.
Always on top of her game versus Iga ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) February 14, 2025
Ostapenko remains undefeated against Swiatek and advances to her third WTA 1000 Championship!#QatarTotalEnergiesOpen pic.twitter.com/24omOGXTNd
"I know how to play against her." ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) February 14, 2025
Jelena Ostapenko was feeling confident for good reason ahead of her Semifinal with Iga Swiatek.#QatarTotalEnergiesOpen pic.twitter.com/xcZImgepnj
and she does it AGAIN!@JelenaOstapenk8 defeats Swiatek for a sixth time 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 to advance into the Stuttgart semifinals! #PorscheTennis pic.twitter.com/uNQ60PGMy0
— wta (@WTA) April 19, 2025
Ostapenko after beating Swiatek in Stuttgart
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 19, 2025
“No one else has beaten Iga 6 times in a row. Which statement is more correct.. She hates to play you or you like to play her?”
Jelena: “I think both” ??
pic.twitter.com/ALR9H26iff
Jelena Ostapenko after beating Iga Swiatek in Stuttgart
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) April 19, 2025
“She’s a great clay court player as well. But you know, I won French Open. So I can say the same thing about myself.” ??
pic.twitter.com/lOKDj8zAAA
It's like she never left ?????@Venuseswilliams defeats Stearns 6-3, 6-4 to reach the second round in the United States capital.#MubadalaCitiDCOpen pic.twitter.com/r38pH63jCt
— wta (@WTA) July 23, 2025
Venus Williams is probably my all-time favorite player for her tennis alone, but this interview answer after 16 months away from the tour is such a mood. pic.twitter.com/2x0MR3xbJr
— Paul Coletti (@CelebrityPaul) July 23, 2025
This video of Venus Williams' first tour level win feels appropriate.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 23, 2025
A 14-year-old Venus Williams makes her WTA tour debut in 1994 with a win.
Today, she got her 819th tour level win at 45 years old.
31 years on tour.
Some things never change ??
(via @cnnsport) pic.twitter.com/VTkjtYnEAg
Locked in ??
— wta (@WTA) February 4, 2025
Bronzetti defeats Halep in consecutive sets to secure her spot in the next round in Cluj! #TO2025 pic.twitter.com/kZYQ0DmQdw
After her match today at the Transylvania Open Simona Halep announced her retirement. pic.twitter.com/pjej7EAgs6
— Romanian Tennis (@WTARomania) February 4, 2025
?? #halep pic.twitter.com/pt3NbELIzS
— Tennis GIFs???? (tip jar????) (@tennis_gifs) February 4, 2025
a lucky fan left with an unforgettable keepsake ??@Simona_Halep | #TO2025 pic.twitter.com/FWnsMhDiPW
— wta (@WTA) February 5, 2025
Simona Halep says goodbye one last time.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) February 4, 2025
2 Grand Slam titles
2 time year-end world #1
64 weeks as world #1
9 WTA 1000 titles
24 singles titles
Incredible career. pic.twitter.com/bmjmiElgtY
We'll one day see Simo in Newport (and BSA's Winterfest, of course!), but hopefully she won't be a stranger between now and then.

The MOMENT Elena Rybakina won the WTA Finals.
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) November 8, 2025
5 top 10 wins in a row. 👏#WTAFinalsRiyadh pic.twitter.com/YuOgb5YzaT
==RECENT "MATCH OF THE YEAR" WINNERS==
2015 R.Garros 2nd Rd.: Schiavone d. Kuznetsova
2016 Wimb. 4th Rd.: Cibulkova d. A.Radwanska
2017 Madrid 2nd Rd.: Bouchard d. Sharapova
2018 Aust.Open SF: Halep d. Kerber
2019 Ind.Wells Final: Andreescu d. Kerber
2020 R.Garros 1st Rd.: Tauson d. Brady
2021 R.Garros 2nd Rd.: Krejcikova d. Sakkari
2022 Ostrava!!! Final : Krejcikova d. Swiatek
2023 Wimb. 3rd Rd.: Tsurenko d. Bogdan
2024 Aust.Open 2nd Rd.: Blinkova d. Rybakina
2025 US Open 4th Rd.: Krejcikova d. Townsend


THE GREAT ESCAPE ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 14, 2025
Elise Mertens completes a spectacular comeback win vs Alexandrova saving ELEVEN match points to reach the #LibemaOpen final! pic.twitter.com/kc8g0rc3Cq
Mertens - Alexandrova maçinin 2. Setinde söyle bir seyler yasandi.
— Mustafa Karalezli (@mkaralezli) June 14, 2025
Alexandrova 1 tane de tiebreakte toplam 11 maç puani kaçirip seti de kaybetti. pic.twitter.com/X5PNivzOnD
All 11 match points that Alexandrova had vs Mertens today pic.twitter.com/HEMcNF7KsY
— Owen (@kostekcanu) June 14, 2025
BARBORA KREJCIKOVA WON THIS MATCH pic.twitter.com/jqf9TKsYt6
— Dre (@barbsclaycikova) June 24, 2025
Barbie K is back in business ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 24, 2025
Krejcikova earns her second win of the season, defeating Dart 6-3, 6-7(4), 7-5. ??#LexusEastbourneOpen pic.twitter.com/WAtMePppac
ANOTHER DAY
— Dre (@barbsclaycikova) June 25, 2025
ANOTHER BARBORA KREJCIKOVA WON THIS MATCH https://t.co/gr5QEq5nn5 pic.twitter.com/mazLpIKLBT
Wow.
— José Morgado (@josemorgado) June 25, 2025
Wimbledon champ Barbora Krejcikova survives from match points down against a British wild card for a 2nd consecutive match, defeats Jodie Burrage 6-4, 4-6, 7-6(3) to reach the QFs in Eastbourne.
Quite a week she is having... pic.twitter.com/ijwB629HS1
Worn down so early in her latest injury comeback, Krejcikova withdrew before her next match.
C L U T C H #DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/QhVr1kbtal
— wta (@WTA) February 19, 2025
4 match points saved ??
— wta (@WTA) February 19, 2025
and 6-3 down in the tiebreaker Rybakina comes back to force a decider against Badosa!#DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/iLaBaIEuGm
Rybakina again served, this time for the match, in the 3rd (at 5-4), but couldn't put away the win. Instead, Badosa eventually had two *more* MP at 6-5 (bringing her total to six) before Rybakina took things to a deciding TB, which she won 7-2.
comeback COMPLETE ??
— wta (@WTA) February 19, 2025
Rybakina saves SIX match points en route to defeating Badosa 4-6, 7-6(8), 7-6(2)!#DDFTennis pic.twitter.com/pZylK92maa
Of course, as the majority of her season went, for every good moment came...
Mirra Andreeva is only 17, and she has already beaten all of the players in the picture above ??#MirraAndreeva #ArynaSabalenka #IgaSwiatek #ElenaRybakina #Tennis pic.twitter.com/BqeP1MPEJJ
— Sportskeeda Tennis (@SK__Tennis) February 21, 2025
Elina Svitolina won this match
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) June 1, 2025
?????????????????????? pic.twitter.com/ZuasIBBxo3
When you comeback from 4-1 down in the second set to win the match, and you can’t believe what just happened ?#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/IjkFSqXqbX
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 1, 2025
What a turnaround, Elina! ??
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 1, 2025
Svitolina saved three match points and stunned our 2024 finalist ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/RzT09qJhvA
All grit & determination ??#BTO pic.twitter.com/YuB1X03GVG
— wta (@WTA) June 20, 2025
Aryna was living on the edge today ??#BTO pic.twitter.com/1LM3lMm1OO
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 20, 2025
It's a win for the ages ??
— wta (@WTA) July 26, 2025
Leylah Fernandez is into her seventh Tour-level final with a 6-7(2), 7-6(3), 7-6(3) victory over Rybakina.#MubadalaCitiDCOpen pic.twitter.com/h8vHJ8uK5F
How do you not go insane if you're Elena Rybakina...
— Bastien Fachan (@BastienFachan) July 26, 2025
? 2025 Dubai SF (break in the third)
? 2025 Roland-Garros R16 (set and a break)
? 2025 Berlin QF (four consecutive match points)
? 2025 Washington SF (set and a break) pic.twitter.com/fG7ZGJNHAf
Night fight ??
— Cincinnati Open (@CincyTennis) August 12, 2025
As the clock ticks past midnight, Rybakina closes out Mertens 4-6, 6-3, 7-5. pic.twitter.com/BmvLi2KvjW
Moyuka Uchijima won this match ???? pic.twitter.com/5YCJbhNHVQ
— TNT Sports (@tntsports) August 24, 2025
Thing is, just to get herself into such a position, the Serb had staged a comeback of her own from 7-6/3-1 down. Danilovic eventually led 5-3 in the 3rd, with three MP at 40/love on her own serve, then three more at 6-5, love/40 up on that of Uchijima. In the deciding MTB, Danilovic had another comeback from 6-1, taking the lead and holding MP #7 at 9-8, only to lose the last three points of the match, the final one via a double-fault. Ouch. It was Uchijima's third win this season after being MP down.
Olga Danilovic wastes SEVEN match points
— Barstool Tennis (@StoolTennis) August 24, 2025
Moyuka Uchijima snatches the opening round victory pic.twitter.com/a58BzwwDw7
Madison Keys d. Sofia Kenin 4-6 6-3 7-5 at Roland Garros
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) May 31, 2025
3 match points saved.
Down 0-3 in the 3rd set.
Insane comeback from Madi.
She remains undefeated in Grand Slams this season.
10 wins, 0 losses.
?1st Roland Garros R16 since 2022
Guts.
?????? pic.twitter.com/NYRqwKr1B0
?? Fought her way to QFs! Madison Keys defeats Karolina Muchova in 3 sets 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 #NBO25
— Omnium Banque Nationale (@OBNmontreal) August 3, 2025
Quarts de finale atteintes ?? Madison Keys défait Karolina Muchova en trois manches 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 #OBN25 pic.twitter.com/kSPPuhCz2n
2 MPs saved ??@Madison_Keys defeats Lys 6-1, 6-3 7-6(1) making her 11th appearance in Cincy. pic.twitter.com/RrclSXvKDx
— Cincinnati Open (@CincyTennis) August 9, 2025
Clara Tauson just hit 26 aces in Auckland ?? That’s 5th most aces in a single WTA match pic.twitter.com/qwGNBWSaoa
— ??nebby?? (@1gamesetmatch) January 1, 2025
CRAZY COMEBACK! Polina Kudermetova continues her fine run from qualifying, stunning compatriot Daria Kasatkina from 0-4 down in the decider. Really stepped up her level afterwards for her first career Top 10 win.
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) January 2, 2025
Prevails 1-6, 6-2, 7-5 to reach the quarterfinals in Brisbane! pic.twitter.com/JMzGDVLYX2
Moyuka Magic You don't see too many players pull off a comeback from 1-6, 1-5 down. But, that's exactly what Japan's #1 player did today in Rouen, digging out of a massive deficit to defeat Dove brand ambassador Lois Boisson, 1-6, 7-64, 6-1. Uchijima moves forward to face Danilovic or Fruhvirtova
— Tick Tock Tennis (@ticktocktennis.bsky.social) April 17, 2025 at 10:51 AM
[image or embed]
Moyuka Uchijima defeats Lois Boisson pic.twitter.com/VVUcItgYpc
— JokerNole (@JokerNole69) April 17, 2025
With this match coming in the weeks prior to Roland Garros, Boisson clearly brushed the loss off pretty quickly, eh? To say the least.
The ultimate fight back ??
— wta (@WTA) April 14, 2025
Anastasia Potapova comes back from a set down to defeat Tauson in an absolute thriller, 2-6, 7-6(8), 6-3!#PorscheTennis pic.twitter.com/9lFOjKijJ3
WHAT A WIN!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) April 27, 2025
Anastasia Potapova saves two match points and defeats Sofia Kenin 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 to reach the fourth round of the Mutua Madrid Open for the first time in her career.
Incredible fightback, winning 4 consecutive points from 4-6 down in the final-set tiebreak. pic.twitter.com/Y7l5v2BRkb
What a comeback!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) May 8, 2025
Anastasia Potapova saves a match point to beat Dayana Yastremska 2-6, 7-6, 6-3 in a tough opening round at the Internazionali BNL D'Italia.
Will face World No.1 Sabalenka next! pic.twitter.com/VDpuwBEX4n
Hard fought victory! 💥
— wta (@WTA) November 7, 2025
Mertens/Kudermetova defeat Townsend/Siniakova to secure their spot in the final!#WTAFinalsRiyadh pic.twitter.com/Tw3ArYLKFk
6 MATCH POINTS SAVED!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 23, 2025
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova pulls off the crazy comeback as she comes from 1-6 down in the final-set tiebreak to beat Viktoriya Tomova 6-1, 6-7, 7-6 in the first round of the Lexus Eastbourne Open.
What a win and definitely one that boosts the morale! pic.twitter.com/cTqie7TH8f
Pavlyuchenkova ultimately reached the SF, her first on tour since consecutive final four runs in Doha and Linz in February 2024.
To the Max
— Tick Tock Tennis (@TickTockTennis) September 8, 2025
Her full name is Tiantsoa Sarah Rakotomanga Rajaonah.
But, she calls herself Sarah Rakotomanga on Instagram, so that's what I'm going with because the font would be soooooo small. ??
The 19yo goes the distance to get the win over Ana Sofia Sanchez in Sao Paulo. pic.twitter.com/jRuKgXKQWW
Smiling for a big W ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 13, 2025
Jasmine Paolini advances to the semifinals in dramatic fashion ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/7RBabgVSqe
What a fight from Jasmine ??#IBI25 pic.twitter.com/T8koigUMIi
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) May 13, 2025
DAUNTLESS DIANA ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) August 22, 2025
Shnaider completes a Houdini-like escape, saving FIVE total match points to make the Monterrey semifinals!#AbiertoGNPSeguros pic.twitter.com/q5sSgJaNxV
When there's a will, there's a way ??
— wta (@WTA) August 22, 2025
Diana Shnaider comes back from 5-1 down in the third set and survives FIVE match points along the way to defeat Mertens 3-6, 7-6(6), 7-6(4) and reach the final four in Monterrey.#AbiertoGNPSeguros pic.twitter.com/H9EY1b0Yv2
Medical time out during play for Joanna Garland
— edgeAI (@edgeAIapp) November 1, 2025
Just collapsed on the court
Garland serving for the match at 5-3 (40-40) vs Kimberly Birrell pic.twitter.com/gnplNcxSb7
TENNIS:
— HER WAY (@herwaysports) November 1, 2025
Australia’s Kim Birrell is through to the final of the Chennai tennis Open after an epic 3hr 19min semi final. The 7th seed will play 4th seed Janice Tjen from Indonesia in the decider later today.
📸WTA pic.twitter.com/MMWsLdB7b9
🇩🇰REBECCA MUNK MORTENSEN WITH A SHOCKER AT #BJKCup!
— Jacob Pacheco (@JacobPacheco6) November 16, 2025
#652 ranked 🇩🇰Munk Mortensen defeats World No. 188 🇨🇦Cadence Brace in her debut for Team Canada in an absolute BATTLE lasting 3 hours and 41 minutes.
Unreal battle. Tough loss for Brace. Had NINE match points... #CdnTennis pic.twitter.com/5ku7RcP0Cv

Sara Errani is retiring from singles
— HareshRamchandani (@R1979Harry) May 21, 2025
“This, 99 percent, will be my last singles tournament,” the 38-year-old Errani told @BenRothenberg after her comeback win over Jule Niemeier at #RolandGarros yesterdayhttps://t.co/iIcsWbL5xV
Friends will be Friends
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) May 22, 2025
Jasmine Paolini cheers on doubles partner Sara Errani during her final singles match at Roland Garros. pic.twitter.com/U30Xymsrxc
Sara Errani left this heartfelt message on Instagram following her last career singles match pic.twitter.com/CGyUcy6ZTW
— Mario Boccardi (@boccardi_marioo) May 23, 2025
Sara Errani's singles career comes to a close, will still be playing doubles, and is very successful still.
— Tennis Updates (@TennisUpdates25) May 22, 2025
• Career High of #5
• 9 WTA Titles
• 2012 Roland Garros Final
• 690-516 Record at All Levels, per WTA website
• 13 Top 10 Wins
• 3 Top 5 Wins
?? Jimmie48/WTA Tour pic.twitter.com/SkQIWTpElz
Errani didn't mourn her singles career for long, as she didn't lose a match the rest of her time in Paris, sweeping the women's doubles *and* mixed doubles titles.


what a win! ????
— wta (@WTA) March 21, 2025
Alexandra Eala defeats Ostapenko 7-6(2), 7-5!
#MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/IGMbkm9mYP
Alex Eala understandably emotional after her very tight straight sets win over Jelena Ostapenko. That was a massive fight.
— islandtennisgirl (@islandtennisace) March 21, 2025
Also so lovely for Penko to come over across the net and congratulate Alex so warmly. A true understanding of what it meant for her opponent. #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/JbrN4yaFiI
Alex Eala has more wins over Jelena Ostapenko than Iga Swiatek
— Raj ?? (@RajBhandari1001) March 21, 2025
This was Ostapenko's fourth straight loss (0-8 sets) after she throttled Iga Swiatak to reach the Doha final. She wouldn't win multiple matches in another event until Stuttgart, where she again mowed through Swiatek, this time en route to the title (after which she went 6-11, dropping her last four matches of the year to finish under .500, at 18-20, for the season).
BIGGEST WIN OF HER CAREER! ??
— wta (@WTA) March 23, 2025
Alexandra Eala defeats Keys 6-4, 6-2 and will face Badosa in the next round! #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/pSkqPoogtN
Alexandra Eala on what it means to be the 1st Filipino to beat a top 10 player
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) March 23, 2025
“You have to ask the country ?? Growing up it was tough.. you didn’t have anyone where you’re from to pave the way. I hope this takes Philippines tennis to another step” ??????
pic.twitter.com/MpDzqhXI2k
Eala didn't get to celebrate her trip to the QF, as it happened via a walkover from Paula Badosa. No matter...
SHE’S ONLY GONE AND DONE IT!!!!!!!! ????
— wta (@WTA) March 26, 2025
Filipino wildcard Alexandra Eala stuns World No. 2 Swiatek 6-2, 7-5 to reach the last 4 in Miami!#MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/xn1zNpck10
One of many winners from Alex Eala today ??
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) March 26, 2025
This forehand earns our @BetMGM shot of the day!#MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/WVBOnWruph
More specifically, Eala coverted 8/10 BP chances on Swiatek's serve, breaking her in 8 of 10 service games (the first five, then the last three) while presenting a note of intimidation -- or the lack thereof when it came to Iga's serve -- by moving inside the baseline to return, and staging rallies in both sets to win in straights. Swiatek held an early break edge in the 1st, and led 4-2 in the 2nd after having reeled off four straight games.
Elisabetta Cocciaretto, take a bow ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 1, 2025
The Italian beats No.3 seed Jessica Pegula 6-2, 6-3 to storm into the second round of #Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/oGWnAVK4BJ
It's been some journey for Elisabetta Cocciaretto ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 1, 2025
After missing out on playing at #Wimbledon last year, the Italian was delighted to progress to the second round in SW19 ?? pic.twitter.com/FicmDhlFyI
Two years ago, Pegula defeated Cocciaretto 6-4/6-0 in the Wimbledon 3rd Round, but while the Bannerette has gone on to win a pair of grass court titles since then (including this year in Bad Homburg), the Italian has also showed still more grass court ability. She reached the Birmingham SF last year, and the final four at Rosmalen in '25. The results ended Pegula's streak of seventeen consecutive 1st Round wins in majors. Later, Gauff's memorable slam debut at Wimbledon of 2019 (at age 15, she defeated Venus Williams in the 1st Round, then reached the Round of 16) got just a little big more lost in the memory bank, as the two-time slam champ (including at this year's RG) was taken down by Yastremska, a former major semifinalist (AO24) and proficient grass court player. The Ukrainian reached the SW19 junior final in 2016, the Wimbledon 4th Round in 2019 and arrived having just reached a final in Nottingham and the Eastbourne QF.
Dayana's delight ?#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/a4ybw2DgnY
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 1, 2025
"It's the win of her career."
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 1, 2025
No.1 Court is stunned as Dayana Yastremska defeats No.2 seed Coco Gauff 7-6(3), 6-1 ??#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/pZYylWHcs8
This is Gauff's second 1st Round loss at Wimbledon in three years.
A roar heard all over Paris.
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 2, 2025
Epic three-set win for French wild card Lois Boisson who stunned Jessica Pegula to reach her first-ever Grand Slam quarter-final. pic.twitter.com/KAK67YGr9j
In 2024, Boisson was an athletic Pastry looking to take a bite out of the world on the big stage. With multiple challenger titles and a quickly rising ranking (#152 before Roland Garros), she was set to make her slam MD debut in Paris as a wild card before a knee injury a week before the start of play set her career back nine months and delayed her introduction to the tennis world for a full year. In Paris this year, everyone saw her. Even while #3 seed Pegula seemed to be outplaying her in their Round of 16 match-up, Boisson got off to a decent start in the 1st set. She held an on-serve lead at 3-2, but the Bannerette reeled things back in down the stretch, winning 15 of the final 18 points en route to a 6-3 win. Then, lo and behold, Boisson again held a 3-2 edge in the 2nd, but this time the lead didn't feel so tenuous. The Pastry's hard topspin groundstrokes -- especially her favored inside out forehand -- began to help her take advantage of Pegula's (though-improved) still wanting clay court movement. Boisson began to find some traction in the veteran's service games and, with Pegula missing on several first serves, broke to take another 3-2 lead, and even though she gave the break back a game it was still the French player who was clearly gathering some momentum. Boisson put still more pressure on Pegula's long serve in game 7, holding two BP before the U.S. player finally held on her third GP to lead 4-3. But Pegula couldn't hold the wild card off two games later, and Boisson got the break that gave her a chance to serve out the set. She did so, at love, winning 6-4. Come the 3rd set, with the late-arriving Chatrier fans (where were you?!?!) finally in their seats to offer her the sort of support that a French player is expected to receive in Paris, Boisson was starting to believe that the match might not just turn out to be an exercise in gaining experience for the future. She broke Pegula to open the set, and held to lead 2-0, running her winning streak to five consecutive games. Pegula got the set back on serve, but the two were still knotted at 4-4 later in the set. The big tests were about to come, for both women. In the ninth game, Boisson found an opening on Pegula's serve at 15/30, but the Bannerette would hold three GP for a 5-4 lead before she ever faced a BP. She'd end up seeing Boisson hold four. The French woman ran around a Pegula serve, stepping back into the doubles alley in order to fire off a forehand. But it went long. Pegula's big shots saved the second, while Boisson missed on a nervous-looking angled lob on the third. But on #4, Pegula netted a forehand that put Boisson up 5-4 with the chance to become the first wild card to reach the RG quarterfinals since Mary Pierce (by then just two years removed from being the women's champ in Paris) in 2002. Boisson quickly went up 30/love, but two points later DF'd to level the game at 30-all. This time, after playing a bit too tentatively, it'd be Boisson who'd be tasked with saving four BP. She got lucky on the first, with a successful drop shot off a framed mishit, then found her groove with a perfect lob over Pegula on the second. A forehand winner denied the third, then Pegula pushed her reply to a drop shot wide on #4. With the dream suddenly coming close to being true, Boisson directed a high volley drop shot into the forecourt, and Pegula couldn't scramble and slide across the terre battue well enough to pull off a winner, instead firing her shot into the net to give Boisson a MP. A forehand winner down the line completed the year-long circle for Boisson, as she went from disappointed (and injured) would-be wild card to the most successful French player at this year's Roland Garros, reaching the QF in her maiden slam MD with a 3-6/6-4/6-4 win over the world #3 on the biggest court at her dream event.
Elation and packing up & going home are just mere meters seperated on a tennis court. pic.twitter.com/bpyg2AUxF7
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) June 2, 2025
What a moment for French wild card Lois Boisson who beat Pegula and qualified for the quarter-finals, and is today’s Extraordinary Moments with @HaierOfficial#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/LQrggWpPyN
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 2, 2025
La vie est belle ?????#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/jK5PstqgBA
— wta (@WTA) June 2, 2025
At #361, Boisson became the lowest-ranked woman to reach a major QF since 2017, then followed up with a QF win over #6 Mirra Andreeva to become the lowest-ranked slam semifinalist (not counting a few unranked former champions on the comeback path) in four decades.
6 GAMES IN A ROW TO REACH THE SEMI-FINALS FOR LOIS BOISSON ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/MLPBookvlt
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
LOIS BOISSON.
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
REMEMBER THE NAME.#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/brvgyZydRe
Cold. ??#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/TAxZ6cBFNx
— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 4, 2025
a FIRST Top 10 WIN! ??
— wta (@WTA) March 20, 2025
Krueger takes down the No. 7 seed Rybakina 6-4, 2-6, 6-4!#MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/NZxPQTTEO8
in the first tour level singles main draw match of her career, ???? carson branstine gets a huge win over wta #18, #1 seed and defending champion, ???? liudmila samsonova, 6-4 5-7 6-1 in 's-hertogenbosch! pic.twitter.com/KkXTFcmkVT
— josh? (@leylixshapeescu) June 11, 2025
Branstine went on to qualify for her maiden slam MD at Wimbledon.
"Siegemund stuns Keys." ??
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 4, 2025
The 37-year-old takes down the No.6 seed 6-3, 6-3 to reach a Grand Slam singles fourth round for the first time ??#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/Psh6Vh5dvb
The win gave Siegemund her second victory over a Top 10 player at a major this year, having knocked off Zheng Qinwen in Melbourne back in January. She had zero before this year. It makes '25 the German's first multi-Top 10 win campaign since 2017. Siegemund didn't make her slam MD debut until age 27 at Wimbledon in 2015.
6 - Laura Siegemund is the sixth player in the Open Era to reach the Round of 16 in Women’s Singles at the SW19 after having turned 37 after Billie Jean King, Virginia Wade, Martina Navratilova, Venus and Serena Williams. Rejuvenation.#Wimbledon |@Wimbledon @WTA pic.twitter.com/0WnfGgAHdi
— OptaAce (@OptaAce) July 4, 2025
With a 4th Round win over Solana Sierra, Siegemund became the oldest first-time Wimbledon quarterfinalist. In that QF, she led Aryna Sabalenka twice by a break in the 3rd, and had a GP for a 5-3 lead, before falling to the #1 seed.
Todas las emociones ??
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 25, 2025
Renata Zarazua of Mexico notches the biggest win of her career, rallying from 7-6 3-0 down to stun Keys! pic.twitter.com/NDtoZl6M4F
Remember the name ???
— wta (@WTA) March 19, 2025
The 18-year-old wildcard Victoria Mboko defeats Osorio!#MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/NrE9swwsmg
Jaw-dropping drop shot from Victoria Mboko??#MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/kAGu89C6PU
— wta (@WTA) March 19, 2025
both giving EVERYTHING! ??
— wta (@WTA) March 19, 2025
Osorio and Mboko with another long rally #MiamiOpen pic.twitter.com/oBh34WPahZ
Pressure? What pressure ??
— wta (@WTA) August 3, 2025
Victoria Mboko reaches her first ever WTA 1000 quarterfinal after taking out the top seed Gauff 6-1, 6-4.#OBN25 pic.twitter.com/S3X8ttdadw
Indonesia’s first win in a Grand Slam main draw in 22 years! ??????
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 24, 2025
Janice Tjen pulls off the upset over No.24 seed Kudermetova. pic.twitter.com/1I6ZWrJtpQ
First ever Top 10 (and Top 20) win!!
— Owen (@kostekcanu) September 28, 2025
First ever R4 at a 1000!!
New career high in the rankings!!
Eva Lys!!! pic.twitter.com/1rjui100QN
4th Round baby ??
— wta (@WTA) September 28, 2025
? First Top 10 win
? First R16 at WTA 1000
What a moment for @evalys_ ??#2025ChinaOpen pic.twitter.com/rREYxAVIs3
Of course, after this loss, Rybakina reeled off QF-W-SF-W results to end her season, qualifying for and then winning the WTA Finals.

Jasmine Paolini never ceases to entertain.
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 31, 2025
Today, it was a reenactment of the viral photo ?? pic.twitter.com/Cp6RevWhJe


