Thursday, December 4, 2025

My 2025 top 10

So many notable things occurred this year that I need a top 15 or a top 20.

Belinda Bencic, just a few months after returning from her maternity leave, won the championship in Abu Dhabi.

Jasmine Paolini won the Italian Open in both singles and doubles. 

Tatjana Maria, at age 37, won her first 500 title. 

The USA defended its junior Billie Jean King Cup championship. 

Elena Rybakina won the WTA Finals. 

Yui Kamiji, who, in Diede de Groot’s absence/rehab/return, became world number 1 again, won three singles majors, and took the Wheelchair Masters in both singles and doubles. 

Those were all important events, but—between the abundance of really big events and my own fondness for certain happenings and phenomena, I had to narrow down my top 10 occurrences, in ascending order:

10. Young blood: Lois Boisson, Victoria Mboko, and Alexandra Eala rocked the tour this year. Frenchwoman Boisson, ranked number 361 in the world, made her major debut at the French Open, and made the most of it—she reached the semifinals, knocking out the likes of Elise Mertens, Jessica Pegula and Mirra Andreeva along the way. A couple of months later, she would win her first title, in Hamburg, and enter the top 50.

Canadian Mboko became an instant star when she won the Canadian Open, a 1000 event, and rose to the top 20. And Philipino Eala, ranked number 140 in the world, was given a wild card to the Miami Open (a 1000 event), and reached the semifinals.

Eala’s run in Miiami was unbelievably dramatic: She took out Jelena Ostapenko, Madison Keys, and Iga Swiatek before she was stopped by Jessica Pegula. This stunning run made Eala the first wild card in history to defeat three major champions in straight sets at a WTA event. She is also the first player from the Philippines to reach the semifinals of a 1000 event.

9. Seems like old times: Remember when the Fighting Four couldn’t stop winning? Francesca Schiavone, Flavia Pennetta, Sara Errani, and Roberta Vinci ruled Fed Cup for a long time (well, when the Czechs weren’t ruling it). Errani never left, and she and Jasmine Paolini form a solid base for the current Italian Billie Jean King Cup team. Last year, Italy won the Billie Jean King Cup; this year, Errani and Paolini, along with Lucia Bronzetti and Elisabetta Cocciaretto—all coached by Tathiana Garbin—defeated the USA in the final. Feels like a pattern.

8. Take this show on the road:
I’ve heard a lot of International Tennis Hall of Fame induction speeches, and a lot of acceptance speeches. The induction speeches were generally what one would expect, though a few of the acceptance speeches stand out for me (Jennifer Capriati’s candid and memorable speech, Aranxa Sanchez-Viccario’s indictment of sexism in tennis, Mary’s Pierce’s beyond-description speech). But there was never before anything like Serena Williams’ induction of Maria Sharapova, which occurred this year. 

Apparently, I was one of the few people who wasn’t shocked by this occurrence. It actually seemed just right, in light of the pair’s long history, and their more recent history. But it was more than an allegedly shocking twist—it was a delicious combination of honest emotion and comedic theatre. Sharapova has always been very funny, and—on this occasion—Williams was right there with her (“Security—I have a heckler”). I would gladly watch it again. And again. Those two…..

7. One singular sensation: This was the year that Katerina Siniakova tied Martina Navratilova for having the most doubles world number 1 year-end finishes (five) on the tour. It was also the year that she won her tenth major, and her first mixed doubles title (Wimbledon). The Czech player has established herself as one of the all-time greats in doubles. Of note: In September, the world number 1 teamed with former long-time partner Barbora Krejcikova, and they won the Korea Open. (I can’t help but want more of this.)

6. Virgo rising: If I had to pick a face for a tennis “Never Give Up” poster, I might pick Amanda Anisimova’s. Yes, she’s only 24, but she’s already lived what feels like a lifetime on the WTA tour. Anisimova has always had a lot of talent and potential, but—what with undergoing a personal tragedy and then, later, taking an eight-month break from tennis—it took her a while to put it all together. 

But did she ever put it together this year! Anisimova started by winning her first 1000 event in Qatar. She also reached her first grass court semifinal at the Queen’s Club Championships. But all that was just a prelude to some really big events: Anisimova fought hard to reach the semifinals of Wimbledon, in which she upset world number 1 Aryna Sabalenka. She then lost 0-6, 0-6 to Iga Swiatek in the final. But despite that scoreline, Anisimova would go on to also reach the final of the U.S. Open, upsetting Swiatek along the way. She lost that final to Sabalenka, but she entered the top five. What a season!

5. Saving the best for last: World number 1 Aryna Sabalenka had a somewhat (for her) frustrating season, in that she lost both the Australian Open (she was the two-time defending champion) and the French Open finals. But she won her second consecutive U.S. Open, as well as two 1000 titles. And for the second year in a row, Sabalenka ended the year as the world number 1.

4. Coco means France—then and now: Three years ago, Coco Guaff lost the French Open final to Iga Swiatek. This year, she won the title, and she did it by defeating world number 1 Aryna Sabalenka in the final. Before she got to Sabalenka, Gauff took out, among others, Ekaterina Alexandrova, Madison Keys, and French Open breakout star Lois Boisson.

3. Worth the wait: According to Madison Keys, she spent much of her career wanting to win a major. For her, this was a realistic goal—from the start of that career, Keys was thought to have the kind of potential that could get her a very big trophy. But it didn’t happen. It almost happened in 2017, but Sloane Stephens allowed Keys only three games in the U.S. Open final. 

As she advanced in (tennis) years, Keys utilized her maturity to make some changes. She changed her racket, which—for a professional player—is a major change. And she made the decision to have someone help her delve into her psyche. She stopped believing that she had to win a major in order to achieve validation. And when she did that, she won one. At age 29, Keys won her first major, defeating two-time defending champion  and world number 1 Ayrna Sabalenka in the final of the Australian Open.

2. Too many goodbyes: Every season, we have to deal with at least one notable—or even elite—player’s retiring from professional tennis. This year, we had to deal with three notable retirements,  and that was, and is, difficult for fans. In February, two-time major champion Simona Halep announced her retirement, and this one was sad in a special way because Halep had been made to suffer for so long by the organizations that pretend to guard the tour’s morality (and who are still allowed to get away with their outrageous behaviors). Finally back on the tour, the Romanian star had to deal with injuries, and she called it quits. 

Frenchwoman Caroline Garcia also retired this year. Garcia, a key member of the French Billie Jean King Cup team, won eleven singles titles and eight doubles titles, two of which were majors. In 2022 and 2023, she led the tour in serving aces. 

And then there was Petra Kvitova. The two-time Wimbledon champion, whose career was made difficult by illness and was almost destroyed by a violent act perpetrated against her, was so many things to fans, media, and those who work in the professional tennis field. Adored and respected by her peers, the Czech star had a wicked sense of humor and an innate gentleness that lifted her to a status beyond that of “just” elite athlete. 

(Yes, Alize Cornet retired for the second time this year, but her “comeback” was so brief that—for me—she retired in 2024. She did get some good news this year, though: Cornet, who is also a very fine writer, was named captain of France’s Billie Jean King Cup team.

1. High on grass!: Former world number 1 Iga Swiatek made some changes this year. She hired a new coach, and she made some changes to her game. But the four-time French Open champion lost her semifinal match in Paris to world number 1 Aryna Sabalenka. To add insult to inury, Sabalenka turned the tables on the tour’s bakery queen and bageled her in the third set. But the clay court leader of her generation wasn’t to be left behind: In a major run that stunned some and delighted many, Swiatek won Wimbledon. Having defeated Belinnda Bencic 6-2, 6-0 in the semifinals, she then defeated Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 in the final. No one (perhaps not even the champions themselves) can say which are the sweetest victories, but this one had to rank pretty high in the Polish star’s resume. She has now won six singles majors.

Monday, November 10, 2025

Rybakina crashes the party--let the 2026 preparations begin

Just over a week before the start of the WTA Finals in Riyadh, Elena Rybakina hadn't made it into the top 8, but she did make it--just in time--and then went on to run over the field and win the event. The 2022 Wimbledon champion hasn't had an easy time of it lately, but--other than having a bit of a problem with her shoulder--you wouldn't have known it last week. Among her accomplishments were: defeating Amanda Anisiova in straight sets, allowing Iga Swiatek only seven games (and delivering a bagel, usually Swiatek's signature), and defeating world number 1 Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets (and delivering a mini bagel in the second set tiebreak) in the final.

Rybankina had been dealing with some health issues, which went away, but now they've returned, so she'll be getting some health checks done during the off-season. We can only imagine what she'll play like when she's 100% healthy. A healthy Rybakina is a threat at all times.

Sabalenka, Swiatek, Coco Gauff, and Rybakina have all had an interesting season. The world number 1 sneaked a major victory in toward the end of the season, at the U.S. Open, at which she was the defending champion, but fell short in finals at the Australian Open (at which she was also the defending champion), the French Open, and the WTA finals.  Overlooked is the fact that Sabalenka made it the final in Paris, an achievement that was probably not expected by many fans and observers. Sabalenka also won Brisbane, Miami and Madrid, and ended the year as the top-ranked player in the world for the second consecutive time. 

Former world number 1 Swiatek had a most unusual year. After parting ways with long-time coach Tomasz Wiktorowski and hiring Wim Fissette, she went through much of 2025 without winning a title, and that losing run included her failure to win a fifth French Open title (she was the defending champion). Then she did what hardly anyone was expecting--she won Wimbledon, The Polish star would go on to win both Cincinnati and Seoul. 

Coco Gauff won the French Open, and she also reached the finals of both Madrid and Rome. She would go on to win Wuhan, a 1000 event, in October. Gauff was the defending champion at the WTA Finals, but did not make it out of her round robin group after losing to both Jessica Pegula and Aryna Sabalenka.  The world number 3 has continued to struggle with her serve.

Of course, in 2026, tennis fans will also be looking at Zheng Qinwen, Mirra Andreeva and Jasmine Paolini to continue to add to their trophy collections. Paolini didn't have the kind of season that she had in 2024, in which her singles break-out was dramatic, but Fighting Italians are nothing, if not determined and scrappy. It will also be interesting to keep an eye on Ekaterina Alexandrova, who--at age 30, joined the top 10 for the first time in the career. And then there's Jessica Pegula, known as Ms. Consistency, and the remarkable Amanda Anisimova, who took the long road to get into elite section of the WTA, but who is now number 4 in the world.  

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Down to four

Today, world number 1 and top seed Aryna Sabalenka booked her spot in the WTA Finals in Riyahd when she defeated defending champion Coco Gauff 7-6, 6-2. Gauff led through most of the first set, but Sabalenka caught up and took the set in a tiebreak.

Also advancing to the semifinals today was 5th seed Jessica Pegula, who defeated 8th seed Jasmine Paolini  6-2, 6-3. Paolini, along with Madison Keys and Mirra Andreeva, have has been dealing with a viral illness all week. Keys, in fact, withdrew yesterday from what was, for her, a dead rubber. And Andreeva--a competitor in doubles but an alternate in singles--passed on her chance to play singles when Keys withdrew. The scores in both singles and doubles reflect--at least to some extent--how bad these players were feeling.

Here are the final round robin stats:

Stefanie Graf Group
Aryna Sabalenk (1): 3-0
Jessica Pegula (5): 2-1
Coco Gauff (3): 1-2
Jasmine Paolini (8): 0-3

Serena Williams Group
Elena Rybakina (6): 2-0 (3-0 in terms of winning all matches)
Amanda Anisimova (4): 2-1
Iga Swiatek (2): 1-2
Madison Keys (7): 0-2

Here is the semifinal draw:

Aryna Sabalenka (1) v. Amanda Anisimova (4)
Jessica Pegula (5) v. Elena Rybakina (6)

U.S. players comprised 50% of the total draw, and they comprise 50% of the semifinal draw.

Here are the final doubles round robin stats:

Martina Navratilova Group
Hsieh/Ostapenko (6): 3-0
Kudermetova/Mertens (4): 2-1
Errani/Paolini (1): 1-2
Muhammad/Schuurs (8): 03

Liezel Huber Group
Siniakova/Townsend (2): 3-0
Babos/Stefanie (7): 2-1
Dabrowski/Routliffe (3): 1-2
Andreeva/Shnaider (5): 0-3 

Gabriela Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe are the defending champions. 

Here is the doubles semifinal draw:

Hsieh/Ostapenko (6) v. Babos/Stefanie (7)
Kudermetova/Mertens (4) v. Siniakova/Townsend (2) 

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

WTA Finals--Rybakina into the semifinals, Sabalenka is close

I enjoy the WTA Finals round robin play. This is the only time during the season that we get to see round robin competition, and it's a nice change. The third round is approaching, and here are the current singles group stats:

Stefanie Graff Group
Aryna Sabalenka (1): 2-0
Coco Gauff (3): 1-1
Jessica Pegula (5): 1-1
Jasmine Paolini (8): 0-2

Serena Williams Group
Elena Rybakina (6): 2-0
Iga Swiatek (2): 1-1
Amanda Anisimova (4): 1-1
Madison Keys (7): 0-2

Rybakina advanced to the semifinals yesterday, and--if Sabalenka had beaten Pegula in straight sets today--she, too, would have advanced. But Pegula took a set off of her, so the battle continues. Rybakina plays Keys tomorrow--more significant--Swiatek plays Anisimova. The winner of that match will advance to the semifinals. 

In doubles, here are the current group stats:

Martina Navratilova Group:
Hsieh/Ostapenko (6): 2-0
Kudermetova/Mertens (4): 1-1
Errani/Paolini (1): 1-1
Muhammad/Schuurs: 0-2

Liezel Huber Group:
Siniakova/Townsend (2): 2-0
Dabrowski/Routliffe (3): 1-1
Andreeva/Shnaider (5): 0-2 

Hsieh Su-wei and Aļona Ostapenko have advanced to the semfinals.  

Coco Gauff is the defending champion in singles, and Gabriela Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe are the defending champions in doubles. 

Saturday, November 1, 2025

WTA Finals--Bosses boss on day 1

Both 2023 champion Iga Swiatek and Elena Rybakina came out in peak fighting mode in Riyadh today, as round robin play commenced. 2nd seed  Swiatek defeated 7th seed Madison Keys 6-1, 6-2. Swiatek had a first serve win percentage of 82, which pretty much says it all. The match was finished in just over an hour. And 6th seed Rybakina, facing Amanda Anisimova for the first time, defeated the 4th seed in just under an hour.

In doubles, top seeds Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini defeated 8th seeds Asia Muhammad and Demi Shuurs 6-3, 6-3. And 6th seeds Hsieh Su-wei and Alona Ostapenko defeated 4th seeds Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens 1-6, 7-5, 10-5.

Former WTA stars Daniela Hantuchova, Martina Hingis and Garbine Muguruza were on hand for the ceremonial part of the proceedings. Both Hingis and Muguruza won the WTA Finals, and Hingus won it in both singles and doubles (twice). Last year, Muguruza was named Tournament Director of the Finals. 

I wasn't that comfortable seeing Hantuchova there. She and Laura Robson were my favorite commentating team (they were terribly funny, and brought out the best in each other), but after Hantuchova's remarks about the WTA, it seems to e that a more appropriate representative (an advocate, for example) could be found. 

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Swinging into the Finals

Back in the day, the Asian swing was a relatively short season. In 2011, Aga Radwanska added considerably to her tennis resume when she won what was called the Asian Double--Tokyo and Beijing. And while there have always been smaller (now the WTA 250 events) tournaments that were held during the post-U.S. Open period, those used to be the big two.

Now, however, there are three 500 events--Seoul, Ningbo and Tokyo, and two 1000 events--Beijing and Wuhan. This year, Seoul, Ningbo and Tokyo were won by Iga Swiatek, Elena Rybakina and Belinda Bencic, respectively. The (finally) rapidly rising Amanda Anisimova won Beijing, and Coco Gauff was the champion in Wuhan. 

But there's barely time for the top players to breathe before they're off to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia for tthe 2025 WTA Finals. Only eight players can qualify for the Finals, and this year, they are:

Aryna Sabalenka (1)
Iga Swaitek (2)
Coco Gauff (3)
Amanda Anisimova (4)
Jessica Pegula (5)
Madison Keys (8)
Jasmine Paolini (6)
Elena Rybakina (7)*

The WTA Finals, which begin on November 1, will be played on a hard court in round robin form. Coco Gauff is the defending champion. 

There are also eight doubles teams that have qualified:

Sara Errani & Jasmine Paolini
Taylor Townsend & Katerina Siniakova
Gabriela Dabrowski & Erin Routliffe
Elise Mertens & Veronika Kudermetova
Diana Shnaider &  Mirra Andreeva
Hsieh Su-wei & Alona Ostapenko
Timea Babos & Luisa Stefani
Asia Muhammad & Demi Schuurs

Dabrowski and Routliffe are the defending champions. 
 
There will also be alternates available to play at the event.

*Rybakina had to withdraw from the Tokyo tournament right before her semifinal match  because of an issue with her back. 

Sunday, September 7, 2025

My U.S. Open top 10

 My top 10 U.S. Open occurrences, in ascending order:

10. The power of a bad memory: “I just tried to not focus on the fact that I'm 2-4 or 0-2 down. I just tried to focus on every point, every shot that I make, on my plan, and my tasks on court. Then, yeah, I kind of forgot the score.” Those are the words of  new U.S. Open junior champion Jeline Vandromme of Belgium. The 14th seed, she won the title when she defeated qualifier Lea Nilsson 7-6(2), 6-2. And Nilsson's run was impressive. She had to win two qualifying rounds before knocking out three seeded players on her way to the final.

9. If you can make it here...: Until this year's U.S. Open, people who aren't serious tennis fans had probably never heard of Ann Li. However, on her way to the round of 16, the Pennsylvania native  took out 16th seed Belinda Bencic. She lost to 4th seed Jessica Pegula, but it was a very good run.

8, Twirling into the future: 45-year-old Venus Williams, a two-time U.S. Open singles champion and two-time U.S. Open doubles champion, entered the doubles competition with new partner Leylah Fernandez, and the pair took out two seeded teams on their way to the round of 16. They fell to top seeds Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend, but it was fun to watch them, and to watch Fernandez make a point of getting her partner to do her famous twirl.

7. Hard (court) times:  6th seed and Australian Open champion Madison Keys lost a close first round match to Mexico's Renata Zarazua, who needed three hours and ten minutes to defeat her, 7-6(10), 6-7(3), 7-5. 

6. Yui makes it three: Top seed Yui Kamiji won her third U.S. Open wheelchair singles title at this year's tournament. Having already defeated six-time U.S. Open champion Diede de Groot in the quarterfinals, she defeated 3rd seed Li Xiaohui 0-6, 6-1, 6-3 in the final. Li and her partner, Wang Ziying--the 2nd seeds--won the doubles title, defeating the unseeded team of de Groot and Zhu Zhenzhen 6-4, 7-6(4).

5. Point made--I hope: The U.S. Open's ridiculous mixed doubles "competition"--a glorified exhibition event, paired all manner of players with each other, while omitting most actual mixed doubles and doubles specialists. Fortunately, a couple of those specialists--Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori, the defending champions--won the event. This is the pair's second U.S. Open mixed doubles title, and their third title overall.

4. Hard to say goodbye: Both Petra Kvitova and Caroline Garcia retired from professional tennis at this year's U.S. Open. The two-time Wimbledon champion and the flying Frenchwoman--a two-time French Open doubles champion (with an outstanding singles record)--will be missed by fans and peers alike.

3. The hottest show in town: In 2009, Flavia Pennetta lit up the U.S. Open when she saved six match points with winners in her round of 16 match against Vera Zvonareva. In 2025, for Barbora Krejcikova, this became a "hold my Pilsner Urquell" moment: The Czech star, also in the round of 16, saved eight match points with winners in her match against Taylor Townsend. In the previous round, she had defeated Emma Navarro after going down 0-3 in the third set. Because of injury and rehab, Krejcikova had played only twelve matches during the season at this point, and she had saved match points in three of them.

2. Sweet repeat: 3rd seeds Gaby Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe, who won the U.S. Open doubles title in 2023, did it again this year, defeating top seeds Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend in an extremely well-played and exciting match. The pair also won the WTA 1000 event in Cincinnati right before coming to New York. Their recent success is especially poignant, considering that Dabrowski was diagnosed with breast cancer last year.

1. Roar!: She took the scenic route, but world number 1 Aryna Sabalenka won her major in 2025. A finalist at both the Australian Open and the French Open, and a semifinalist at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open was Sabalenka's final chance to get a big trophy this year. She was also the defending champion, which probably created even more pressure, but the Tiger was up to the task

In an interesting twist to the story, at each of the other majors, her defeat came from a player from the USA--Madison Keys, Coco Gauff and Amanda Anisimova. And wouldn't you know it? In the final of the U.S. Open, there was Anisimova, the Wimbledon finalist--and a woman with a 6-3 record against Sabalenka--again. The two hard hitters played for an hour and a half, and there was a moment in the second set when it appeared that Anisimova had a chance to extend the match, but Sabalenka was too focused, and too good at winning the big points. 

This is Sabalenka's fourth major title; she won the U.S. Open last year, of course, and she won the Australian Open in 2023 and 2024.