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Aryna Sabalenka

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British tennis star Emma Raducanu is still looking to find back her rhythm and confidence after missing out most of the 2023 season due to surgeries on both wrists and one ankle. However, her performance against Aryna Sabalenka in the R32 of the Indian Wells forced the world number 2 to heap praise on the 21YO. Now, American tennis legend Martina Navratilova has come up with a bizarre take on Raducanu’s US Open glory.

Emma Raducanu made the headlines by winning the 2021 US Open at the age of just 18. But after that, there have been a series of failures, injuries, and frequent changes in her coaching team. This has resulted in a drastic fall in her performance curve. Martina Navratilova says it was a mix of good and bad news for the Brit in the years since her stellar victory at the US Open.

‘It wasn’t a fluke’ – Martina Navratilova on Emma Raducanu’s journey so far
Emma Raducanu is still yet to defeat a Top 10 opponent in her career. Martina Navratilova recently gave an interview to Gigi Salmon on Sky Sports. In the interview, she stated enormous pressure to be one of the reasons for Raducanu’s downfall. “It was amazing when she won but it’s become a handicap because the expectations have gone sky-high,“ said Martina Navratilova.

https://x.com/the_LTA/status/1767589878282191087?s=20

She further went on to add, “It wasn’t a fluke because Emma has got that level. It wasn’t just she played great tennis and then all of a sudden she can’t play. But the pressure that’s been on her since then – particularly being a Brit – you can’t get away from it.“ Navratilova feels it to be a big burden to carry and hopes Emma Raducanu will soon make her way back to the top level yet again. But for that, she needs to stay fit.

The tennis legend said that winning matches will boost her confidence for the rest of the season. “It’s a nasty Catch-22 where you can win with confidence but you can’t have confidence without winning,“ added Navratilova. But what does Emma Raducanu think about her target for the 2024 season?

‘Patience is a big thing’ – Raducanu
Emma Raducanu is currently placed at the 288 spot in the women’s singles ranking. So the first target for her would surely be to get into the Top 100. She previously said, “If you would have said to me last year, Emma, what is your goal for the year? I’d be like, Okay, I want to win one round in the main draw of a Grand Slam.”

She reached the second round at the AO this year and she believes that this could’ve been a really big thing to even think for her last year. Especially after what she had gone through over the past few months.

She further added, “Yeah, what might be a poor result now in people’s eyes to me would have been a positive thing. I think I need to keep reminding yourself of that, not getting sucked in, I feel like now people are starting to realize it’s going to take some time for her to settle in. I feel like patience is a big thing.”

Emma Raducanu believes if she somehow manages to settle in and go through all these highs and lows, she’ll definitely find some sort of equilibrium to carry forward for the rest of the season. What are your thoughts on her journey so far?

The Indian Wells Masters is more than just a tennis tournament! While the 2024 edition of the tournament is just a few days away, they recently celebrated Family Day, giving kids an opportunity to play with professional tennis players. Recently, a lot of WTA and ATP stars, including Emma Raducanu, Grigor Dimitrov, and Alexander Zverev, were seen spending little moments of joy with the young tennis fans.

A lot of tennis players have already reached America to participate in one of the most popular tournaments, along with the four major tennis events. Before that competition, a lot of tennis stars enjoyed a lovely time with children on the occasion of Family Day.

Emma Raducanu and Alexander Zverev play tennis with kids
The Indian Wells Masters Arena, where players will show off their competitive edge in just a few days, is filled with smiles. As the event is celebrating Family Day, a lot of children came up to enjoy the special occasion and create a tennis memory with the popular tennis players.

Recently, the official Instagram account of the tournament shared a series of pictures from this special day. In one of the stories, the German tennis player was seen interacting with kids, and he also signed a kid’s headband while sharing a light-hearted moment with him.

On the other hand, 32-year-old tennis player Grigor Dimitrov was seen practicing tennis on the court with some kids. In addition, he was also seen hitting some slow shots for his young opponents, and they enjoyed playing tennis together.

Subsequently, even the WTA star, Raducanu, was seen doing the same. After hitting the court with some young tennis fans, she was seen greeting them with handshakes as the kids walked off the court. Not only that, there are a lot of tennis players who are also ready to give their 100% in the competition.

Swiatek and Sabalenka reach California for the big event
While the British tennis star has already reached California for the big event, the world’s number one-ranked tennis player, Iga Swiatek, recently took to her Instagram account to share her story of how she started her practice. Last year, the Polish tennis player faced defeat in the semi-final round itself. This year, she is ready to take revenge and show some good tennis.

On the other hand, the 2024 Australian Open champion reached a bit late, but shared her amazing feelings on how she was “happy to be back.” She shared a picture of herself from the court. Similar to Swiatek, Sabalenka lost the tournament’s final round last year, which prevented her from winning the Indian Wells title. However, this year, with her improved form and triumph at the Australian Open, things may be looking up for her.

Nevertheless, what are your thoughts on the lighthearted Family Day? Do let us know in the comments section below.

The American insists she wasn’t put off by Aryna Sabalenka’s grunting during her straight-sets loss in the Australian Open semi-final.

Coco Gauff has shut down talks that she may have been put off by Arnya Sabalenka’s grunting during the American’s straight-sets Australian Open semi-final defeat. Many tennis players grunt during play but Sabalenka’s noises have often been ridiculed for being at times excessive or unnecessary.

Gauff famously complained about Martina Trevisan’s grunt during their Roland Garros match two years ago. However, she refused to blame the Belarusian’s grunting for her 7-6 6-4 loss on Thursday night.

“I have played her a lot, so I can’t sit here and say that the grunt is distracting. I don’t even know, it’s like the fifth time we have played,” Gauff said post-match. “I don’t notice. I feel like at least with her it’s consistent, so it doesn’t bother me.

“I’ve played a player in the past where the grunt wasn’t consistent, where they would grunt longer on purpose on 30-all or deuce point. I don’t think it’s a tactic or anything. I think that’s just how she plays tennis.”

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 25: Coco Gauff of the United States walks onto the court to play against Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus in the semi-final on Day 12 of the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 25, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia (Photo by Robert Prange/Getty Images)
Coco Gauff famously complained about Martina Trevisan’s grunt during their Roland Garros match two years ago, however, she refused to blame the Belarusian’s grunting for her 7-6 6-4 loss on Thursday night.

Gauff last met Sabalenka in the US Open final, where the American came from a set down to win 2-6 6-3 6-2. The World No 5. admits she wasn’t on her game on Thursday night while the World No.2 was and that is what ultimately cost her.

“She served better (tonight). (In the) US Open … she made less errors, but also I feel like I played a little bit more aggressive this time,” Gauff said. “So, you know, US Open I felt like wasn’t, like, a great match, like, for me. Yes, I won, (but) I think I played better tonight.”

“I’m going to dwell on it tonight. But as Brad (Gilbert, coach) told me as soon as the match was over, the sun is going to rise tomorrow and you have a new chance to live a good day,” Gauff said. “Tomorrow, I don’t know. I’m going to try to go to the movies or something, be proud of myself. ” Sabalenka will meet 21-year-old Qinwen Zheng in the Australian Open women’s final on Saturday.

Sabalenka credits relaxed approach for Australian Open dominance
The defending Australian Open champion says in years gone by at this stage in a tournament she would have been an emotional wreck. But this year Sabalenka says she is in a better headspace than ever before as she prepares to take on China’s Qinwen.

“I would say emotionally I’ll be very ready to fight. Not going crazy, because when you play (your) first final, you get emotional and are rushing things sometimes,” Sabalenka said.

“When you’re third time in the finals, you’re, like, ‘OK, it’s a final, it’s OK’. It’s just another match and you’re able to separate yourself from that, just focus on your game.”

While she admits she is fully aware of how big a favourite she will be going into Saturday’s final, the World No.2 is trying not to pay attention to any added stresses such as if she is to win the title in 2023 she will be the first woman to win back-to-back Australian Open’s since fellow Belarusian Victoria Azarenka in 2013

“Yeah, I’m defending champion, but worst case I’m going to lose this tournament, and it’s less points to defend next year. Then that’s it,” she said. “That’s helping me to just stay focused. It’s not like I’m ignoring the pressure. I’m just shifting my focus and it’s working well so far. It’s one more to go, and I’ll do my best.”

Iga Swiatek suffered a shock defeat at the 2024 Australian Open and there could be movement near the top of the WTA Rankings, with Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff still in contention.

The world No 1 was beaten in three sets by 50th-ranked Linda Noskova in the third round of the Melbourne major on Saturday – her earliest defeat at a Grand Slam since Wimbledon in 2022.

Iga Swiatek after losing to Linda Noskova

Despite her early exit at the year’s first Grand Slam, Swiatek will hold onto her position at the top of the WTA Rankings after the Australian Open.

The 22-year-old will only drop 110 points, having went one round further by reaching the fourth round at the 2023 edition of the tournament.

This will see the four-time Grand Slam winner’s points total fall from 9,880 to 9,770 after the event – a tally which cannot be caught by the chasing pack.

World No 2 Aryna Sabalenka was on 8,905 points heading into the Australian Open, but will not be able to increase her total as she is the defending champion.

Australian Open 2024 results: Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka through in  Melbourne - BBC Sport

The 25-year-old Belarusian will remain on 8,905 points points if she can defend her title and claim the 2,000 points earned for a major triumph, but will drop points if she falls short of this.

Coco Gauff, who was ranked fourth prior to the tournament, is guaranteed to at least return to her previous career-high ranking of world No 3 after the event.

This is because current No 3 Elena Rybakina, who was a runner-up in Melbourne last year, will lose 1,230 points and slip to fifth position after her second round loss to Anna Blinkova. The 24-year-old Kazakh will see her points tally drop from 6,918 to 5,688.

Jessica Pegula, who lost in the second round to Clara Burel, will also climb above Rybakina and see her ranking improve from fifth place to fourth. The 29-year-old American will drop 360 points – from 6,065 to 5,705 – after reaching the quarter-finals in 2023.

Only one who can win it with her B-game' - Coco Gauff backed to win  Australian Open by former No 5

Gauff could overtake Sabalenka to reach a new career-high ranking of world No 2 as she can increase her points total, having already matched her 2023 Australian Open result by progressing to the fourth round.

The 19-year-old will remain on the 6,660 points she had coming into the event if she loses in the last 16, but can reach 6,850 points if she makes the quarter-finals, 7,200 for the semi-finals, 7,720 if she loses in the final, and 8,420 if she wins the title.

Sabalenka will finish on 7,145 points if she loses in the fourth round, 7,335 with a quarter-final exit, 7,685 for making the last four, 8,205 if she is a runner-up, and 8,905 if she defends the title.

Gauff would, therefore, leapfrog Sabalenka to become world No 2 if she wins the title or reaches the final as the pair are both in the bottom half of the draw and would meet in a potential semi-final. The American could also overtake Sabalenka if she makes the last four and the Belarusian loses in the last 16.

Both players will play their fourth round matches on Sunday, with Gauff to face Magdalena Frech and Sabalenka to take on Amanda Anisimova.

Women’s Grand Slam points breakdown
Winner – 2000 points
Runner-up – 1300 points
Semi-finals – 780 points
Quarter-finals – 430 points
Round of 16 – 240 points
Round of 32 – 130 points
Round of 64 – 70 points
Round of 128 – 10 points

Iga Swiatek will be the hot favourite to win a first Australian Open when it begins on Sunday, but could face a stiff challenge from reigning champion Aryna Sabalenka.

AFP Sport highlights five women to watch at first Grand Slam of the year:

Iga Swiatek

Poland's Iga Swiatek is top of the women's rankings
The world number one is a four-time Grand Slam champion but has never been beyond the semi-finals at Melbourne Park.

The Polish player rocketed back to the top of the rankings after winning her first WTA Finals trophy in November.

She enjoyed a stellar season in 2022, recording 37 straight wins, but faltered last year, with her 75-week run as number one ending in September.

However, Swiatek, 22, lost only one of her final 13 matches of the season and followed up by winning all five of her singles at the United Cup this month.

Aryna Sabalenka

Aryna Sabalenka 'really disrespected by the WTA' after poor organisation |  The Independent
The 2023 Australian Open champion looked on course to finish the year on top of the world rankings until Swiatek pipped her by winning the WTA Tour finals.

The consistent Belarusian, who came from a set down to beat Elena Rybakina in the final 12 months ago, boasted a fine record at the majors last year.

She reached the semi-finals in Paris and at Wimbledon before losing to Coco Gauff in the final of the US Open.

The powerful 25-year-old was the first player since Serena Williams in 2016 to reach at least the semi-finals at all four Slams in a single season.

Sabalenka reached the final at the recent Brisbane International, losing to Rybakina.

Elena Rybakina 

Elena Rybakina won the WTA 500. Her opponent offered virtually no  resistance | Dailysports

The Russian-born Kazakh came close a year ago to adding the Australian Open crown to her 2022 Wimbledon title, losing to Sabalenka in three sets.

The world number three started the year in style, dropping just three games in beating Sabalenka in the Brisbane final, where she lost only 15 games in five matches.

“For sure it gives me confidence,” she said about her Australian Open prospects. “I’m playing well now, so hopefully I continue.”

Naomi Osaka

Home | Naomi Osaka

The Japanese fan favorite knows her way around Melbourne Park, triumphing in 2019 and 2021, but she is something of an unknown quantity this year.

The former world number one has admitted she almost gave up on tennis but is now back in love with the sport.

The 26-year-old stepped away from the game in September 2022, citing mental health concerns. She subsequently gave birth to daughter Shai.

Osaka will be unseeded after dropping to 833 in the world.

Emma Raducanu

Get to Know Emma Raducanu, the British teen making history at Wimbledon
Britain’s Emma Raducanu stunned the tennis world when she won the US Open in 2021 as a qualifier but only on one other occasion has she reached the fourth round of a Grand Slam.

The 21-year-old has plummeted to 299th in the world after an eight-month layoff with ankle and wrist injuries.

Raducanu, who has a high profile despite her relative lack of success, took Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina to three sets in round two in Auckland.

But she is still feeling her way back from injury and will likely regard any sort of run in Melbourne as a bonus.

Iga Swiatek will be the No 1 seed at a Grand Slam for the eighth consecutive time as the world No 1 has received top billing for the 2024 Australian Open.

Four-time Grand Slam winner Swiatek has been top seed at every single major since the 2022 French Open with the now retired Ashleigh Barty the last player other than the Pole to achieve the top seed status as she was No 1 for the 2022 Australian Open.

A happy Iga Swiatek

Organizers of the Australian Open use the official WTA Rankings to determine the seeds and Swiatek tops the list ahead of defending champion Aryna Sabalenka. It means the top two won’t face each other before the final, but they could potentially face either Elena Rybakina or Coco Gauff in the semi-final.

Last year’s runner-up Rybakina is seeded third as she replaced reigning US Open champion Gauff at No 3 in the WTA Rankings on Monday on the back of her title run at the Brisbane International.

Gauff retained her Auckland Classic trophy last week, but the New Zealand event was a WTA 250 tournament while Rybakina’s title run was worth 500 points.

The top four are followed by Jessica Pegula, Ons Jabeur, Marketa Vondrousova, Maria Sakkari, Barbora Krejcikova and Beatriz Haddad Maia.

MATCH REPORT | 2024 United Cup: Iga SWIATEK continues incredible form,  brushes aside former World No.1 Angelique KERBER | Tennisuptodate.com

Last year’s French Open finalist Karolina Muchova was due to be the No 9 seed, but she is missing due to injury.

Meanwhile, two players in the top 20 – two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova and reigning Olympic champion Belinda Bencic – will also miss the tournament as they are pregnant while world No 18 Madison Keys is out injured.

As a result, Chinese duo Zhu Lin and Wang Xinyu as well as Marie Bouzkova from the Czech Republic and Canadian Leylah Fernandez have received a boost as they are among the top 32 seeds despite being ranked lower.

French Open champion Iga Swiatek wins twice in a day to set up Rome final  with Karolina Pliskova | Tennis News | Sky Sports

2024 Australian Open women’s seeds:
1. Iga Swiatek Poland
2. Aryna Sabalenka –
3. Elena Rybakina Kazkhstan
4. Coco Gauff United States
5. Jessica Pegula United States
6. Ons Jabeur Tunisia
7. Marketa Vondrousova Czech Republic
8. Maria Sakkari Greece
9. Barbora Krejcikova Czech Republic
10. Beatriz Haddad Maia Brazil
11. Jelena Ostapenko Latvia
12. Zheng Qinwen China
13. Liudmila Samsonova
14. Daria Kasatkina
15. Veronika Kudermetova
16. Caroline Garcia France
17. Ekaterina Alexandrova
18. Victoria Azarenka
19. Elina Svitolina Ukraine
20. Magda Linette Poland
21. Donna Vekic Croatia
22. Sorana Cirstea Romania
23. Anastasia Potapova
24. Anhelina Kalinina Ukraine
25. Elise Mertens Belgium
26. Jasmine Paolini Italy
27. Emma Navarro United States
28. Lesia Tsurenko Ukraine
29. Zhu Lin China
30. Wang Xinyu China
31. Marie Bouzkova Czech Republic
32. Leylah Fernandez Canada

Kazakhstan’s top seed Elena Rybakina defeated world’s No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus with a 6-0, 6-3 score to clinch the Brisbane International on Jan. 7, reported the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA).

Rybakina expressed her sentiments on the court after receiving the Evonne Goolagong Cawley Trophy from former world No. 3 Wendy Turnbull, acknowledging the challenge of playing against her opponent despite the score.

“We always push each other, and I think that is great. We improve this way, so hopefully, we continue,” said Rybakina.

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev congratulated Rybakina, who is also the 2022 Wimbledon champion, on her confident victory at the prestigious tournament in Australia and wished her new sporting achievements.

Anna Danilina, Viktória Hrunčáková.

Rybakina, who will now become world No. 3, was awarded the unusual title of Baker of the Week for Week 1 of the 2024 WTA season, acknowledging her achievement as the player who won the most sets with a score of 6-0/6-1 during that week.

Kazakh tennis player Anna Danilina rose ten places to 44th in the WTA doubles ranking after her triumph at the WTA 250 ASB Classic Auckland tournament in New Zealand.

Danilina, paired with Viktória Hrunčáková from Slovakia, beat the American-Czech pair Bethanie Mattek-Sands/Marie Bouzková in the final.