Finals WTA WTA Finals
Amanda Anisimova: a season rebuilt leads to WTA Finals semifinal berth
Anisimova has rebuilt her career, reaching two major finals in five months and WTA Finals semis. now
Amanda Anisimova, 24, has spent nearly a decade on tour and in 2025 produced the most sustained surge of her career. Ranked No. 4 and having beaten each of the Top 3 this season, she clinched a spot in the semifinals at the WTA Finals by beating Iga Swiatek.
“I feel like I belong at this point.” That admission follows a year in which Anisimova reached two Grand Slam finals in the last five months and recorded a pair of WTA 1000 wins. The turnaround is striking after a difficult period that culminated in her describing life on tour as “unbearable” in 2023 and taking the remainder of that season off.
“If you would have told me a year ago I would be sitting right here, it would be a little hard to believe,” she said as the year-end Top 8 event began. “I think I’ve surprised myself along the way, for sure. I’ve definitely hit some goals that I dreamt of early in the year and didn’t think that maybe I would be able to achieve them by the end.”
Anisimova traces her revival to work done away from the scoreboard. “I don’t think there’s anything in particular that I could say has helped me get to where I am,” she said. “I think it was a combination of many different things…I think all the hard work I did on the inside was what really paid off for me.” She added, “I think just me enjoying the process has gotten me this far.”
Her results back that up: two major finals, WTA 1000 victories, a recovery after “losing 0 and 0 at Wimbledon,” and a remarkable streak of winning her last 13 three-set matches dating to April. “I’ve played a lot of tough matches this year. I know my capabilities. And I know if I can play my best tennis, I can give it my best shot. Amanda Anisimova”
Her WTA Finals week began with a loss to Elena Rybakina, but she followed with three-set wins over Madison Keys and Swiatek, showing patience and clutch play. After the match against Swiatek, the defeated champion said, “I did everything I could today, so like no regrets,” Swiatek said . “I felt like I was really in the zone, positive mindset. I fought and really didn’t give up—it wasn’t enough.”
Analytics & Stats Finals
No. 1 Seeds Extend Streak to Seven Straight WTA Titles
No. 1 seeds have won seven straight WTA events, compiling a 35-0 run across seven weeks. Remarkable.
Elena Rybakina defeated Karolina Muchova to claim the Stuttgart crown, 7-5, 6-1, and Marta Kostyuk beat Veronika Podrez for the Rouen title, 6-3, 6-4. Those finals completed another chapter in an unusual run on the women’s tour: top seeds have won the last seven WTA events in a row.
The run began in early March with Aryna Sabalenka at Indian Wells and has continued through seven tournaments and seven weeks. Top seeds are 35-0 over the last seven weeks at WTA events: Sabalenka 6-0 at Indian Wells and 6-0 in Miami; Pegula 5-0 in Charleston; Bouzkova 5-0 in Bogota; Andreeva 4-0 in Linz; Rybakina 4-0 in Stuttgart; and Kostyuk 5-0 in Rouen.
Those 35 consecutive wins did not all come without drama. In the first tournament of the streak, Indian Wells, Sabalenka faced a match point against Rybakina down 6-5 in the third-set tie-break in the final before sneaking out the win, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (6). In Stuttgart, Rybakina saved two match points in the third set, one down 5-4 and another down 6-5 in the breaker, to survive Leylah Fernandez in the quarterfinals, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 7-6 (6).
There were also a string of three-set victories elsewhere, including several from Pegula in Charleston before she closed out that event in straight sets. At each tournament the top seed has reached the finish line, producing an unbroken run of title-clinching performances by No. 1 seeds across the most recent slate of WTA events.
CHAMPIONS AT THE LAST SEVEN WTA EVENTS:
500 Australian Open Finals
Rybakina secures second Stuttgart title with straight-set win over Muchova
Rybakina claimed her second Stuttgart crown, beating Muchova 7-5, 6-1 to start clay season for Rome
Elena Rybakina captured her second Porsche Tennis Grand Prix trophy, defeating Karolina Muchova 7-5, 6-1 in a one hour and 18 minute final on Center Court. The top seed overcame a spirited comeback in the first set from the No. 7 seed before asserting control in the second.
Rybakina, the reigning 2026 Australian Open champion, is set to return to No. 1 in the Race to the WTA Finals standings after the victory. Since her major triumph in Melbourne, the 26-year-old produced steady results but had not claimed another title, finishing runner-up to the world No. 1 at the BNP Paribas Open and falling in the Miami Open semifinals.
With Aryna Sabalenka absent from the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix because of injury, Rybakina targeted a strong start to her clay-court season and lost just one set across four matches to complete that mission. She advanced through a third-set tiebreaker against Leylah Fernandez in the quarterfinals, handled No. 6 seed Mirra Andreeva after Andreeva had stunned No. 3 seed Iga Swiatek, and then carried momentum into the final.
Against Muchova, Rybakina raced to a 5-2 lead early in the opening set before Muchova fought back to level at 5-5 and saved two set points as she tried to force a tiebreak. Rybakina converted her third set point to close out the first set and then dominated the second, building a 5-0 advantage. Muchova avoided a bagel with a game for 5-1, but Rybakina served out the match to love.
Muchova arrived in Stuttgart off a breakthrough season that included her first WTA 1000 title at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open. She had also snapped losing streaks against Coco Gauff and Elina Svitolina en route to the final, and she was the last woman to beat Rybakina before Rybakina went on to win the Australian Open. On Sunday, however, Rybakina’s form proved decisive as she lifted her second Porsche in three years.
Equipment Finals Grand Slam
Sabalenka debuts Wilson Blade v10 and reflects on pressure, regret and grief in Esquire profile
World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka debuts a Wilson Blade v10, discusses grief, regrets and lessons. Read on
Fans missing Aryna Sabalenka at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix have been met with a steady stream of new material from the world No. 1. Sabalenka unveiled her new racquet and posed for a fashion-forward Esquire cover shoot while speaking with editor-in-chief Michael Sebastian.
The Wilson advertisement for the Blade v10 carries a simple declaration: “Pressure is power,” a line that echoed Sabalenka’s 2026 run. A four-time Grand Slam champion, the 27-year-old rebounded from an Australian Open final loss to Elena Rybakina by completing the Sunshine Double, taking back-to-back titles at the BNP Paribas Open and the Miami Open. In Miami she avenged the Australian Open defeat to Rybakina in straight sets.
Asked how she might have lived her life outside tennis, she said she would be a “boxer or a model,” and in the Esquire conversation she addressed mistakes and hard lessons.
“I have a lot of regrets. I think we all do,” she told editor-in-chief Michael Sebastian. “Mistakes make us better people. It’s tough to be the person without regrets and mistakes. You better stay away from those people.”
Sabalenka also revisited a difficult moment after the Roland Garros final, when she was hesitant to immediately praise Coco Gauff following a three-set defeat. “I have to take my time after the match before I go to the press conference when I lose the match, because when you do it straightaway, you’re still that emotional person,” said Sabalenka. The two players later smoothed things over and recorded conciliatory TikToks.
Beyond on-court swings, Sabalenka spoke about personal loss. She has carried the grief of losing her father in 2019 and urged emotional honesty. “It’s important to grieve, to cry, to go through the emotions,” she said. “Never hold it inside, because it’ll destroy you from the inside.”
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