Grand Slam Wimbledon WTA
Iga Swiatek: Wimbledon peak amid an otherwise uneven 2025
Swiatek salvaged the season with dominant Wimbledon and more titles, yet uneven losses persisted. now
Iga Swiatek’s 2025 season combined a historic major triumph with stretches of inconsistency. The former No. 1 arrived at Roland Garros with hopes of a four-peat only to see that bid end in the semifinals against Aryna Sabalenka. “Obviously looking at the math, I lost many points right now, but I know that it doesn’t really matter. Any of us can win these tournaments,“ Swiatek reflected after that loss.
Earlier in the year she held a match point on eventual Australian Open champ Madison Keys in a gripping semifinal and left Paris with 32 wins on the season. Talk surfaced about a title drought approaching a year, yet those numbers and moments showed the campaign was far from disastrous. Still, Swiatek could not clear her first five semifinal hurdles until she reached the grass swing.
For the first time in June she competed for a grass-court title. After what looked like a likely loss at Bad Homburg to Jessica Pegula, Swiatek rewrote the script at Wimbledon. A former junior champion who had gone 13-5 in her first five visits to the All England Club, she put together a flawless fortnight. In the final she defeated Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0, becoming the first woman since Monica Seles to win her first six major finals. She dropped two total games across the semifinal and final.
Beyond Wimbledon, Swiatek added a WTA 1000 title at Cincinnati and a WTA 500 crown at Seoul, sealing a fourth consecutive Top 2 year-end finish and setting up a Career Grand Slam bid in January Down Under. —Matt Fitzgerald
The numbers underline both dominance and vulnerability. In 2025 she recorded seventeen 6-0 set wins and 24 sets won 6-1, yet she also suffered four 6-0 set losses and nine 6-1 defeats. By comparison, world No. 1 Sabalenka lost just two sets 6-1 and none 6-0 in 2025, while world No. 3 Coco Gauff lost one set 6-0 and three 6-1. Swiatek lost a set by 6-0 or 6-1 in 12 matches in 2025 and won only three of those encounters. Her highs remain exceptional, but the season exposed lows as stark as any since she rose into the sport’s elite.
ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Djokovic Drawn into Jannik Sinner’s Quarter as Alcaraz Tops 2026 Australian Open Field
Novak Djokovic is placed in Jannik Sinner’s quarter at the 2026 Australian Open draw. Alcaraz is No.1
The 2026 Australian Open men’s draw, revealed Thursday, set up a notable path through the top half of the field and across the bottom. Ten-time champion Novak Djokovic was placed as the No. 4 seed in the third quarter, positioning him as a projected semifinal opponent for defending champion Jannik Sinner.
Sinner arrives at the tournament bidding for a third consecutive Australian Open crown. He captured his first major title at this event in 2024 and will open his title defense against France’s Hugo Gaston. Seeded directly behind world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz, Sinner’s early section also lists Brazilian Joao Fonseca as his first projected seeded opponent in the third round.
If the seeding holds, American Ben Shelton is slated to meet Sinner in the quarterfinals. That potential quarterfinal pairing reinforces the stacked nature of Sinner’s quarter and the wider implications for the semifinals, where Djokovic’s placement makes for a high-profile projected clash.
Carlos Alcaraz’s position at the top of the draw leaves the defending champion and Djokovic on a collision course in opposite halves until the advanced rounds. The alignment of seeds creates a clear narrative for the tournament: a top seed carrying expectations at the summit, a defending champion aiming for a three-peat, and a multiple-time winner navigating a draw that could pitch him against the current titleholder before the final.
With the draw now public, attention will turn to early matches and how the projected matchups materialize on court. For Sinner, Gaston represents the immediate test. For Djokovic, the third quarter presents a pathway that, if both players advance as seeded, would culminate in a semifinal meeting with the defending champion.
Australian Open Grand Slam
Australian Open draw sets up potential Gauff–Venus rematch; Sabalenka in top half
Gauff could meet Venus in round two as Sabalenka tops the half; bottom quarter packed with Americans
The 2026 Australian Open women’s draw sets the stage for a headline second-round meeting between No. 3 seed Coco Gauff and Venus Williams, who returns to Melbourne for a 22nd appearance.
Gauff and Williams previously met at the 2019 Wimbledon Championships, where a then-teenaged Gauff won her first Grand Slam match at 15. Williams, 45, has not played the Australian Open since 2021 but launched a surprise return last summer. She entered the ASB Classic and Hobart International and impressed despite losses to Magda Linette and Tatjana Maria. The two-time finalist must first get past Olga Danilovic, while Gauff opens against Kamilla Rakhimova.
Both Gauff and Williams occupy the top half of the draw alongside world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka. Sabalenka, a back-to-back Australian Open champion in 2023 and 2024 and the 2025 runner-up to Madison Keys, began the year by defending her Brisbane International title. She will face French wild card Tiantsoa Sarah Rakotomanga Rajaonah in the first round and could meet Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in a potentially tricky second round rematch of their 2025 quarterfinal.
The bottom half contains a dense third quarter with three Americans vying for a spot in the semifinals. Defending champion Madison Keys, seeded ninth, is the projected fourth-round opponent of No. 6 seed Jessica Pegula. The winner of that section would be projected to face No. 4 seed Amanda Anisimova.
Anisimova is playing her first Australian Open since reaching back-to-back major finals at Wimbledon and the US Open. She opens against Switzerland’s Simona Wiltert, with 2020 champion Sofia Kenin a possible third-round opponent.
The draw combines familiar rivalries, comeback narratives and tightly grouped seeded players, offering multiple intriguing matchups in early rounds and a busy path for any player seeking the title.
ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Who’s Wearing What: Sponsor and Apparel Moves Ahead of the Australian Open
A rundown of the apparel and sponsorship moves shaping the season as players arrive for the Open…
The start of the 2026 season has brought a wave of sponsorship shifts as players prepare for the Australian Open. Longtime partnerships have ended, new 360 deals are arriving and several brands are expanding their presence on tour.
Asics shared a tribute post marking the departure of world No. 6 Alex de Minaur, bringing an end to an 11-year partnership. Since then, the Aussie has been teasing a big reveal, wearing blank, logo-less shirts, shorts and hats during practice sessions and at the United Cup. While nothing has been officially confirmed, De Minaur is expected to join Wilson in a new 360 deal, according to Jessica Schiffer of Hard Court . He already competes with the Wilson Ultra racquet and could soon be outfitted head to toe in Wilson apparel and footwear.
Karen Khachanov, Anastasia Potapova and Jiri Lehecka have been wearing Wilson since the start of 2026. Jiri Lehecka, previously with Le Coq Sportif, and Karen Khachanov, who had been with Nike since 2019, have both expanded existing racquet deals into full 360 partnerships. Anastasia Potapova, another former Nike pro, is also set to join Wilson’s growing WTA roster, which includes Marta Kostyuk, Victoria Mboko and Peyton Stearns.
German rising star Eva Lys unveiled Lacoste as her new apparel sponsor and directed her own launch campaign. Nick Kyrgios, another longtime Nike wearer, has been sporting kits from Stack Athletics since November. He is now Stack’s owner and creative director and is helping shape design direction, capsule storytelling and athlete collaborations. “Stack represents everything I stand for—making noise and pushing boundaries… If it doesn’t make people feel something, I’m not interested,” said Nick Kyrgios. “Stack represents everything I stand for—making noise and pushing boundaries,” Kyrgios said. “We’re building a brand with real personality. If it doesn’t make people feel something, I’m not interested.”
Donna Vekic, who helped launch Donna Sport by Uomo in 2023, has signed with Ellesse. Alejandro Tabilo has parted ways with Lotto and is set to wear Ellesse this season; he will also take the court in On shoes, the Swiss brand said on social media.
FP Movement has teased a potential signing of world No. 15 Emma Navarro, previously with Fila; the move would make Navarro the highest-ranked player the brand has signed and reportedly includes a one-year Asics shoe agreement. “It’s really exciting to work with a brand that allows me to add my personal touch,” Navarro told Vogue Business. “I’ll be wearing outfits that I worked on designing—outfits that I’m really excited to wear and feel like myself in—and I’m excited for people to get a better sense of my style and personality through that.”
Fila has seen a series of recent departures, including Barbora Krejcikova, Reilly Opelka and Navarro, even as it added Jaqueline Cristian after her breakout 2025 season. Lois Boisson wore Asics during her Cinderella run to the Roland Garros semifinals as a wildcard ranked world No. 361.
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