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1000 Qatar TotalEnergies Open

Rybakina encouraged by fight after Doha quarterfinal defeat to Victoria Mboko

Rybakina left Doha encouraged after a tough quarterfinal loss to Victoria Mboko, proud of the fight.

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Elena Rybakina reflected positively after a narrow quarterfinal loss at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open, her first tournament since claiming a second Grand Slam title at the Australian Open. The No. 2 seed fell to Victoria Mboko in a deciding set, 7-4, 4-6, 6-4, ending her run in the first WTA 1000 event of the season.

Rybakina had been in position to move in the WTA rankings after a quarterfinal exit by top seed Iga Swiatek earlier in the evening, but the Canadian teenager staged a comeback that leveled their head-to-head at two wins each. The week included a demanding three-set match against Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen in the previous round, which Rybakina said tested her endurance.

Q. Did you feel you had recovered from yesterday’s match? Because you had a tough one against Qinwen [Zheng].

ELENA RYBAKINA: “It was a tough match and I’m actually happy that I managed to give this fight. I hadn’t played such long matches in a long time. In Australia, we always had a day in between and I was playing all the matches in two sets except for the final. I think it was still a good tournament for me. I had to do some stuff outside of the court. I think it’s a good preparation, even for the other tournaments.”

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Despite the loss, Rybakina emphasized the positives from a hard-fought week and framed the Doha event as useful preparation for the months ahead. She also made clear her ambitions for the season remain high.

Q. If you could win another Grand Slam this year, would you rather win Wimbledon again or one of the other two?

ELENA RYBAKINA: “All of them! (laughs) There is nothing to choose. It doesn’t matter which Grand Slam. But that’s the goal.”

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1000 Australian Open Grand Slam

Rybakina Hits 100 Weeks in WTA Top 5, Riding Momentum from Late 2025 into 2026

Rybakina reaches 100 weeks in the WTA Top 5; third week at No. 2 and eyes clay season push now ahead

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Elena Rybakina reached a milestone this week: her 100th career week inside the WTA Top 5. It is also her third week at a career-high of No. 2.

Rybakina captured the second Grand Slam title of her career at the Australian Open earlier this year and lifted her ranking to No. 2 after a strong start to 2026. Her first entry into the Top 5 came on May 22nd, 2023, when she rose from No. 6 to No. 4 after winning the WTA 1000 event in Rome. That opening spell lasted 77 consecutive weeks before she dipped out on November 10th, 2024.

She returned to the Top 5 for two weeks from January 27th to February 9th, 2025, immediately following the Australian Open. A difficult portion of 2025 saw her struggle for consistency and even fall out of the Top 10. The season shifted after Wimbledon, however. Rybakina reached three straight semifinals in Washington D.C., Canada and Cincinnati, then closed 2025 on an 11-match winning streak that included winning the WTA Finals.

That unbeaten run in Riyadh carried her back into the Top 5, moving her from No. 6 to No. 5. This week marks her 21st consecutive week in the elite since that return, bringing her career total to 100 weeks.

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Rybakina has maintained much of that late-2025 form into early 2026. Her best results so far this season are the title in Melbourne and a run to the final at Indian Wells. At Indian Wells she held match point against Aryna Sabalenka before finishing runner-up to the world No. 1 in a third set tie-break, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (6). After Indian Wells, Rybakina rose to No. 2.

She remains 2,917 points behind Sabalenka in the rankings, 11,025 to 8,108. The upcoming clay-court season presents an opportunity for Rybakina to press for the top ranking.

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1000 Australian Open Grand Slam

Rybakina Marks 100th Week in WTA Top 5, Riding Momentum from Late 2025 into 2026

Rybakina reaches 100 weeks in the WTA Top 5 after late-2025 surge and early-2026 success. Trophy run

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Elena Rybakina reached a milestone this week: her 100th career week inside the WTA Top 5. It is also her third week at a career-high ranking of No. 2.

Rybakina earned a second Grand Slam title at the Australian Open earlier this year and moved to her new career-high following strong early-2026 form. Her first entry into the Top 5 came on May 22, 2023, when she rose from No. 6 to No. 4 after winning the WTA 1000 event in Rome. That initial run stretched to 77 consecutive weeks before she dipped out on November 10, 2024.

She returned to the elite for two weeks from January 27 to February 9, 2025, immediately after the Australian Open. A difficult stretch for much of 2025 saw Rybakina struggle for consistency and fall out of the Top 10, but her season turned after Wimbledon. She reached three straight semifinals in Washington D.C., Canada and Cincinnati, then closed 2025 on an 11-match winning streak that included the WTA Finals.

That undefeated run in Riyadh carried her back into the Top 5, moving her from No. 6 to No. 5. This week marks her 21st consecutive week in the Top 5 since that return, bringing her overall total to 100 weeks.

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Rybakina has extended much of that late-2025 momentum into 2026. The highlights so far this season are her title run in Melbourne and a run to the final at Indian Wells. At Indian Wells she held match point against Aryna Sabalenka before finishing runner-up to the world No. 1 in a third set tie-break, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (6). After Indian Wells, Rybakina rose to No. 2.

She remains behind Sabalenka in the rankings by 2,917 points, 11,025 to 8,108, but the coming clay-court season presents an opportunity for Rybakina to press for the top ranking.

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1000 Miami Open Miami Open WTA

Miami Final Underlines Coco Gauff’s Progress and Clay-Court Promise

After a shaky start, Gauff reached the Miami final and arrives on clay with renewed promise. Indeed.

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Coco Gauff left Miami with more affirmation than anguish despite losing the final to Aryna Sabalenka, 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 in two hours and 10 minutes. The 22-year-old, ranked No. 4, was the youngest American in the Miami final since Serena Williams more than two decades ago and the first player in the event to take a set off the top-ranked Belarussian.

Gauff arrived at the tournament after a modest start to the season, 11-5 with no finals, and she bucked advice from her support team to skip Miami after retiring at Indian Wells with shooting pains in her left arm. “I just wasn’t in the right mindset leaving Indian Wells,” she said after an early-round win. When asked why she stayed, she added: “You know, life happens. You just realize, you know, if I had the opportunity to play this tournament, I’d rather take it up. Because you don’t know what’s gonna happen. Tomorrow is not a promise. I just want to make sure I make decisions that I know I won’t regret in the future.”

The run to the final included four three-set victories and a one-sided semifinal over former Roland Garros runner-up Karolina Muchova. Gauff opened eyes with movement and relentlessness that Sabalenka acknowledged: “Oh, my God. Her movement is something else. Going into matches against her, I know that there is always going to be an extra ball. It’s all about stay focused and be ready for an extra ball to come back. [Her] movement is something else, you know. I wish I could move even like 70% from what she has, [that] would be enough for me.”

Technically there were loose edges. Gauff struggled with a shaky second serve and forehand return at times, and she committed seven double faults in the final. Analysts traced her serving troubles to a toss issue that is considered fixable. Still, Andrea Petkovic captured the essence of Gauff’s week: “Coco just did what she does so well. She just competes and competes and competes. No matter how well the opponent is playing, how much she is zoning. She just competes and waits for a chance. And she got her chance.”

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With clay next on the calendar, Gauff arrives as a defending champion on that surface and confident that parts of her game are clicking. “Earlier this year I felt that I was practicing well and just waiting for it to click. And I think it’s not obviously fully clicked, but I think it is clicking.” She also reflected on the week: “I felt a lot of joy this week. . . I felt a lot of gratitude.”

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