1000 BNP Paribas Open
Victoria Mboko’s Rapid Rise: From a Portugal ITF Title to a Top-10 Debut at Indian Wells
Victoria Mboko went from No. 188 and an ITF win in Portugal to a World No. 10 debut at Indian Wells.
Victoria Mboko’s trajectory over the past year was on full display at the BNP Paribas Open. Twelve months earlier she was ranked No. 188 and competing — and winning — a $75,000 ITF event in Portugal, where she took home $9,142. On Stadium 2 in Indian Wells she followed with a 6-4, 7-6(5) victory over Kimberly Birrell, her third win against the Australian in the last 12 months and the match that marked her official debut as a Top 10 player.
After the match, speaking to Steve Weismann, Mboko reflected on how different the scene feels now, beginning with the crowd. “I feel like … I had one fan and here I have a lot of, especially Canadian, fans,” the now-World No. 10 said. “I saw a lot of Canadian flags and people, I guess just locals, who were rooting for me, so that was a really heartwarming feeling. It just motivated me to keep going, and it was amazing.”
She also described the setting and the scale of the event. “The grounds are just beautiful,” she said. “I feel like I’m at a Grand Slam right now. They say [it’s] the ‘fifth Slam’ for a reason. … So far, what’s not to enjoy about it?”
Mboko put her progress in personal terms. “It’s crazy to see how far I’ve come,” she continued. “I would’ve never thought I’d be in this position today. I feel like I’m so thankful and grateful for everything that has been in front of me, and taking opportunities that will advance me further.
“I feel like I always just take things day by day. You never know, I surprise myself, and here we are.”
Her fellow Canadian Eugenie Bouchard said “the sky’s the limit” for the 19-year-old in her first trip to Tennis Paradise. Mboko arrives in the later rounds of a WTA 1000 aiming for a third career WTA 1000 final appearance since August, having reached a final on home soil last summer and then another at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open last month in Doha.
1000 Madrid Open Masters
Madrid Preview: Sabalenka’s clay return and three first-round story lines
Sabalenka begins Madrid title defense on clay; Swiatek and Osaka face testing early matches. Preview
After nearly a month away, Aryna Sabalenka returns to competition on a new surface and a new continent, stepping into Madrid as the world No. 1 and the tournament’s defending champion. In late March she beat No. 2 Elena Rybakina to win Indian Wells and No. 3 Coco Gauff to claim the Miami Open, results that underscored her ability to manage the pressures of big-stage finals.
The 27-year-old starts clay season in an unfamiliar role: an early favorite for Roland Garros and chasing a first title in Paris. For now, Madrid is a logical launch point. Sabalenka is a three-time champion at this event and the relatively quick conditions suit her attack-first game. Her opening opponent, Stearns, is not an automatic clearance. Sabalenka leads their head-to-head 2-0, but their first meeting at Indian Wells in 2024 was a marathon that required Sabalenka to save four match points to prevail 8-6 in a third-set tiebreaker. Their Madrid meeting a year ago finished 6-2, 6-4 in Sabalenka’s favor. Stearns arrives with momentum from a title in Austin and a semifinal run in Rome last year that demonstrated she can adapt to clay. Winner: Sabalenka
Iga Swiatek brings a strong Madrid record, 17-3 with a title and a runner-up showing, and remains widely regarded as this decade’s best women’s clay-courter. Her first-round opponent, Snigur, is a 24-year-old who has spent much of her career on the ITF Circuit and has never been ranked higher than 93; she is currently 98th. Snigur has compiled a 28-6 record this year and won a 125 in Oeiras in February. She advanced through two qualifying matches and a first-round win in Madrid, including a 15-13 third-set tiebreaker victory over Daria Kasatkina. Swiatek is working with a brand-new coach and has not yet found consistent rhythm on serve or ground strokes in 2026. If she is off, Snigur could make things interesting. Winner: Swiatek
The match between Osorio and Naomi Osaka continues a recent micro-rivalry that split at Indian Wells the last two years: Osorio won in straight sets in 2025; Osaka took a match in 2026 with a 6-1 decider. This will be their first meeting on clay. Osorio, a Colombian, has all three of her titles on clay in Bogota and posts a winning percentage roughly 25 points higher on clay than on hard courts. Osaka remains a long-term work in progress on this surface, but Madrid’s elevated, quicker clay can level the playing field and play to her strengths. Their meeting is a genuine test for both players.
1000 Madrid Open
Eala ends ‘ova’ streak with straight-sets Madrid win over Pavlyuchenkova
Alexandra Eala ended her run of losses to ‘ova’ surnames, beating Pavlyuchenkova 6-3, 6-3 in Madrid
Alexandra Eala ended an odd run of results on Wednesday, defeating Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-3, 6-3 in the first round at the Mutua Madrid Open. The 20-year-old broke Pavlyuchenkova four times to close out a composed victory and advance.
Eala reflected on the match afterward: “The intensity was really high throughout the whole match. One of the things that I really had to focus on was a good percentage of first serves. I know Anastasia is a big hitter, so I think that helped with my match today.” The win sent her through to the second round of this WTA 1000 for the third year running.
Beyond the immediate result, the victory ended an unusual trend followers had been tracking for the past year. The fan-generated “ova” stat dated back to exactly one year earlier when Eala beat Viktoria Tomova. When the Quezon City native fell at the Miami Open, X user @ichpruens published, “The OVA curse continues. Karolina Muchova effortlessly defeats Alex Eala.”
Social posts before Madrid illustrated the fixation. On Tuesday ahead of Eala taking the court, X account @alexealastan wrote, “Oh naur… Alex Eala will face (another ova 😭) Pavlyuchenkova at Madrid R1.” Pleaded @APalaiz before her match, “Please beat the OVA.” Those posts were among several that highlighted a run in which Eala had lost eight consecutive matches to opponents whose last names end in “ova.” That string also contributed to her winless record against Czech opponents rising to 0-12, a country-specific detail that some fans continue to note.
On the day, however, the headline belonged to Eala and a clean two-set win that moves her deeper into Madrid’s draw and halts the peculiar streak her supporters had been counting.
1000 Madrid Open
Rybakina trims Sabalenka’s lead with Stuttgart win; Madrid will shape the No. 1 fight
After Stuttgart, Rybakina cut the gap to Sabalenka, setting the stage for a tight Madrid run. ahead.
Elena Rybakina’s victory in Stuttgart has narrowed the gap to Aryna Sabalenka at the top of the WTA rankings and revived genuine discussion about the No. 1 race.
By winning Stuttgart last week, world No. 2 Rybakina shortened a deficit that had stood at 2,917 points (Sabalenka 11,025 to Rybakina 8,108) to 2,395 points (10,895 to 8,500). The change came both from Rybakina adding the Stuttgart title points and from Sabalenka losing points after skipping the event, having reached the final there last year.
That 2,395-point gap is the smallest anyone has reached against Sabalenka since the opening week of the 2026 season, when Sabalenka led then-No. 2 Iga Swiatek by 2,312 points (10,490 to 8,178).
Rybakina cannot overtake Sabalenka in Madrid, but the WTA 1000 event can substantially alter momentum. Sabalenka is defending 1,000 points from winning Madrid last year; Rybakina is defending only 65 points after a third-round exit a year ago. In the most extreme Madrid scenario—Sabalenka losing her opening match while Rybakina wins the title—the gap would fall to just 470 points, with Sabalenka dropping from 10,895 to 9,905 and Rybakina rising from 8,500 to 9,435.
That outcome is possible but unlikely, largely because Sabalenka has won Madrid three times, including three of the last five years, and she has not lost before the quarterfinals of any event since last February, nor before the final of any event since last October.
Beyond Madrid the picture becomes more complex. Over the rest of last year’s clay season Sabalenka earned 1,515 points (215 for a Rome quarterfinal and 1,300 for a French Open final), while Rybakina collected 805 points (65 in Rome, 500 for winning Strasbourg and 240 for a fourth round at Roland Garros).
Madrid cannot immediately decide the No. 1 ranking, but the tournament will set the tone for how the battle for the top spot unfolds through the remainder of the clay-court season.
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