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Raducanu arrives at US Open with momentum and realistic expectations

Emma Raducanu enters the 2025 US Open with momentum; she missed a seed by one spot after withdrawals

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Emma Raducanu arrives at the 2025 US Open on the back of encouraging hard-court form, offering reason for cautious optimism. The Brit reached the third round at the WTA 1000 events in Cincinnati and Montreal and made the semi-finals at the 500 in Washington. In Cincinnati she fell to world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka in a tight three-set match, having also pushed the Belarusian hard in the third round of Wimbledon last month.

The 22-year-old missed out on a seeding position at the US Open by a single place following the withdrawals of Qinwen Zheng and Paula Badosa. Listed at world No 35, Raducanu is scheduled to face a qualifier in her opening match and could meet Lucia Bronzetti or another qualifier in round two. If she reaches the third round, the projected opponent is ninth seed and 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina.

Raducanu’s sole career title remains her remarkable run to the 2021 US Open crown, where she won 10 matches without dropping a set across qualifying and the main draw.

Before the draw Martina Navratilova offered a concise assessment: “Emma has a chance of going deep if she gets a good draw.” Annabel Croft, a former British No 1 and one-time world No 24, underlined Raducanu’s inherent quality and the importance of consistency. “She’s always got a good chance because she’s such a good player,” Croft said. “It’s about her doing well and maintaining a high level for a sustained level of time.

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“It will depend on the draw but there’s no question she’ll be in the mix. She’s done it before at the US Open before and she’s back in what is probably her favourite tournament I would think, so that counts for a lot.” Former Wimbledon champion and world No 7 Marion Bartoli added: “It depends on the draw but she has a decent chance to get through to the second week.” Naomi Cavaday, a former British pro, concluded: “She has a great chance to go deep this year. We will have to see how the draw falls as she needs to avoid Sabalenka and [Iga] Swiatek early on.”

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Gauff exits US Open with optimism after radical serve overhaul

Gauff leaves the US Open hopeful after a service overhaul, eyeing steady improvement ahead. 2025 now

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Coco Gauff left the 2025 US Open with mixed emotions: bruised after a loss to Naomi Osaka but upbeat about the work she has started on her serve. Observers had noted a sombre demeanour during parts of her run in New York, yet Gauff framed the week as part of a broader process.

The changes began after a difficult 2024 North American hard-court swing. She parted ways with Brad Gilbert and joined Matt Daly last September, a partnership that produced immediate results: she won the China Open and finished the year with the season-ending WTA Finals trophy. Her form carried into 2025 with a second major at Roland Garros and runner-up finishes at the Madrid Open and Italian Open, but she acknowledged a persistent weakness in her serve.

When Gavin MacMillan became available after the Cincinnati Open, Gauff made another significant switch. She and MacMillan focused on biomechanics and decided to change her entire service motion. That overhaul left the build-up to the US Open difficult; she described shoulder pain after practice but accepted the short-term discomfort.

A testing three-set win over Ajla Tomljanovic opened her campaign. There were tears during and after a two-set victory over Donna Vekic, and she dropped only four games against Magdalena Fręch in the third round before the defeat to Osaka. After the Fręch match she admitted she “broke down.”

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She detailed the emotional swing: “I think that trying to be more positive after the match, I was really disappointed,” she admitted. “Kind of broke down to my team and then hearing their perspectives and everything, it definitely is a lot of positive things.

“If I think if I kept the way I was going in Cincinnati to here, I would have been out the first round. And so I think that where my serve started from the start of the tournament to today was a big improvement. And I feel like now I just have to get everything to work together. But, yeah, I knew going in it was going to be a tough tournament for me.”

Statistically there are signs of progress: she served 320 double faults before the US Open, added 23 in her first three matches in New York and five more against Osaka. “My goal going into the tournament this year was not to lose the same way that I lost last year. And I don’t remember how many doubles I hit in my match against Emma, but it was definitely in the double digits, so I didn’t do that today,” she said.

At 21 she already owns 10 WTA Tour singles titles, including two Grand Slams, a WTA Finals trophy and two WTA 1000 titles, and she has peaked at No 2. With older rivals such as Aryna Sabalenka, 27, and Iga Swiatek, 24, she sees room to grow: “So I think for me, it just gets me excited to realise if I have, like, four more years of just working as hard as I am right now and actually doing the right things, like where my game could be.”

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Venus Williams and Leylah Fernandez Advance to US Open Doubles Semifinals

Venus Williams and Leylah Fernandez upset 12th seeds to reach the US Open women’s doubles semi-final.

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Venus Williams and Leylah Fernandez continued an unexpected doubles run at the 2025 US Open, defeating the 12th seeds to reach the semi-final at Flushing Meadows.

The experienced Williams, who entered the tournament after competing in mixed doubles and singles, accepted a wildcard to partner the Canadian youngster. The pairing opened with an upset of sixth seeds Ellen Perez and Lyudmyla Kichenok and followed with victories over Ulrikke Eikeri and Eri Hozumi before the quarter-final win.

Williams and Fernandez beat 12th seeds Ekaterina Alexandrova and Zhang Shuai 6-3, 6-4 to move into the last four, setting up a semi-final against top seeds Taylor Townsend and Katerina Siniakova.

“Our energy really matched each other in terms of determination, in terms of not giving up, in terms of really still just focused and dialled in on every single thing.

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“That felt amazing. I never really had played with a partner, outside of Serena obviously, who had that kind of mentality. So, it was really fun and I think we can just hopefully continue to get better.”

Venus reflected on family support after the win: “She [Serena] gave me a pep talk today. She gets so nervous watching, and she’s got her kids yelling my name,” the 45-year-old said after the match.

“She’s so happy for Leylah and I, she’s giving us advice. We just need her in the box. My message is, Serena, you need to show up.”

Fernandez described the experience as a learning opportunity. “Well, I’m growing a lot, actually. I feel like my team members and even my family says, like, ‘wow, you are growing just by playing with Venus, learning from her’,” she said.

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“I mean, you know, you may not say much on the bench, but whatever you say, I’m like kind of a sponge, and she’s kind of soaking everything in. And, you know, it’s a huge opportunity for me to just learn from such a great champion, a legend like you.”

Williams returned to doubles earlier this season at the Citi DC Open with Hailey Baptiste. That run, and the US Open quarter-final showing, has lifted her doubles ranking from No 582 into the Live Rankings at No 139 after a 430-point gain and a 443-place rise. Fernandez, who began the event at No 73, is projected to climb 21 places following the run.

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Sinner dominates Bublik at US Open as rival compares him to an AI

Sinner routed Bublik 6-1, 6-1, 6-1 at the US Open; Bublik likened him to an AI-generated player. Now

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Alexander Bublik’s flair for memorable lines framed the build-up to his latest meeting with Jannik Sinner and provided a lighter moment after a one-sided encounter in New York. Their fourth match of the season ended in emphatic fashion as Sinner prevailed 6-1, 6-1, 6-1.

The pair’s season-long mini-rivalry has swung both ways. At Roland Garros in June Sinner recorded a clinical 6-1, 7-5, 6-0 victory and Bublik later posted on social media: “I almost got him guys.” On grass in Halle the Kazakh reversed the result, winning 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 and quipping after the match: “I got him, guys!”

Before their Arthur Ashe Stadium clash, Bublik was asked what makes Sinner tough to face. “Everything. He is like an AI-generated player, but we all try to find a way to get closer to him, to beat him. I was lucky once and let’s see how it goes today.”

On court, Sinner answered decisively. The match lasted under 90 minutes, leaving little for the crowd to dissect. Bublik had reached the fourth round after a five-set upset over 14th seed Tommy Paul, but he struggled to find rhythm against the world No 1. During the post-match handshake Bublik smiled and said to Sinner: “That’s so good. I’m not bad, but you’re the GOAT.”

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Sinner reflected on familiarity and form. “We know each other very well. We had some tough battles, especially this year, so we know each other a little bit better now how we play,” he said. “He just said congrats and wished me all the best. He had a very tough match the last match playing five sets, finishing very late.

“Today he didn’t serve as good as he usually serves, so I broke him very early in every set, which then gave me the confidence to serve a little bit better.”

Sinner’s next opponent is Lorenzo Musetti, who dismissed Jaume Munar 6-3, 6-0, 6-1. The reigning champion leads their head-to-head 2-0, with wins in 2021 and 2023. “It’s great to see. Italian tennis is in great form now. We have so many players, so many different game styles,” Sinner said. “Lorenzo is maybe one of the biggest talents we have in our sport, so I’m looking forward for this one. From an Italian point of view it’s great to have for sure one Italian player in the semis.”

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