Grand Slam US Open WTA
Eala rallies from 1-5 to stun Tauson in tense US Open opener
Eala rallied from 1-5 in the third, outlasting Clara Tauson in a tense US Open opener. Fans erupted.
Alexandra Eala leaned on prayer, crowd energy and flashes of stunning shotmaking to survive a roller‑coaster opening match at the US Open, outlasting No. 14 seed Clara Tauson in a two‑hour, 36‑minute encounter decided in a match tiebreak.
From the first set the 20-year-old from the Philippines produced the kind of flat, early-struck winners that forced Tauson back and animated a vocal Filipino contingent in the Grandstand. The attack recalled the form that carried her to the girls’ title on these courts in 2022, a win over Iga Swiatek in Miami in April, and the Eastbourne final in June.
Eala also acknowledged a quirky on-court ritual when nerves crept in. “If I won the point with Our Father, I’d say Our Father,” she said to Jon Wertheim. “If I won the point with Hail Mary, I’d say Hail Mary.
“If I lost the point, I had to switch to a different prayer.”
The match was a study in contrasts. After taking the opener, Eala lost the second 6-2 and found herself trailing 1-5 in the third as a less precise version of her game resurfaced — missed groundstrokes, a sluggish second delivery and difficulty with drop shots. Facing the brink, she turned outward.
She raised a fist after holding at 1-5 and drew the fans back in. “It’s hard not to get their energy,” the 20-year-old said of her US Open fan army. “Definitely hard to see the positives when, you know, you’re down 5-1, but that’s what I tried to do,” Eala said. “I tried to see the positives, find solutions. And obviously, you know, with all these people backing me up, it’s hard not to stay in the moment and get their energy.”
Tauson, shaken by the atmosphere at points, twice saw match points erased before the pair reached 11-11 in the tiebreak. At that juncture Eala produced a backhand winner and finished with a full-cut forehand to clinch the victory. She collapsed to the court as the crowd erupted.
The win marked the first time in the Open Era that a player from the Philippines had won a match at a major. “To be Filipino is something I take so much pride in,” Eala said. “I don’t have a home tournament, so to be able to have this community here at the US Open, I’m so grateful that they made me feel like I’m home.” She added, “I’ve never seen any other nationality do this,” and later, “I’m super over the moon with what I was able to do today,” she said later. “I think everything in general just made the atmosphere so, so exciting, but at the same time, so tense.”
Australian Open Grand Slam Player News
Naomi Osaka on legacy, motherhood and the aims she still has for her career
Osaka reflects on legacy, motherhood, fashion and tennis, and hopes to make the sport more inclusive
Naomi Osaka used a recent Hypebeast digital cover to reflect on the arc of her career and the priorities that have shifted since becoming a parent. The four-time Grand Slam singles champion discussed fashion, off-court interests and the ways tennis has changed since she first arrived on tour, but much of the feature turned to how she hopes to be remembered.
Osaka, who acknowledged a “love-hate relationship” with the sport, said the birth of her daughter, Shai, in 2023 reframed what success means to her. “When I was young, success meant winning every match,” she says. “Now it’s just being healthy, being able to play matches, seeing my daughter smile.”
The former world No. 1 described a broader aspiration: to leave the game more welcoming for those who feel different. “I would hope my legacy is that I’m someone who made it easier for the generation after,” she adds. “And also someone that made it easy for the people that are different or unique.
“For me, with my background being Japanese and Haitian and American, I’ve just always been considered different. And growing up, playing with the Japanese flag, but not looking fully Japanese, it just made me aware of being a little different from everyone else. I was always kind of OK with it and I realized that for some people, it’s tough to accept that.
“I realized there are always a few black sheep in the bunch and just hope that they know that it’s cool to be different and unique. Those are things that make you, you and it’s something that should be embraced rather than something that should be shamed.”
Osaka also addressed present ambitions. She told the magazine that it “suck[ed]” she got injured during this year’s Australian Open, a major she has won twice, and made clear she hopes to capture at least one more Grand Slam before stepping away. “[T]hat would be a very big goal I’d love to set for myself, which I think is possible,” she says, while leaving open the possibility of future involvement in the sport under selective terms.
ATP Australian Open Grand Slam
Study, Team, Tour: Michael Zheng’s Year Between Columbia and the ATP
Columbia senior Michael Zheng balances studies and an emerging ATP career after Australian Open win.
Hi, my name is Michael Zheng.
Michael Zheng is a Columbia University senior and an ATP Tour rookie ranked 149th. Two months into 2026 he has already travelled to New Caledonia, Melbourne, Charlottesville, Chapel Hill, Ann Arbor, Dallas and Princeton, and marked his 22nd birthday along the way. This spring his objectives are straightforward: earn his degree, help Columbia back into the NCAAs final eight, and launch his professional career full time.
Zheng’s family story is part of that trajectory. His parents, Joe and Mei, emigrated from Hubei, China, to the U.S. in the early 2000s. He was born in Chesapeake, Va., in 2004, spent three months back in China with his aunt, then moved to Montville, N.J., around age two. Both parents work in IT. His father, a self-taught player who picked up tennis in his mid-20s, named him for Michael Chang and Michael Jordan and pushed the tennis dream; Zheng remembers the milestone of finally beating his father at 13.
On court, Zheng combined a successful junior career, including a run to the Wimbledon boys’ final in 2022, with a decision to attend Columbia. He chose the Ivy League school in part because of coach Howie Endelman’s record of improving players. Columbia’s program delivered team success, winning the Ivies twice, while Zheng won two NCAA singles titles. Zheng also became the first man from an Ivy League school to win a singles title in 102 years. He is a psychology major living in a dorm in New York City, balancing classes, papers and team practice with professional ambitions.
The opening months of 2026 raised the stakes. Zheng won three matches to qualify for the Australian Open and then his first main-draw match against Sebastian Korda. He suffered an adductor injury in Australia, and Korda beat him in Dallas. “So I was like, you know, why not? Why can’t I have a run here?” he said, reflecting on the confidence those wins brought. He also acknowledged areas to improve: serve and return, and adapting to the solitary grind of life on tour compared with the built-in support of college team tennis. Winning, he says, makes the travel easier and provides the motivation to stay in draws as long as possible.
Australian Open 2026 Grand Slam Qatar TotalEnergies Open
Rybakina says she ‘knew the road’ after second major as she arrives in Doha
After her Australian Open victory, Elena Rybakina said she ‘knew the road’ back to major success….
Elena Rybakina arrived in Doha carrying the momentum of a second major title and a clear sense that the path to further success was familiar.
“I kind of knew the road,” Rybakina said at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open after her title run at the 2026 Australian Open. Her victory in Melbourne, achieved despite arriving with a cold, included wins over both No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and No. 2 Iga Swiatek and returned her to No. 3 in the WTA rankings.
The world No. 3 traced that confidence back to her first Grand Slam triumph at the 2022 Wimbledon Championships and the complicated aftermath of that win. Awarded no ranking points after the All England Club’s decision to ban Russian and Belarusian players, Rybakina noted the odd sense of not feeling fully recognised in the weeks that followed.
“I feel like actually I’m not the Wimbledon champion,” she said at the 2022 US Open. “I didn’t get this feeling to be No. 2 or actually achieve, because it’s still different treatment when you are Top 10 or Top 20. Even with the win of Wimbledon, it’s kind of different feeling.”
Reflecting on the two Slams, she added: “At Wimbledon, it was really not expected. I think I wasn’t really prepared that well,” and, of the Australian Open, “It was a lot of emotions, different ones, in Australia. I feel like it’s more of a job. I try to really prepare for each match differently. If I have time, we celebrate, but if we don’t, there’s a lot of tournaments ahead.”
Sitting atop the Race to the WTA Finals standings, Rybakina welcomed the security that comes with a major and a high ranking. “It’s a big advantage,” smiled Rybakina, who won the tournament last year after qualifying under the wire in the fall. The tour guarantees entry to major champions who finish the year inside the Top 20, effectively putting her on course for the season-ending championships in Riyadh.
Hopefully, this week can be as good as in Australia. But if not, we still have so many tournaments ahead… Elena Rybakina
A former finalist in Doha, she declined an extended break and emphasised process over pressure. “We’ll see how I’m going to feel here and how the matches will go,” said Rybakina, who is the No. 2 seed in Doha. “It’s good practice no matter what. We’ll still try to work on some things with the team. I don’t put too much pressure or expectations, that’s for sure. But I definitely want to do well and we’ll see how it’s going to go day by day.”
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