Grand Slam US Open WTA
Naomi Osaka Rediscovers Her Passion, Advances to US Open Semifinals
Osaka has rediscovered her love for tennis and returned to Grand Slam semifinals after a long hiatus.
Naomi Osaka has navigated a turbulent return to the top of the sport and now sits back in the semifinal mix at a Grand Slam. After four years away from the summit, time for mental recovery, childbirth and shifts in her off-court focus, she produced a decisive victory to reach the last four.
Osaka eliminated Karolina Muchova, the No. 11 seed, 6-4, 7-6 (3) in a one-hour and 45 minute match that showcased sharp shotmaking from both players. The 27-year-old, ranked No. 24, said afterward, “It was an incredibly difficult match, I’m just really grateful to be here.” She will face Amanda Anisimova in the second semifinal on Thursday night.
Reflecting on the emotional arc of her comeback, Osaka acknowledged how central tennis remains to her life. “It’s one thing to say (I quit), but I think to actually do it, to hang up my racquet permanently would be a very scary thing,” she said after her fourth-round upset of No. 3 seed Coco Gauff. “I’ve been playing this sport since I was 3. I tell people it’s like breathing air to me. I wouldn’t really know what to do.”
Her resurgence followed a fitful stretch that included an early exit at Roland Garros and limited success at Wimbledon. Washington D.C. in July marked a turning point. After a loss to Emma Raducanu, she convened her team and insisted, “I think I can beat anyone from the baseline still, even though I lost. We just have to figure out if I have to change my game plan, or if I just have to do something new and different.”
Osaka parted ways with Patrick Mouratoglou and brought Tomasz Wiktorowski into the fold. “He’s done a lot in my game in a very short amount of time that have been really simple fixes, but they’ve just also been kind of mind-blowing at the same time,” Osaka says of Witkorowski. She credited the coach with a more measured approach and a focus on fitness and execution.
The biggest realization has been personal. “I learned I loved tennis way more than I thought I did, and I learned that, you know, I actually really love challenges,” she said. “You know, it’s like a video game. You pick it up, and even if you lose a level, you kind of just restart and keep going until you eventually win. I think it’s a little tough at some times, but I wouldn’t trade it for the world.”
ATP Grand Slam Player News
Alcaraz and Sinner Headline 2026 Laureus Nominations; Sabalenka, Fonseca and Anisimova Also Recognized
Alcaraz and Sinner lead 2026 Laureus nominations; Sabalenka, Fonseca and Anisimova also honored now.
Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner top the list of tennis nominees for the 2026 Laureus World Sports Awards after contrasting but equally dominant 2025 campaigns. The ATP world No. 1 Alcaraz and world No. 2 Sinner are both in contention for the Laureus Sportsman of the Year award following seasons that produced multiple major titles and season-defining achievements.
Alcaraz captured Roland Garros and the US Open and clinched the year-end No. 1 ranking. Sinner lifted trophies at the Australian Open, Wimbledon and the ATP Finals in Turin. The winner will be announced April 20 at Madrid’s Cibeles Palace. The annual ceremony, which celebrates the world’s greatest athletes and recognizes “the inspirational power of sport and its ability to change lives,” takes place during the Mutua Madrid Open.
Other Sportsman of the Year nominees include Ousmane Dembele, Mondo Duplantis, Marc Marquez and Tadej Pogacar. Tennis has a storied history in the Laureus awards; the only previous tennis players to earn Sportsman of the Year honors are Roger Federer (2005–2008, 2018), Rafael Nadal (2011, 2021) and Novak Djokovic (2012–2015, 2016, 2019, 2024), a group often referred to as the sport’s “Big Three.” Men’s tennis players remain the most decorated in that category, with 12 total wins compared with Formula One and athletics, which have five apiece.
On the women’s side, WTA world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka leads the Sportswoman of the Year nominees after clinching her fourth Grand Slam title at the US Open in 2025 and finishing runner-up at the Australian Open, Roland Garros and the WTA Finals in Riyadh. She is nominated alongside Aitana Bonmati, Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, Katie Ledecky and Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone. Four former WTA world No. 1s have previously won the award: Jennifer Capriati (2002), Serena Williams (2003, 2010, 2016, 2018), Justine Henin (2008) and Naomi Osaka (2021). Williams is tied with Simone Biles for the most wins at four.
Younger and returning players were also acknowledged. Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca received a Breakthrough of the Year nomination after main-draw wins at all four Grand Slams, a first Top 10 victory over Andrey Rublev and titles in Buenos Aires (ATP 250) and Basel (ATP 500). Amanda Anisimova earned a Comeback of the Year nomination after reaching back-to-back Grand Slam finals at Wimbledon and the US Open, two years after announcing an indefinite mental health break from the sport.
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.
-
ATPAustralian OpenGrand Slam2 months agoAustralian Open announces record A$111.5 million prize pool for 2026
-
ATPUnited CupWTA2 months agoHurkacz edges Zverev in straight sets in United Cup return
-
ATPPlayer NewsWTA2 months agoVesnina rejects claim that podcast aired unapproved Kudermetova anecdote about Rune
