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Elli Mandlik’s wild-card win secures Australian Open return for 2026

Elli Mandlik earned a main-draw Australian Open wild card after winning the USTA challenge.

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Elizabeth “Elli” Mandlik has clinched a main-draw spot at the Australian Open after winning the USTA Australian Open Wild Card Challenge, earning a return to Melbourne for the first time in two years. The 24-year-old, a former world No. 97, rose 80 places in the rankings after changing coaches in September and parlayed that momentum into a W100 title in Edmond, Oklahoma.

Mandlik edged countrywoman Claire Liu over a five-week series of tournaments this fall to secure the guaranteed berth. She made her Australian Open debut as a lucky loser in 2023 and had entered the fall aiming only to qualify, her ranking having slipped to No. 270 at the start of October.

“It’s a really great opportunity for all the Americans to battle with each other and fight for that wild card,” she said, reflecting on the value of the competition. The deciding stretch included both players at a WTA 125K event in Austin, Texas; had Liu advanced one round farther, the pair would have met with the wild card on the line.

Mandlik credited the coaching switch to Emiliano Redondi and Juan Pablo Guzman for the quick improvement and described the relief of securing a main-draw spot. “By the time I realized I was also in the running for the main-draw wild card, I had already secured my spot in qualies, and that was such a weight lifted off my back,” she said.

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Holding a direct main-draw entry lengthens Mandlik’s pre-season and removes the extra pressure of qualifying. “When you have to play qualies, it’s more difficult because you can’t play that extra warm-up. You have to cut your pre-season shorter,” she said. The guaranteed entry also gives her more time to prepare for the first Grand Slam of 2026.

Family ties to Melbourne run deep for Mandlik. Her mother, Hana Mandlikova, won the Australian Open twice, and her grandfather, Vilem, reached the semifinals of the 200 metres at the 1956 Summer Olympic Games in Melbourne. “I feel very blessed to be playing a sport she played already. She knows the ins and outs and she’s been able to prepare me for all the little crevices I might get into. Obviously, I’ve had to go through a lot on my own, but she knows how it feels when different things have happened to me, so it allows me to feel a little bit ahead of the game sometimes. She gives me so much support and knowledge.”

Mandlik plans to arrive in Australia early to maximize preparation. Her brother and his fiancée will join the trip, and the family will spend the off-season together at home before she heads to Melbourne.

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Carson Branstine criticizes inequality in tennis, calling the situation “the fact I’m not exaggerating is diabolical”

Branstine used TikTok to call out scheduling, medical and anti-doping inequalities in tennis season

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Carson Branstine has used social media to lay out a blunt critique of life for many professional players, even while sidelined by injury. The 25-year-old Canadian filmed a TikTok titled “POV: you play professional tennis” that sketches the realities faced by lower-ranked competitors.

Branstine, whose career-high ranking is No. 172, frames the clip as a series of mock conversations with tennis officials that expose costs and compromises beneath the tour’s surface. In the video she quips, “Merry Christmas! Your flight’s today. That’s your Christmas present,” and then adds, “But, like, you have to pay for it.” She follows with another exchange: “You can’t afford a coach?” and “That really sucks… I can’t help you.”

The most forceful section addresses perceived inconsistencies in anti-doping outcomes. “I mean, yeah she failed a drug test, but she’s No. 1 in the world,” Branstine says. “We need her to play…

“But, like, the other girl who is ranked No. 300 who (ate) contaminated meat? We’re just going to ban her for four years. We don’t need her.” She captioned the post, “the fact I’m not exaggerating is diabolical.” Branstine later clarified in the comments: “not referring to any specific players… it’s an example that has happened many times with different players.”

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The video’s examples echo public outcomes that drew scrutiny: Iga Swiatek accepted a one-month suspension in late 2024 after low levels of trimetazidine were traced to a contaminated supplement, while Tara Moore received a four-year ban in 2025 after a positive test she has argued came from contaminated meat.

Branstine’s post also highlights the financial and medical precarity players can face. She recounts the consequences of injury: “So sorry about your injury! You’re not going to make a single dollar for eight months,” and notes the difficulty of obtaining support: “You must be crazy for thinking we would cover your medical bills from the tournament we hosted you at!

“Yeah, we have insurance, but it’s the most expensive insurance ever, of course.”

Branstine broke through in 2025 while funding her career partly through modeling, is enrolled at Texas A&M and qualified for the Wimbledon main draw in 2025. She opened the 2026 season in Australia, winning a first-round qualifying match at the Australian Open before retiring injured against Daria Snigur with a shoulder issue and has not returned to competition since.

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Episode 17: Placing Arthur Fils’ Forehand and a Wide‑Ranging Chat with Marcos Baghdatis

The Big T: ranking Arthur Fils’ forehand, Marcos Baghdatis interview and Roland Garros expectations.

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Episode 17 of The Big T focuses on two clear threads: the debate over Arthur Fils’ forehand and a reflective interview with Marcos Baghdatis. The show opened a conversation that began with a simple question posed on social media: “Is @ArthurFils FH the best in the men’s tennis game right now? @_markpetchey” Brad Gilbert replied that Fils’ “fearhand” is massive, while still favoring Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz. That exchange led to a co-host debate with Coco Vandeweghe (48:00) about the top forehands on tour. “I think it’s definitely top three,” said Vandeweghe. Gilbert placed Joao Fonseca in his top three and slotted Fils fourth. Both offered honorable mentions: Coco went with Jakub Mensik; BG with Jiri Lehecka. As Vandeweghe noted, “The players from Czechia have such weight of shot, because they play on fast courts and need to get that depth really quickly,” says Vandeweghe, “and it’s a flatter ball that pushes you further and further back.”

The episode also revisited Marcos Baghdatis’ peak years and his transition to developing young players. Twenty years ago at the Australian Open Baghdatis reached the final during an era dominated by Roger Federer. The show reminded listeners that “Federer won all his Slam finals in four sets, over Rafael Nadal (Wimbledon), Andy Roddick (US Open) and…Marcos Baghdatis (Australian Open).” Baghdatis reflected on his own ambitions: “I wanted to be No. 1 in the world. I wanted to push myself more … I was not patient enough. Marcos Baghdatis” (15:30). His career-high reached No. 8; he finished 2006 ranked 12th. The interview covered career records against the era’s top players (1-7 vs Federer, 1-9 vs Nadal, 0-8 vs Novak Djokovic) and his current role as tournament director of the IMG Future Stars Tournament, helping prepare the next generation.

Looking ahead to Roland Garros, the hosts discussed the vacancy created by Alcaraz being sidelined through Madrid and potentially Roland Garros. Gilbert placed Djokovic first despite limited clay this season: “First, at 39 years young, I would still go—with no playing in him [on clay this season]—Djoker,” says Gilbert. He listed Alexander Zverev second and Fils third, while Coco offered Ben Shelton as an honorable mention following his Munich win. To share your top three forehands for men’s and women’s tennis, email thebigt@tennischannel.com [thebigt@tennischannel.com], or call 844-678-BIGT. New episodes drop every Wednesday.

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500 Australian Open Finals

Rybakina secures second Stuttgart title with straight-set win over Muchova

Rybakina claimed her second Stuttgart crown, beating Muchova 7-5, 6-1 to start clay season for Rome

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Elena Rybakina captured her second Porsche Tennis Grand Prix trophy, defeating Karolina Muchova 7-5, 6-1 in a one hour and 18 minute final on Center Court. The top seed overcame a spirited comeback in the first set from the No. 7 seed before asserting control in the second.

Rybakina, the reigning 2026 Australian Open champion, is set to return to No. 1 in the Race to the WTA Finals standings after the victory. Since her major triumph in Melbourne, the 26-year-old produced steady results but had not claimed another title, finishing runner-up to the world No. 1 at the BNP Paribas Open and falling in the Miami Open semifinals.

With Aryna Sabalenka absent from the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix because of injury, Rybakina targeted a strong start to her clay-court season and lost just one set across four matches to complete that mission. She advanced through a third-set tiebreaker against Leylah Fernandez in the quarterfinals, handled No. 6 seed Mirra Andreeva after Andreeva had stunned No. 3 seed Iga Swiatek, and then carried momentum into the final.

Against Muchova, Rybakina raced to a 5-2 lead early in the opening set before Muchova fought back to level at 5-5 and saved two set points as she tried to force a tiebreak. Rybakina converted her third set point to close out the first set and then dominated the second, building a 5-0 advantage. Muchova avoided a bagel with a game for 5-1, but Rybakina served out the match to love.

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Muchova arrived in Stuttgart off a breakthrough season that included her first WTA 1000 title at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open. She had also snapped losing streaks against Coco Gauff and Elina Svitolina en route to the final, and she was the last woman to beat Rybakina before Rybakina went on to win the Australian Open. On Sunday, however, Rybakina’s form proved decisive as she lifted her second Porsche in three years.

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