500 Charleston Open
Charleston Open Raises WTA 500 Purse to $2.5 Million as Pegula and Anisimova Lead Field
Charleston Open offers $2.5 million, a WTA 500 firstly; Pegula defends as Anisimova and Jovic enter.
The Credit One Charleston Open’s 25th Daniel Island edition enters the clay season with an unprecedented purse for this level on the WTA tour. Tournament organizers announced a total prize fund of $2.5 million, matching the amount awarded at ATP 500 events. The singles champion will collect $354,345, up from $164,000 in 2025.
“It’s a commitment not just to today’s players, but to the future of the sport,” according to the tournament website. The increase signals a clear investment in the event and in the athletes who will compete on Charleston’s green clay.
Top seed and defending champion Jessica Pegula arrives after a strong start to 2026. Pegula reached her first Australian Open semifinal and added a fourth WTA 1000 trophy in Dubai. Now back inside the Top 5, she also pushed through solid results in the Sunshine Swing, losing two close quarterfinal matches to AO champion Elena Rybakina at the BNP Paribas Open and Miami Open. Jessica Pegula can’t run into Elena Rybakina in Charleston, but the defending champion will still face plenty of top competition.
World No. 6 Amanda Anisimova is second among the top seeds and announced a coaching change on Friday. Anisimova aims to build on a breakthrough 2025 season in which she reached back-to-back Grand Slam finals at Wimbledon and the US Open. The 24-year-old completed a box set of Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances with a run at the 2026 Australian Open and reached the semifinals in Dubai, where she pushed Pegula to three sets.
A youthful contingent also figures to make noise. Eighteen-year-old Iva Jovic will make her Charleston debut after a breakthrough Australian Open, where as the No. 29 seed she stunned world No. 8 Jasmine Paolini en route to the quarterfinals. That run helped Jovic make her Top 20 debut on the WTA rankings.
With a historic purse and a competitive draw, the Charleston Open stands as a notable stop as players transition to clay for the season ahead.
500 Analytics & Stats Player News
Sabalenka Marks 80 Weeks At WTA No. 1 As Rankings Shift After Merida and Austin
Sabalenka begins her 80th week at WTA No. 1; rankings shift after Merida, Austin and ATP events now.
Aryna Sabalenka begins her 80th career week as the WTA No. 1, a milestone that places the four-time major champion among an elite group in the sport’s ranking history. She is the 11th player to reach 80 weeks at the top since the WTA rankings began in 1975, and only the sixth woman to do so this century alongside Martina Hingis, Serena Williams, Justine Henin, Ashleigh Barty and Iga Swiatek.
Sabalenka’s advantage at the summit has in fact inched higher over the last month despite not competing since the Australian Open. A month ago she led Iga Swiatek by 3,012 points (10,990 to 7,978); the current gap reads 3,087 points (10,675 to 7,588). She will keep the No. 1 position through Indian Wells, where she is defending 650 points from a runner-up finish last year. The top ranking could be contested in Miami, where she defends 1,000 points as the reigning champion.
Last week’s WTA events produced significant upward movement in the rankings. Cristina Bucsa, who captured her first WTA title in Merida, climbed from No. 63 to No. 31 and eclipsed her prior career high of No. 50. Runner-up Magdalena Frech moved from No. 57 to No. 36. Victoria Jimenez Kasintseva entered the Top 100 for the first time, advancing from No. 122 to No. 97 after reaching the quarterfinals in Merida as a qualifier.
In Austin, Peyton Stearns claimed her second WTA title and rose from No. 62 to No. 48. Taylor Townsend, the finalist at the WTA 250 event and making her first WTA semifinal and final of her career, returned to the Top 100 for the first time since last summer, moving from No. 119 to No. 87.
On the ATP side, Flavio Cobolli recorded a notable rise to No. 15 after winning the ATP 500 in Acapulco, surpassing his previous best of No. 17. Jakub Mensik continued his steady climb: he reached No. 13 after a Doha semifinal and moved to No. 12 following a Dubai quarterfinal.
1000 500 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships
Janice Tjen Enters WTA Top 40, First Indonesian Woman at That Level Since 1998
Janice Tjen rises into the WTA Top 40, becoming the highest-ranked Indonesian woman since 1998. Now.
Janice Tjen climbed into the WTA Top 40 on Monday, moving from No. 46 to No. 36 after reaching the round of 16 at the Dubai WTA 1000 event. The 23-year-old is the first Indonesian woman to sit inside the Top 40 since Yayuk Basuki was No. 35 during the two weeks of the 1998 US Open, the weeks of August 31 and September 7.
Three weeks earlier Tjen had marked her Top 50 debut, rising from No. 59 to No. 47 after a second-round showing at the Australian Open. Her progression this season has been steep. On this day a year ago, Tjen was ranked No. 391. She only just started playing at tour-level at the end of last summer.
Tjen made her first tour-level main draw at the US Open, where she reached the second round. In the weeks that followed she reached her first WTA final in Sao Paulo and then captured her first WTA title in Chennai. Last week she reached the round of 16 at a WTA 1000 event in Dubai for the first time in her career, eventually falling to Amanda Anisimova.
Those results have included wins over established opponents. She already has four career victories against Top 30 players: No. 25 Veronika Kudermetova at last year’s US Open; No. 23 Leylah Fernandez at the Australian Open; a No. 29-ranked Maya Joint in Abu Dhabi; and the No. 29-ranked Fernandez again in Dubai. If those wins are a guide, further climbs up the rankings may follow.
Tjen is back in competition this week at the WTA 500 event in Merida, where she is the No. 6 seed. She will meet former Top 40 player Camila Osorio in a first-time meeting in the first round.
500 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships Player News
Anisimova, moved by Andreeva’s tears after marathon Dubai quarterfinal
Anisimova beat Andreeva 2-6, 7-5, 7-6(4) in Dubai; she was visibly moved by her opponent’s tears. .
Amanda Anisimova advanced to the Dubai semifinal after a gripping quarterfinal against defending champion Mirra Andreeva, but victory was marked by empathy as much as elation. Andreeva rallied from 5-3 down in the third to force a winner-take-all tiebreak, only for her final backhand to go long and hand Anisimova a 2-6, 7-5, 7-6(4) triumph.
The match finished with Andreeva doubled over and teary-eyed after hugging Anisimova on court. The American, who has been open about her own mental health struggles, said on court: “It was such a tough battle, and I thought we played incredible tennis,” and then added, “Seeing Mirra down like that, it’s understandable. We both fought so hard today, and it made me emotional seeing her like that. She was playing so well, she’s the defending champion and I feel like we both won on the court today. These type of matches, it’s always tough that someone has to lose at the end of the day.”
In her press conference Anisimova returned to the point, saying Andreeva is doing “all the right things” even after a dramatic loss and two earlier-than-expected exits following a title at the Adelaide International.
Q. You seemed really touched by when she broke down at the end. Can you talk about that moment.
AMANDA ANISIMOVA: Yeah, made me like really emotional because I feel like we both sort of felt that way throughout the match probably because it was such a roller coaster, so up and down. Despite whichever way it was going, I feel like we were both fighting with everything we had and trying our best.
Yeah, it’s not easy to see someone that gives their all and then to react like that. It made me really sad for her. In my mind, I was just, like, thinking if she keeps playing like this, there’s a title around the corner for her. Obviously she’s going to have a great year. She seems to be doing all the right things. Yeah, not easy to be a defending champion. But I feel like she did an amazing job.
Yeah, that’s kind of why I felt like that. I mean, there will be many more matches for us to come, I’m sure.
For a spot in the final, Anisimova will face No. 4 seed Jessica Pegula, who topped No. 12 seed and defending finalist Clara Tauson in another three-set quarterfinal. Anisimova sought perspective after an earlier loss to Pegula in Australia: “I feel like that feels like such a long time ago for me because every week we have a lot going on. There’s so many practices, so many matches,” she said. “I’m feeling, like, a lot better, like I said, every single day here. I feel like I’ve been going into the right direction. I’m really happy with the things I’m working on and the progress I’ve been making since I finished Australia. I’m excited at the end of the day. It’s another challenge for me, another opportunity for me to learn more about myself and my game and see how things have changed since that match that I played at Australia.”
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