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Caroline Garcia expecting first child after retirement

Caroline Garcia and husband Borja Duran announced they are expecting their first child. Podcast duo!

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Less than a year after stepping away from professional tennis, former world No. 4 Caroline Garcia and her husband, Borja Duran, announced they are expecting their first child. The couple shared the news in a joint social-media post showing them walking along the beach at the Hotel Fairmont Mayakoba Riviera Maya in Mexico, wearing blue and holding sonogram photos. The images and caption made clear they wanted to celebrate the moment together.

Garcia, 32, married Duran last summer in Spain. The pair have also collaborated off court as producers of the “Tennis Insider Club” podcast, which debuted in 2024, and the new arrival will be the first family addition since they launched the show.

Reaction from peers in the WTA community was warm. The news was received positively by players including Paula Badosa, Barbora Krejcikova and Jasmine Paolini, along with former world No. 1 Garbiñe Muguruza, who just had a son, and Ons Jabeur, who will welcome a son next month. Those responses underscored Garcia’s standing among colleagues and the wider women’s tour.

The couple did not explicitly state the baby’s gender, though their coordinated blue outfits in the announcement photos prompted speculation. Beyond the public announcement, the post focused on family and the next chapter of life away from the weekly demands of tour travel.

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For Garcia, who reached a career-high ranking of world No. 4, this marks a significant personal milestone in the months after retirement. For listeners of their podcast, and for followers who have tracked her career, the pregnancy announcement is a reminder that many athletes reshape their priorities after leaving the tour. Garcia and Duran’s joint reveal blends personal joy with the same direct, collaborative approach they brought to their media project.

Analytics & Stats Grand Slam

28 Numbers for Aryna Sabalenka on Her 28th Birthday

Sabalenka turns 28: 28 statistics from No.1 weeks to Grand Slam titles and tie-break records. Today!

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Aryna Sabalenka turns 28 and this profile assembles a number for each year of her life drawn from the milestones listed below.

1 — The No. 1 ranking, which she will hold for an 89th and 90th career week during Rome over the next two weeks.

2 — Two year-end No. 1 finishes, in 2024 and 2025. She is one of only 13 players to finish No. 1 in back-to-back years in WTA history.

3 — One of three women this century to be No. 1 every week of a calendar year, joining Serena Williams and Ashleigh Barty after doing so in 2025.

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4 — Four Grand Slam titles, all on hard courts: two Australian Open trophies (2023, 2024) and two US Open crowns (2024, 2025).

5 — Five straight Top 5 year-end finishes from 2021 to 2025, the only woman to finish the last five years in a row in the Top 5.

6 — Six straight Top 10 year-end finishes when including her No. 10 in 2020; the only woman with six consecutive Top 10 year-end placings.

7 — Reached the last seven hard-court major finals in a row, a run beginning at the 2023 Australian Open; the last woman to do seven in a row on hard courts was Martina Hingis.

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8 — Won her first eight Grand Slam quarterfinal matches in a row, the second woman in the Open Era to do so after Chris Evert.

9 — Reached nine finals in 2025, the most on the women’s tour that year, and won a tour-leading four titles.

10 — Owns the 10th-longest streak at No. 1 in WTA history, secured this week with her 81st consecutive week at the top.

11 — The 11th-most career weeks at No. 1 with this week being her 89th overall; 11 WTA 1000 titles, including two already this year.

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12 — Surpassed 12,000 ranking points for the first time in her career last summer, reaching a career-high 12,420 after Wimbledon.

13 — Reached the quarterfinals or better at the last 13 majors she has played, a run dating to the 2022 US Open; 12 of those were semifinals or better.

14 — Reached 14 career Grand Slam semifinals and has won seven of her last eight Grand Slam semifinals.

15 — Earned more than $15 million in prize money in 2025 alone, $15,008,519, a single-season WTA record.

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16 — Three 15-match winning streaks in her career have each been snapped before 16; most recently she had six match points to break the run but did not.

17 — Reached the quarterfinals or better at her last 17 tournaments in a row, a streak beginning last February.

18 — Won 18 consecutive sets at the US Open at one point between her third-round match in 2024 and the 2025 semifinals; the only sets she lost in those two events were to Ekaterina Alexandrova and Jessica Pegula.

19 — Won 19 tie-breaks in a row during the 2025 season, the Open Era record for most consecutive tie-breaks won by a woman.

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20 — Won her last 20 Grand Slam tie-breaks in a row, the Open Era record for any player at Grand Slams, surpassing Novak Djokovic’s 19.

21 — Her last straight-set defeat at a major came 21 majors ago at the 2020 US Open to Victoria Azarenka, 6-1, 6-3.

22 — Posted a 22-3 overall tie-break record in 2025, the most tie-break wins by a woman in a single season in the Open Era.

23 — Broke into the Top 5 at age 23 after winning her first Madrid title in 2021, defeating Barty in the final.

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24 — Has 24 career titles, 21 on hard courts and three on the clay of Madrid (2021, 2023, 2025).

25 — Reached No. 1 for the first time at age 25 after her run to the 2023 US Open final; won 25 consecutive sets at the Australian Open from 2023 to 2025.

26 — Owns a 26-2 record this year; both losses were narrow, including a match where she led Elena Rybakina 3-0 in the third set of the Australian Open final and a match where she had six match points against Hailey Baptiste in Madrid.

27 — Spent her full 27th year ranked No. 1, all 365 days from May 5, 2025 to May 4, 2026.

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Analytics & Stats ATP Grand Slam

Carlos Alcaraz at 23: the numbers that define his early career

At 23, Alcaraz already has seven majors, eight Masters 1000s, a Career Grand Slam and 15 big titles.

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“Feliz cumpleaños, Carlitos!”

Carlos Alcaraz turns 23 with a résumé few players achieve over an entire career. The following numbers, drawn from his first 23 years, outline how quickly he has climbed the sport.

1. No. 1 — he first reached the top ranking as a 19-year-old in 2022, the first and still only teenager to do so since the rankings began in 1973.
2. Two year-end No. 1 finishes, in 2022 and 2025.
3. Three match points saved in the Roland Garros final last year; he recovered from 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth set to beat Jannik Sinner, 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (2), becoming the first man in the Open Era to save three match points to win a major final.
4. $64,997,598 in career prize money, the fourth-most in ATP history behind Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer.
5. Five — he won his first five Grand Slam finals in a row, second in the Open Era only to Federer.
6. A 6-2 career record against reigning world No. 1s (1-1 vs Djokovic at No. 1, 5-1 vs Sinner at No. 1).
7. Seven Grand Slam titles: Australian Open (2026), Roland Garros (2024, 2025), Wimbledon (2023, 2024) and US Open (2022, 2025). He is the youngest man to reach seven majors.
8. Eight Masters 1000 titles, the second-youngest man to reach that total after Nadal.
9. Nine ATP 500 titles and a 16-match winning streak at ATP 500 events, with Queen’s Club and Tokyo last year and Doha this year.
10. He ended Djokovic’s 10-year, 45-match winning streak on Centre Court by winning the 2023 Wimbledon final, 1-6, 7-6 (6), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4.
11. Eleven hard-court and 11 clay-court titles, plus four grass-court titles including two Wimbledons.
12. A 12-match winning streak in five-setters; he is 15-1 in five-set matches, the lone loss to Matteo Berrettini at the 2022 Australian Open.
13. Surpassed 13,000 ranking points for the first time after the Australian Open this year, reaching a career-high 13,650.
14. Titles in 14 countries: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Croatia, France, Italy, Japan, Monaco, Netherlands, Qatar, Spain, UK and USA.
15. Fifteen career big titles (seven majors, eight Masters 1000s); runner-up at the 2024 Olympics and the 2025 ATP Finals.
16. Made a winning ATP Tour debut at 16, beating Albert Ramos-Vinolas in Rio de Janeiro in 2020, 7-6 (2), 4-6, 7-6 (2).
17. Seventeen Top-10 wins in 2025 (17-4 vs Top 10 that year).
18. Broke into the Top 10 at 18 on April 25, 2022.
19. First Grand Slam title at 19 at the 2022 US Open.
20. A perfect 20-0 record in Grand Slam first-round matches.
21. $21,354,778 earned in 2025, the second-highest single-season prize money total in ATP history behind Djokovic’s $21,646,145 in 2015.
22. Completed the Career Grand Slam at 22 with the Australian Open this year, the youngest man ever to do so.

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1000 Analytics & Stats Madrid Open

Sabalenka Joins Top 10 Longest No. 1 Streaks; Poised for 90th Week

Sabalenka passed Martina Hingis into the Top 10 longest No.1 runs and will hit 90 career weeks soon.

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World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka remains the model of consistency at the top of the WTA rankings. The four-time Grand Slam champion advanced to the quarterfinals at the Mutua Madrid Open, reaching the deepest stage at the WTA 1000 event among players in the Top 5. That result extended a remarkable run: she has reached the quarterfinals or better at her last 17 tournaments in a row, a streak that dates back to February of last year.

That level of form is keeping her firmly at No. 1. During Rome she will spend her 81st and 82nd consecutive weeks at the top spot, moving her past Martina Hingis for the standalone 10th-longest streak at No. 1 since WTA rankings officially began in 1975. The milestone adds a historical dimension to a season already defined by steady deep runs.

Sabalenka will also reach another landmark during the second week of Rome: her 90th career week at No. 1. She spent her first eight weeks at the top spot in 2023, then began her second (and current) stint there on October 21st, 2024. When she reaches 90 career weeks she will be the 11th player to do so as WTA No. 1.

The combination of tournament consistency and sustained weeks at No. 1 underlines how Sabalenka has balanced high-level results with longevity atop the rankings. Her recent form in WTA 1000 events and the ongoing streak of deep runs are central to her staying power, and the Rome calendar will see her add two more consecutive weeks to an already notable tenure as the WTA’s top-ranked player.

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© 2026 Ion Alcoba Beitia

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