American women’s tennis is in a fine place after the Australian Open, with Madison Keys emerging victorious in Melbourne.
Keys was superb at the Adelaide International, beating compatriot Jessica Pegula in the final, before going on to win the Australian Open.
Andy Roddick was left really impressed by Keys after her success, which resulted in her climbing to seventh in the WTA rankings.
Keys overcame world numbers one and two Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek respectively at the Australian Open, beating the former in the final.
World number three Coco Gauff meanwhile fell to Paula Badosa in the quarter-finals, while Pegula lost to Olga Danilovic in round three.
But the American trio have now helped secure a fantastic achievement for American women, with this week representing the first since March 1st, 2004 that three such players are ranked in the top six, as per Tennis.
Gauff has stayed third in the rankings, but Pegula has climbed one spot to fifth and Keys has moved up one place to sixth.
READ MORE: The three other American women with the best chance of emulating Madison Keys by winning a Grand Slam in 2025
Back in 2004, Lindsay Davenport occupied fourth spot, with Jennifer Capriati and Serena Williams in fifth and sixth respectively.
Gauff and Pegula have certainly played their part in the superb achievement, with the former having triumphed at the WTA Finals last season.
The latter meanwhile reached the final of the US Open in New York last time out, losing to second seed Sabalenka.
READ MORE: What Madison Keys said back in her hotel room after losing to Aryna Sabalenka in 2024 before winning the Australian Open
But right now much of the focus is rightfully on Australian Open champion Keys, who produced several stunning displays to triumph in Melbourne.
Like Gauff, she has one Grand Slam final win and one loss to her name, with Sloane Stephens beating Keys in the 2017 US Open final.
Notably, the latest Grand Slam champion has just clinched a new career-high ranking, which along with her Australian Open title should fill her with confidence for the coming months.
With Emma Navarro also in the top 10, American women’s tennis is certainly in a great place right now, but the nation will undoubtedly be targeting more Grand Slams in 2025.
Rank | Change | Player | Nation | Age | Points |
1 | – | Aryna Sabalenka | BLR | 26 | 8956 |
2 | – | Iga Swiatek | POL | 23 | 8770 |
3 | – | Coco Gauff | USA | 20 | 6538 |
4 | – | Jasmine Paolini | ITA | 29 | 5288 |
5 | +1 | Jessica Pegula | USA | 30 | 4861 |
6 | +1 | Madison Keys | USA | 29 | 4680 |
7 | -2 | Elena Rybakina | KAZ | 25 | 4588 |
8 | – | Qinwen Zheng | CHN | 22 | 4095 |
9 | – | Emma Navarro | USA | 23 | 3709 |
10 | – | Paula Badosa | ESP | 27 | 3588 |
A professional tennis player received a frightening message from a sports bettor who threatened to go after him if he didn’t win a recent match at the Thionv
Emma Raducanu has revealed she “couldn’t see the ball through tears” and could “barely breathe” during a stalking ordeal at the Dubai Open last month.
The man approached Raducanu near the player hotel in Dubai the day before her second round match with Karolina Muchova.He gave her a letter and took her photo,
Australian Open champioon Madison Keys fields questions from the media prior to the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells (MATTHEW STOCKMAN)Madison Keys says staying