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Since 1969, the tournament became open to professionals, so it is now called the Australian Open. [1] The senior men's and women's tournaments are open to any player with a world ranking, although players below number 100 in the world rankings generally have to enter a preliminary qualification tournament or receive a wildcard to gain entry. [2]
1. Aryna Sabalenka 2. Iga Świątek 3. Coco Gauff 4. Jasmine Paolini 5. Zheng Qinwen (second round) 6. Elena Rybakina 7. Jessica Pegula 8. Emma Navarro
The Australian Open [a] [b] is an annual tennis tournament created in 1905 and played on outdoor hard courts [c] [d] at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia. [6]The women's singles was first contested in 1922 along with the women's and mixed doubles competition as the last three events to be added.
Here are some of the top women at the Australian Open, which starts at Melbourne Park on Sunday local time (Saturday night EST), with money-line odds via BetMGM Sportsbook: Seeding: 1 Career-Best ...
This was the first Australian Open to feature a final-set tiebreak. When the score in a final set reached 6–6, the first player to reach 10 points and lead by at least 2 points won the set (and the match). Katie Boulter and Ekaterina Makarova became the first players to contest this tiebreak in the main draw, with Boulter emerging victorious.
Coco Gauff had a little difficulty adjusting to the sun at one end of Rod Laver Arena and dropped an early service game but quickly settled into a rhythm to start her Australian Open a 6-3, 6-3 ...
The 2025 Australian Open – Women's singles qualifying is a series of tennis matches that took place from 6 to 9 January 2025 to determine the sixteen qualifiers into the main draw of the women's singles tournament, and, if necessary, the lucky losers. [1]
When is the Australian Open women’s final? 13:16, Jamie Braidwood. ... Gauff holds after saving set point! Australian Open LIVE: Coco Gauff vs Aryna Sabalenka. 09:20, Jamie Braidwood