No. 11 seed Paula Badosa of Spain upset American Coco Gauff, the No. 3 seed, in straight sets at the Australian Open ...
In her last Grand Slam quarterfinal, the Spaniard fell apart in New York. She took the lessons to Gauff in Melbourne, and won ...
The world No. 3 missed the chance to return to the semifinal stage after an inspired performance from the former world No. 2 ...
Want to catch the action live? You're going to have to stay up very late (or get up very early) if you're a U.S.-based fan.
As she flicked away a forehand winner to move up match point, Paula Badosa knew it was over. She technically had one more point to win, but she knew. She pumped her fist and looked at her team, ...
The former world No. 2 is into her first Grand Slam semifinal in Melbourne, ending Gauff’s unbeaten start to the season and all but guaranteeing her return to the Top 10.
Corrections and clarifications: The original version of this story failed to mention that Americans Madison Keys and Emma Navarro also ... Spanish star Paula Badosa, had never advanced further ...
MELBOURNE, Australia — As she flicked away a forehand winner to move up match point, Paula Badosa knew it was ... She imploded against Emma Navarro at the U.S. Open in September, leading 5-1 ...
After Coco Gauff's surprisingly lopsided loss to Paula Badosa in the quarterfinals, it's up to Emma Navarro and Madison Keys to keep the hopes alive for American women at the 2025 Australian Open.
Swiatek’s latest lopsided win came via a 6-1, 6-2 scoreline in the quarterfinals against No. 8 seed Emma Navarro on Wednesday ... against her good friend, No. 11 Paula Badosa.
But, Swiatek is in fine form having beaten all of her opponents over two sets in this campaign including Emma Raducanu in ... and counter-punching from Paula Badosa sees her hold serve in this ...