Wimbledon, Aryna Sabalenka and Amanda Anisimova
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Aryna Sabalenka suggests she lacked full trust in herself in all of her three Grand Slam losses in 2025 and that's something she will try to correct at the US Open.
Sabalenka was born and raised in Belarus. Aryna Sabalenka has three Grand Slam titles to her name. But she does not compete with a country’s flag next to her name on the scoreboard—or at least she hasn’t since 2022.
World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka faced a massive challenge from German upstart Laura Siegemund on her road to the Wimbledon semifinals. Siegemund, 37, threatened to become the oldest woman to beat a world No. 1 in WTA history, but Sabalenka fended her off, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 in a quarterfinal that lasted nearly three hours.
After her latest Grand Slam match-win, World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka has already clinched her spot at the 2025 WTA Finals Riyadh presented by PIF -- her fifth consecutive appearance at the year-end championships.
Friday's WTA Wimbledon action delivered fireworks, with World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and Emma Raducanu playing a thriller on Centre Court.
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Tennis World on MSNNovak Djokovic tells how daughter, 7, begs him to take her to Aryna Sabalenka's houseNovak Djokovic reveals his seven-year-old daughter Tara absolutely adores Aryna Sabalenka and she is using every opportunity possible to spend some time with the Belarusian and eat her superfood.
Aryna Sabalenka becomes the first player to qualify for this year’s WTA Finals in Riyadh, marking her fifth consecutive appearance.
Sabalenka is sometimes guilty of having an overreliance on strength – and can struggle against certain opponents with a defensive game style. Her attacking style is very effective – she’s No.1 in the world for a reason after all – but the way she plays can lead to plenty of unforced errors.