by: Just Women’s Sports
US tennis player Madison Keys earned her first-ever Grand Slam title on Saturday, taking down back-to-back defending champ and world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in the 2025 Australian Open final.
On the heels of a three-set semifinal ousting of No. 2 Iga Świątek last Thursday, Keys’ 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 Saturday victory made her the first player to upset both the world No. 1 and No. 2 in the same Grand Slam since Svetlana Kuznetsova did so at the 2009 French Open. The 29-year-old is also the first to do it in Melbourne since Serena Williams in 2005.
Only three other WTA players have racked up more Grand Slam main draws before winning their first title. On Saturday, Keys tied Caroline Wozniacki for making the most Australian Open main-draw singles appearances before lifting the trophy.
Keys’s Australian Open run included five wins over seeded opponents, four of them in the WTA’s Top 10 entering the tournament. Plus, with five three-set victories, Keys tied the record for the most three-set wins at any of the four Grand Slams.
However, none of those records compare with winning her first major.
“I’ve wanted this for so long,” Keys said holding her trophy during the post-match ceremony.=
Keys’ championship was years in the making
Keys burst onto the pro scene on her 14th birthday back in 2009, and has been a Top 20 mainstay for most of the last decade.
The US star has appeared in at least the quarterfinal round of all four majors multiple times. However, she had only one Grand Slam final under her belt prior to this weekend’s championship match — a 2017 US Open loss to Sloane Stephens.
Ultimately, it took relinquishing her desperation to win a Slam to actually snag that elusive trophy.
“I’ve done a lot of work to no longer need [winning a Grand Slam],” Keys explained after her win. “I really wanted it, but it’s no longer the thing that was going to define me, and kind of letting go of that burden, I finally gave myself the ability to play for it.”
Slam win returns Keys to the WTA’s Top 10
The WTA updated their rankings early Monday, with Keys’s breakthrough performance boosting her to No. 7 — her first Top 10 slot since January 2023. The new rank also ties her career-high, with Keys first peaking at No. 7 in October 2016.
Keys’s rise also solidifies the US as arguably the nation most flush with the sport’s top talent. The US now boasts four players in the Top 10, with Keys joining No. 3 Coco Gauff, No. 6 Jessica Pegula, and No. 9 Emma Navarro. No other nation has more than one athlete in that elite tier.
That said, the WTA’s best stayed put in Monday’s rankings. Despite their Australian Open losses, all four top seeds — Sabalenka, Świątek, Gauff, and No. 4 Jasmine Paolini — retained their top spots.