Emma Navarro is the second player in the Open Era to make the quarter-finals in women's singles at Melbourne Park with four three-setters in the first four rounds, after Jelena Dokic in 2009
Iga Swiatek showed no mercy as she ended "lucky loser" Eva Lys's historic run at the Australian Open on Monday, the world number two marching into the quarter-finals 6-0, 6-1.
Emma Navarro said she was just "staying alive" after winning a fourth consecutive three-set marathon to set up an Australian Open quarter-final against Iga Swiatek.
The American's incremental assent to the top 10 has brought a burst of attention and expectation. For Navarro, it's an adjustment
She is an heiress to a billion-dollar fortune but money can't buy what emerging tennis star Emma Navarro truly craves. Navarro takes on Iga Swiatek in the Australian Open quarter-finals on Wednesday hungry for the grand slam spoils her second-ranked opponent has already savoured.
Iga Swiatek demolished Emma Raducanu on Saturday to sweep into the last 16 of the Australian Open, where Jannik Sinner will later step up his title defence and young tyro
America's Tommy Paul faces Germany's Alexander Zverev in the quarterfinals at the Australian Open tonight. Here's how to tune in.
Defending champion Jannik Sinner moved into the Australian Open quarterfinals at Melbourne Park on Monday by eliminating the 13th-seeded Holger Rune 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.
The Australian Open semi-final line-up will be confirmed at the close of play on day 11 and bookmakers expect defending men's champion Jannik Sinner to seal his place in the final four with victory over home favourite Alex de Minaur.
Eight women remain in the 2025 Australian Open, and three of them are Americans. That group of quarterfinalists is headlined by No. 3 seed Coco Gauff and includes No. 8 Emma Navarro and No. 19 Madison Keys. Gauff, 20, will look to continue her hot start to the season when she meets No. 11 Paula Badosa of Spain at 7:30 ET on Monday night.
The 2025 Australian Open runs from Sunday, Jan. 12 to Sunday, Jan. 26. However, due to the time difference in The Land Down Under, match start times will be a bit wonky for U.S. viewers, meaning the first major tennis tournament of the year will start airing coverage at 7 p.m. ET on Jan. 11 in U.S. timezones.