Paula Badosa makes it to the Australian Open semifinals highlights her resilience after battling injury struggles and uncertainty over her tennis future.
The world No. 3 missed the chance to return to the semifinal stage after an inspired performance from the former world No. 2
Aryna Sabalenka will face close friend Paula Badosa in the semi-finals of the Australian Open after battling to victory over Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. The two-time defending champion’s 18-match winning run at Melbourne Park looked in serious danger when she lost the second set on a windy Rod Laver Arena.
Paula Badosa was overcome with emotions when she hit a forehand winner to seal a 7-5, 6-4 win over Coco Gauff in the Australian Open quarterfinal on Tuesday, and for good reason.
Delray Beach's Coco Gauff was eliminated from the Australian Open Tuesday, losing in straight sets to Spain's Paula Badosa. The third-seeded Gauff, who had been playing well since the end of the year, fell 7-5, 6-4 in the quarterfinals at Rod Laver Arena.
In her last Grand Slam quarterfinal, the Spaniard imploded in New York. She is taking the lessons into her match with Gauff in Melbourne.
Former world number two Badosa defeated the third seed 7-5 6-4 at Melbourne Park to book her spot in the last four
In the Round of 16 at the Australian Open on Saturday, Paula Badosa (ranked No. 12) faces Olga Danilovic (No. 55).Badosa enters the Round of 16 after her three-set victory on Thursday over Marta
South Carolina boss Dawn Staley inked a $25 million+ deal last week, becoming the highest-paid coach in NCAA women's basketball history.
Paula Badosa has reached the first Grand Slam semifinal of her career following her shock win over Coco Gauff at the Australian Open. Badosa, who struggled with back problems for nearly two years, defeated Gauff 7-5,
Coco Gauff’s retooled forehand and serve abandoned her in the worst way and at the worst time at the Australian Open. The unforced errors just kept accumulating Tuesday, and so did the double-faults and break points,