The American's incremental assent to the top 10 has brought a burst of attention and expectation. For Navarro, it's an adjustment
Emma Navarro, Australian Open
Fourth seed Taylor Fritz made a strong start in his bid to end the 22-year Grand Slam drought for American men with a resounding 6-2, 6-0, 6-3 victory over compatriot Jenson Brook
By Shrivathsa Sridhar MELBOURNE (Reuters) -Second-seed Iga Swiatek waltzed into the third round of the Australian Open on Thursday with fellow Grand Slam champions Emma Raducanu and Elena Rybakina also winners on a bright and sunny day at Melbourne Park.
Readily admitting she was well short of her best, eighth-seeded Emma Navarro hung tough in a marathon ... book her spot in the second round at Melbourne Park. The high-profile British player ...
The five-time Grand Slam champion dispatched Rebecca Sramkova 6-0, 6-2 in a clean hour at the Australian Open on Thursday.
MELBOURNE, Jan 14 (Reuters ... Danish 13th seed Holger Rune was pushed all the way to five sets and Emma Navarro also had a tough time in one of three all-American ties, the women's eighth ...
American player and world No. 4 Taylor Fritz will face France's Gael Monfils tonight in Margaret Court Arena following the women's singles match between U.S. player Emma Navarro and Ons Jabeur. The match will take place in Margaret Arena no sooner than 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT today.
Iga Swiatek, Jannik Sinner, Jasmine Paolini, Elena Rybakina and N Sriram Balaji are amongst the big players who will be in action on Day 7 of the hard court major at Melbourne Park.
Daniil Medvedev, beaten in the Melbourne final last year by Sinner, faces Learner Tien, 19, of the United States in a later match. Sinner dropped a set for the first time in 14 matches when he lost the opener to Australian wildcard Tristan Schoolkate.
Get caught up on the Australian Open with a guide that tells you everything you need to know about how to watch the year's first Grand Slam tennis tournament, what the betting odds are, what the sched
The Irvine native and 19-year-old qualifier, who played one semester at USC, wins a 4-hour, 49-minute thriller that ends at nearly 3 a.m. in Melbourne.