Want to catch the action live? You're going to have to stay up very late (or get up very early) if you're a U.S.-based fan.
The NWSL released its 2025 calendar on Wednesday, including a Decision Day and Rivalry Weekend across 190 games.
Anti-DEI campaign is central to the president’s economic and cultural agenda. Here is the news to know on Wednesday.
Iga Swiatek absolutely dominated No. 8 seed Emma Navarro 6-1 6-2 to make her second Australian Open semifinal and the first one since 2022. After dropping just 11 games through her opening four matches, the second seed also broke the American three times to easily bag the first set.
Emma Navarro calls for rule change after Australian Open loss to Iga Swiatek - A double bounce call against Swiatek was missed by the umpire in her 6-1 6-2 victory.
The American rallied from a set down to reach the last four in Melbourne for the third time, and will face No. 2 seed Iga Swiatek next.
The Australian Open bottom half will finalize its semifinalists on Wednesday, with Iga Swiatek taking on Emma Navarro, while Madison Keys faces Elina Svitolina in Melbourne.
The five-time major champion is into her second Australian Open semifinal after losing just 14 games over five matches.
Swiatek will face No. 19 Madison Keys of the U.S. on Thursday night for a berth in the final. The other women’s semifinal is No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, the two-time defending champion, against her good friend, No. 11 Paula Badosa.
Madison Keys completed a comeback win over Elina Svitolina in the Women's singles quarterfinal to go through to the semi-final. Iga Swiatek will face off against Emma Navarro next, with the likes of Jannik Sinner,
MELBOURNE - A rampaging Iga Swiatek stormed into her second Australian Open semi-final with a 6-1 6-2 centre court demolition of eighth seed Emma Navarro on Wednesday as the world number two underlined her title credentials once again at Melbourne Park.