The Japan Times - Keys stuns Sabalenka in thriller to win Australian Open

EUR -
AED 3.832584
AFN 82.004984
ALL 98.93014
AMD 417.625233
ANG 1.879072
AOA 953.178847
ARS 1095.86014
AUD 1.673335
AWG 1.878179
AZN 1.765894
BAM 1.956387
BBD 2.105251
BDT 126.677987
BGN 1.956622
BHD 0.39332
BIF 3085.740107
BMD 1.043433
BND 1.41003
BOB 7.20416
BRL 6.112219
BSD 1.042618
BTN 90.205915
BWP 14.511421
BYN 3.412156
BYR 20451.284727
BZD 2.094348
CAD 1.502491
CDF 2972.219142
CHF 0.942987
CLF 0.037431
CLP 1032.844668
CNY 7.566144
CNH 7.583013
COP 4388.459632
CRC 528.561032
CUC 1.043433
CUP 27.650972
CVE 110.298075
CZK 25.084646
DJF 185.667455
DKK 7.461949
DOP 64.229568
DZD 140.975068
EGP 52.399217
ERN 15.651493
ETB 133.366432
FJD 2.418208
FKP 0.859358
GBP 0.838461
GEL 2.999927
GGP 0.859358
GHS 15.889765
GIP 0.859358
GMD 75.127087
GNF 9013.746145
GTQ 8.059417
GYD 218.135412
HKD 8.1284
HNL 26.55509
HRK 7.700063
HTG 136.241508
HUF 407.559704
IDR 16947.332725
ILS 3.783018
IMP 0.859358
INR 90.343916
IQD 1365.770286
IRR 43928.524728
ISK 145.892783
JEP 0.859358
JMD 164.230035
JOD 0.740214
JPY 162.32166
KES 134.602649
KGS 91.248219
KHR 4192.277227
KMF 492.89163
KPW 939.089721
KRW 1507.327543
KWD 0.321691
KYD 0.868836
KZT 538.736714
LAK 22692.022131
LBP 93369.093416
LKR 309.615812
LRD 206.964046
LSL 19.489231
LTL 3.080986
LVL 0.631162
LYD 5.117584
MAD 10.441931
MDL 19.382998
MGA 4911.496346
MKD 61.528119
MMK 3389.029339
MNT 3545.585086
MOP 8.368669
MRU 41.506645
MUR 48.39439
MVR 16.079598
MWK 1807.950814
MXN 21.437638
MYR 4.583279
MZN 66.686029
NAD 19.489231
NGN 1587.426345
NIO 38.37169
NOK 11.770936
NPR 144.328972
NZD 1.84396
OMR 0.401707
PAB 1.042613
PEN 3.900607
PGK 4.245293
PHP 60.987091
PKR 290.740878
PLN 4.201122
PYG 8243.550998
QAR 3.80184
RON 4.974781
RSD 117.108619
RUB 102.255924
RWF 1464.946313
SAR 3.913624
SBD 8.805968
SCR 14.886612
SDG 627.103293
SEK 11.467113
SGD 1.4089
SHP 0.859358
SLE 22.497222
SLL 21880.265992
SOS 595.881542
SRD 36.629721
STD 21596.954228
SVC 9.122473
SYP 13566.714475
SZL 19.494939
THB 35.223683
TJS 11.380085
TMT 3.662449
TND 3.316394
TOP 2.443822
TRY 37.30805
TTD 7.07719
TWD 34.26936
TZS 2630.101292
UAH 43.85286
UGX 3848.153946
USD 1.043433
UYU 45.103525
UZS 13516.053059
VES 59.710896
VND 26169.296987
VUV 123.878448
WST 2.922475
XAF 656.156906
XAG 0.034298
XAU 0.000377
XCD 2.81993
XDR 0.797043
XOF 656.160051
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.94517
ZAR 19.506251
ZMK 9392.156021
ZMW 29.063994
ZWL 335.984966
  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.8

    -0.42%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    11.59

    -0.78%

  • RIO

    -2.0700

    59.9

    -3.46%

  • BCC

    -0.5400

    127.64

    -0.42%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    12.69

    +0.95%

  • CMSD

    -0.2000

    24.17

    -0.83%

  • NGG

    -0.4200

    61.08

    -0.69%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.88

    -0.75%

  • RBGPF

    63.9000

    63.9

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.23

    +0.14%

  • BTI

    -0.4400

    39.17

    -1.12%

  • GSK

    -0.4000

    35.1

    -1.14%

  • RELX

    0.2800

    49.4

    +0.57%

  • BP

    -0.2900

    31.16

    -0.93%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    8.51

    -0.71%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    69.59

    -0.7%

Keys stuns Sabalenka in thriller to win Australian Open
Keys stuns Sabalenka in thriller to win Australian Open / Photo: Martin KEEP - AFP

Keys stuns Sabalenka in thriller to win Australian Open

Underdog Madison Keys upset Aryna Sabalenka 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 in the Australian Open final on Saturday to win her first Grand Slam crown at the age of 29.

Text size:

The American Keys ended world number one Sabalenka's dream of becoming the first woman for 26 years to win a third successive Melbourne Park singles crown.

Keys yelled in delight and wiped away tears on securing the title after withstanding a fierce fightback from the Belarusian two-time defending champion.

Sabalenka, the 2023 and 2024 champion, buried her head in a towel after her 20-match win streak at Melbourne Park was ended.

For 19th-seeded Keys it was the culmination of a 15-year journey from teenage prodigy to major winner.

The American had been tipped as a future world number one after winning her maiden WTA Tour match at the age of 14.

She made her first major semi-final at Melbourne Park 10 years ago as a 19-year-old but a decade on she can finally call herself a Grand Slam champion.

Keys becomes the fourth oldest first-time winner of a major since the Open Era began in 1968.

It was Keys who came out of the blocks in controlled fashion in just her second Grand Slam final.

Keys was playing with her left thigh strapped but was not hampered as she played exemplary tennis to put Sabalenka under pressure.

With the help of two Sabalenka double faults, Keys secured an immediate break.

Sabalenka could not make any inroads on Keys, who landed 86 percent of her first serves in the set.

A third double fault helped Keys unlock a further break and race into a 5-1 lead.

Sabalenka saved set point and then clawed back one of the breaks. But her error count was rising and Keys, who smacked 11 winners to four, secured the first set in 35 minutes.

Sabalenka, renowned for her guts and determination, had similarly lost the first set in the 2023 final against Elena Rybakina before going on to win.

Perhaps more significantly, Sabalenka had lost the first set 6-0 to Keys in the 2023 US Open semi-final before fighting back to reach the final.

That result may have been preying on both players' minds as the Belarusian began to flip the script in the second set, breaking in the third game and moving ahead 3-1.

Another break followed on a brilliant Sabalenka cross-court pass and she levelled the match after an hour and 20 minutes on court.

Sabalenka by now was timing the ball much better and a younger Keys might have buckled.

But this mature version of Keys, who battled all the way to beat Iga Swiatek in a 10-point final set tiebreak in the semi-finals, is made of sterner stuff.

She held from 0-30 in the third game to keep it on serve as the final set became a big-hitting baseline war with no holding back from either player.

It stayed that way until 5-6 when Sabalenka served to take it to a final set tiebreak.

Keys brought up two match points and secured the title on the second with her 29th winner after 2hr 2min.

H.Nakamura--JT