Thursday, January 22, 2026
Home/Sports/Article
Sports
5 min read

Madison Keys Navigates Nervous Start in Australian Open Title Defence

France 24
January 20, 20262 days ago
'Very nervous' Keys makes shaky start to Australian Open title defence

AI-Generated Summary
Auto-generated

Madison Keys, the ninth seed, began her Australian Open title defense nervously, facing early challenges from Oleksandra Oliynykova. Despite double faults and being broken multiple times, Keys recovered to win the first set in a tiebreak. She then dominated the second set, ultimately securing a 7-6 (8/6), 6-1 victory.

The American ninth seed was a bundle of nerves on Rod Laver Arena, but calmed down to clinch a 7-6 (8/6), 6-1 win over Ukraine's Oleksandra Oliynykova. Keys stunned Aryna Sabalenka 12 months ago in a three-set epic to win her first major crown at the age of 29, but she failed to push on from there in 2025, winning no more titles. She started her season with quarter-final exits at Brisbane and Adelaide, admitting before the Grand Slam to being nervous as defending champion. "I've been thinking about this moment for basically a year," said Keys of walking out on centre court again. "I'm so happy to be back in Melbourne. Obviously I was very nervous at the start." Playing at her 50th Grand Slam, in contrast to Oliynykova who was at her first, Keys sent down three double faults and was broken on her first service game. The Ukrainian, ranked 92 and facing a player inside the top 50 for the first time, consolidated with a hold after six deuces in the second game to take charge. Showing no nerves, she stunned the American by breaking again and raced 4-0 clear before Keys finally woke up and battled back. She cut down on the errors and found her range on serve to win the next five games. But Keys was broken again and it went to a tiebreak, where she slumped 4-0 behind and had to save two set points before converting for the set with a blistering crosscourt winner. The gritty comeback was the catalyst for a far more convincing second set, breaking straight away and racing into a 4-0 lead before sealing the match with ease after 1hr 40mins. © 2026 AFP

Rate this article

Login to rate this article

Comments

Please login to comment

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
    Keys Australian Open: Nervous Start to Title Defence