By Staff Reporter
Who: Aryna Sabalenka vs Madison Keys
What: Australian Open women’s singles final
Where: Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne, Australia
When: 7:30pm (08:30 GMT) on Saturday
Follow Al Jazeera’s live build-up followed by our text and photo stream of the match.
The irresistible force of Aryna Sabalenka meets the unbreakable spirit of Madison Keys in an Australian Open women’s singles final on Saturday that promises to be a thunderous slugfest.
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Defending champion Sabalenka was hailed by beaten semifinalist Paula Badosa as being so good it was “like she’s playing a PlayStation” after dishing out a merciless straight-sets bludgeoning to her good friend.
The never-say-die American Keys, who will turn 30 next month, saved eight break points and a match point in a nerve-shredding final set against Iga Swiatek that went all the way to a 10-point tiebreak.
“Definitely some big-hitting. I think that is going to happen,” the powerful 19th seed Keys predicted of the final. “Not a lot of long points.”
What is the head-to-head record between the women’s singles finalists?
Keys and Sabalenka have met five times previously, with the Belarusian winning four of them, most recently on the Beijing hard courts last year. Keys’s sole win came on grass in Berlin in 2021.
“She’s playing incredible tennis,” said Sabalenka. “She’s a very aggressive player, serving well, moving well. She’s in great shape. It’s going to be a great battle. We had a lot of great battles in the past.”
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA – JANUARY 24: Aryna Sabalenka practices during day 13 of the 2025 Australian Open at Melbourne Park on January 24, 2025 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)
Aryna Sabalenka practises on court during day 13 ahead of the Australian Open final [Quinn Rooney/Getty Images]
What would an Australian Open threepeat mean for Sabalenka?
Sabalenka will remain world number one after Swiatek’s defeat while Keys is guaranteed to be back in the top 10 for the first time since 2019 in the new rankings.
Both players are in rampant form and on 11-match win streaks after winning their respective warm-up events. Sabalenka, the modern-day queen of Melbourne Park, has won 20 straight matches on the famous blue hard courts.
If she makes it 21 it will see her complete a treble not witnessed this century. The last person to achieve the three-peat in Melbourne was Martina Hingis in 1999 and only four other women have done it – Margaret Court, Evonne Goolagong, Steffi Graf and Monica Seles.