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Finding the Keys to Success After Years of Staying Afloat
Hindustan Times Mumbai
|January 23, 2025
Keys has been a constant among US players over the past few years, but only now she is truly discovering herself
MUMBAI: A few times through her professional career that began in 2009, a thought—more a question, really—would leave Madison Keys feeling a bit paralyzed on court: "If it didn't happen right now, would it ever happen?"
Moments after the 2023 US Open semi-final where she was up 6-0, 5-3 before a sensational turnaround by Aryna Sabalenka, Keys broke down and wept in her press conference. Perhaps that thought seeped in again for a player now in her late twenties: would it ever happen again?
It has, at this Australian Open. A full decade after it first did. The American is back in the semi-final at Melbourne Park, rallying to defeat Ukraine's Elina Svitolina 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Her 2015 quarter-final victory also happened to be a three-setter, against Venus Williams. She takes on a red-hot Iga Swiatek now. She ran into a red-hot Serena Williams then.
A couple of generations of American women have swept world tennis, and Keys, 29, has been a constant. She stood witness to Venus and Serena kissing greatness. She stands witness to Coco Gauff rising from teen sensation to Grand Slam champion.
This story is from the January 23, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Mumbai.
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