The 6 American women to win Wimbledon in the Open Era: Can Amanda Anisimova end nine-year wait?
Can Anisimova become the 7th American woman in the Open Era to win Wimbledon?
Can Anisimova become the 7th American woman in the Open Era to win Wimbledon?
Big money at play at Wimbledon for those who make it to the final.
Williams and surprise SW19 star Siegemund are among the oldest major quarter-finalists of the Open Era.
Do you agree with our picks for the 10 greatest Wimbledon women's singles winners of the Open Era?
Sabalenka battled past Emma Raducanu to continue an impressive Grand Slam streak at Wimbledon.
Aryna Sabalenka will move ahead of Iga Swiatek on list for most WTA Ranking points since 2009.
Only six women have won 3+ Wimbledon titles in the Open Era.
Tennis365 extracts a piece of each of the game's grass court greats as we build the ultimate champion.
Swiatek beat fellow former world No 1 Victoria Azarenka to hit an impressive milestone at the Bad Homburg Open.
We rank the 10 greatest female grass-court players of the Open Era.
The Williams' sisters, Navratilova, and Graf lead the highest WTA grass-court win percentages.
We look at the WTA legends with the best records in Grand Slam finals.
Gauff is the first US woman since Williams in 2015 to lift the French Open title.
Coco Gauff will look to become the seventh woman in the Open Era to triumph at Roland Garros.
Sabalenka is just the seventh woman in the Open Era to lose consecutive Australian and French Open finals.
Swiatek has now won 24 of 25 Grand Slam opening-round matches.
Jessica Bouzas Maneiro dropped just one game in a 57-minute thrashing of ninth seed Emma Navarro.
Aryna Sabalenka can emulate three former world No 1s with a stellar feat if she wins in Rome.