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Coco Gauff enters US Open celebrating $37M success despite recent struggle

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Coco Gauff enters US Open celebrating $37M success despite recent struggle

Coco Gauff has been named the highest-earning female tennis player in the world, with the American teenager outpacing Novak Djokovic in the latest Forbes Tennis Rich List

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - AUGUST 20: Coco Gauff is seen serving up her first signature Naked smoothie as Naked’s Chief Smoothie Officer in NYC before the US Open on August 20, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Michael Simon/Getty Images for Naked Smoothie)
Coco Gauff is the highest-earning female tennis star of 2025 so far(Image: Michael Simon, Getty Images for Naked Smoothie)

Coco Gauff is leading the pack as the world’s highest-earning female tennis player in 2025, according to the latest Forbes Tennis Rich List. It comes as the American star made a major coaching change just days before the start of the US Open.

In a significant shift, four women occupy spots in the top seven heading to Flushing Meadows, which is in danger of facing a nasty bug invasion. Carlos Alcaraz maintains his position as the world’s highest-paid tennis player, pulling in an estimated $48.3 million over the last year before taxes and agent fees.

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However, his fiercest competitor on the court, Jannik Sinner, is hot on his heels after the Wimbledon champion’s earnings skyrocketed by $26.6M to $47.3M. Interestingly, despite Alcaraz’s higher overall earnings, Sinner has won more money on the court ($20.3M) than Alcaraz ($13.3M) this year.

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French Open champion Gauff, who made a surprising coaching switch right before the start of the US Open, ranks third – and is the top woman at just 21 years old – with $37M, including $25M from off-court earnings.

Despite Novak Djokovic’s impressive career on-court earnings of $188,934,053, the 24-time Grand Slam winner only pocketed $4.6m this year, dropping him to fourth place behind Gauff.

Aryna Sabalenka, Qinwen Zheng, and Iga Swiatek also feature in the top seven, with the combined earnings of the top ten male and female players reaching a staggering total of $285M.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - AUGUST 20: Coco Gauff looks on during a practice session prior to the start of the US Open  at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on August 20, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)
Gauff has been going through a slump since her French Open win(Image: Al Bello, Getty Images)

The $343M total from 2020, when Roger Federer earned a whopping $106.3M, Rafa Nadal took home $40M, and Serena Williams pocketed $36M, has seen a decline.

According to Forbes, Federer, the Swiss tennis legend, has joined the billionaire club, becoming only the seventh athlete to do so, thanks to a significant increase in the value of his minority stake in Swiss footwear and apparel brand On.

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Joining him in this elite group are sports superstars Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, LeBron James, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, and Floyd Mayweather.

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Emma Raducanu, Britain’s No. 1 female tennis player, was ranked sixth on the Forbes list last year with earnings of $12.9M – matching Naomi Osaka.

This included a hefty $12M in endorsements through sponsorship deals with major brands such as Nike, Christian Dior, Tiffany & Co., and Porsche. So far this year, World No. 35 Raducanu has earned $1.1M on court.

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Elite Eight scores and highlights

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Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 7:14 p.m. ET



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Creighton volleyball falls in Elite Eight match, finishes season 28-6

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Creighton volleyball fell Saturday in three sets against the Kentucky Wildcats in the Elite Eight round of the NCAA Volleyball tournament.

The Wildcats owned all three sets, winning with scores of 25-19, 25-13 and 25-18.

Kentucky’s ruthless offense kept the Bluejays on the defense as the game churned into the third set. Following the second set, Kentucky’s coach Craig Skinner told the ESPN2 crew that he was relying on his team’s “big dogs to get it done.”

“Serving pressure was a big factor,” Skinner said heading into the locker room. “Reinhardt hasn’t been able to get involved as much. To keep them away from the net, to limit the number of options is huge.”

Creighton coach Brian Rosen, who’s leading the Creighton team through the NCAA tournament for his first time, said he told his team they needed to change their mindset heading into the third set.

“We’ve got to clean some things up,” Rosen told the ESPN2 crew. “We’re not putting any points on our serves right now, so we got to push it.”

Several long rallies in the third set felt like a comeback for the Bluejays, but the team came up just short. Creighton was attempting to make program history by punching its the ticket to the Final Four but fell just short against Kentucky.

The season-ending loss capped another impressive season for the Bluejays, which included the program’s sixth-straight Big East title.

Senior players, Ava Martin and Kiara Reinhardt, will continue their volleyball careers when they trade their college jerseys for professional ones in the Major League Volleyball. In November. Martin was drafted second-overall to the Atlanta Vibe. Reinhardt was eighth-overall pick by the Omaha Supernovas. The two first-round picks made league history. Creighton was the first school to have two selections in the first round of the same draft.

The Bluejays finished the season 28-6.

The Nebraska volleyball team will look to continue its undefeated season Sunday against Texas A&M. The match will be broadcast at 2 p.m. CT on ABC. If the Huskers move on, they’ll play Thursday.

The NCAA Championship will be Sunday, Dec. 21 at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City.



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Creighton vs. Kentucky volleyball: Elite Eight scores, highlights

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Updated Dec. 13, 2025, 6:02 p.m. ET



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A reverse-sweep comeback over Louisville pushes Texas A&M volleyball to third-ever Elite Eight

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(KBTX) – In the middle of the third set of Friday’s NCAA Tournament region semifinal volleyball match, Texas A&M opposite hitter Logan Lednicky glanced at a random piece of paper in the middle of the score’s table.

After being the first team to 15 points in both of the first two sets, the third-seeded Aggies’ allowed No. 2 seed Louisville to rally and set up a three-game sweep. The Aggies needed a rare reverse sweep to keep their season alive. They were looking for an answer to the situation they found themselves in.

Sometimes the sign is literally a sign.

“Something great is about to happen,” the piece of paper read.

Three sets later, the Aggies were celebrating on the court of the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Nebraska, having rallied to beat Louisville 3-2 in a five set thriller. It was A&M’s first reverse sweep since September 29 of last year, when the Aggies’ came from behind to beat Missouri in Reed Arena.

“I’m like floating on air,” Lednicky said after the match. “That was the most insane experience I have ever been a part of.”

From the start, A&M appeared to be in control of the match, jumping out to a 17-12 lead. However, after A&M reached 15 points, Louisville did not commit another error in the set. The Cardinals closed out the set on a 6-3 run to take the first game.

History repeated itself in the second set. A&M pulled out to a 21-16 lead, but allowed a 5-0 Cardinal run to tie the game. An 8-0 run ultimately sealed the 2-0 start for Louisville and put the Aggies’ season in jeopardy.

It wasn’t unfamiliar territory for the Aggies. Not only did A&M travel to Nebraska last season for the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament, they fell behind 2-1 to Wisconsin and needed to push the game to a fifth set to try to advance. That effort fell short in the final game, 15-13, ending the Aggies season.

The story of this season wouldn’t end the same way.

“I think we spent a lot of time under tension,” Aggie middle blocker Ifenna Cos-Okpalla said. “I think that was something we all said when we were in that fifth set, just knowing that we had been here before. We played here before. We’ve been in this exact situation before and it’s really just on us to turn it around and capitalize.”

The Aggie block leader was key at the net in the match turn-around. A&M finished the match with 17 blocks, 12 of which came from Cos-Okpalla. The Aggies had nine blocks in the fourth set, seven off the hands of Cos-Okpalla.

The senior finished with nine kills, to go along with her blocking effort and a .316 hit percentage.

“Even when I wasn’t getting blocked or good touches, I think I was in a good enough spot to like funnel out space for the defense to work behind me,” Cos-Okpalla said. “We can just run our offense from there. So yeah, it takes everybody on the team honestly, but, yeah, I’m just so proud.”

The fifth set saw nine ties and three lead changes in a back-and-forth struggle for the next line of the bracket. The Aggies needed a 3-0 run through the middle of the set to take a 10-9 lead, thanks to two Louisville errors and a block by Cos-Okpalla and Lednicky. Then, the Aggies closed the match out on a 5-2 run with outside hitter Kyndal Stowers recording the final kill.

Lednicky paced the Aggies with 20 kills and added 12 digs and seven blocks. Stowers had 17 kills and 11 digs.

Louisville’s Chloe Chicoine led all attackers with 26 kills.

A&M hit at a .277 clip, slightly better than Louisville’s .229.

The Aggies advance to the program’s third-ever regional final and will face the No. 1 overall seed Nebraska on its home court Sunday at 2 p.m. The Cornhuskers took down No. 4 seed Kansas 3-0 in a match directly following A&M’s win.

In the meantime, A&M can take a moment to relish in the program they’ve builtin the three years of the Morrison era.

“My No. 1 thing that I said when I first got here was to get it back to where its was and take it further and we have it back to where it was… Now, it’s time, in two days, to take it further,” Morrison said.



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Gonzaga Volleyball signs Lydia Fisher

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SPOKANE, Wash- Gonzaga Volleyball continues to build for the future with the addition of another signee for next season, as head coach JT Wenger announced the signing of Lydia Fisher on Thursday night. 

Coming to Spokane after completing her high school career her hometown of Dallas, Lydia has starred for Highland Park High School as middle blocker and right side hitter. She was named to the First Team All-District while representing the Scots. Fisher helped the team to a capture a state championship last month, as Highland Park won the 5A State Championship. A 6’5″ blocker, Fisher will help further establish the net front presence for the Zags when she comes to campus next season. 



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Badgers news: Wisconsin back in Elite 8 with big win over Stanford

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The Wisconsin Badgers are back in the Elite 8. The Badgers faced off against the No. 2 Stanford Cardinal on Friday afternoon, winning 3-1 to face the No. 1-seeded Texas Longhorns in the Elite Eight on Sunday.

Mimi Colyer had one of her best games as a Badger, recording 27 kills on 51 attempts with just eight errors. Carter Booth had 14 kills of her own with zero errors, while Una Vagajic had 13 kills as well. The Badgers had 70 kills as a whole, while Charlie Fuerbringer had 61 assists.

Wisconsin started off the first set well, getting off to an early 7-3 lead as Colyer and Booth each recorded a pair of kills. Things got tight, with Stanford cutting the lead to 10-9, but Wisconsin went on a 5-0 run to separate itself, with Colyer recording two more kills in the stretch.

From there, Wisconsin comfortably led the rest of the way, ultimately taking the first set 25-17. From there, though, things got tight.

The second set was back-and-forth to start, as neither side had more than a two-point lead through the midway point in the set. Stanford began to pull away, though, going on a 4-1 run when leading 15-14 to get a four-point lead late in the set. That proved to be the difference, as the Cardinal extended that lead to 22-16 before ultimately taking the set 25-21.

Tied at 1-1, the Badgers had a great response coming into the third set, starting off with a 5-2 lead. Stanford hit Wisconsin back, though, tying things up at seven apiece, and the back-and-forth action continued from there. Once again, neither side had more than a two-point advantage until Stanford took a 17-14 lead off back-to-back kills from Ella Rubin.

It seemed like the momentum might be turning in Stanford’s favor, but Wisconsin stormed back with a four-point run to take an 18-17 lead as Natalie Wardlow had three consecutive service aces. Both sides traded points over the next few rallies, tying things up back again at 21 apiece.

The two biggest points of the set came next. Kristen Simon had a service ace of her own before Mimi Colyer got a kill to put Wisconsin up 23-21. Jordyn Harvey got a kill for Stanford, which Carter Booth responded to with a kill of her own. 24-22. Grace Egan had an attack error to cut the lead to one, but rebounded with the set-clinching kill and Wisconsin took the third set 25-23 for a 2-1 lead in the match.

Once again, Wisconsin started the fourth set well, getting out to a 7-3 lead thanks to a flurry of Stanford mistakes. The Cardinal had two service errors and three attack errors in the first ten points, and the Badgers capitalized. But, Stanford slowly chipped back at the lead and flipped the script, taking a 13-12 lead midway through the set.

After both sides traded a point, Wisconsin went on a three-point run to take a 16-14 lead. That stretch proved to be the difference-maker as the Badgers never trailed from that point on. Stanford did tie things up at 19 apiece, but the Badgers had another three-point run. Then, after the Cardinal brought it back within one at 23-22, Mimi Colyer and Grace Egan delivered the final blows to send Wisconsin to the Elite Eight.

With the 3-1 win, the Badgers are facing the No. 1-seeded Texas Longhorns, who swept the No. 4 Indiana Hoosiers on Friday. That game will be played in Austin on Sunday.



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