With the Australian Open less than three weeks away, Mail Sport takes a glance back at the year in tennis and looks ahead to what 2025 has in store… Join Mail+ for more of Matthew Lambert’s insight into the world of tennis Draper’s avowed mission is to chase down Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner at the top […]
- With the Australian Open less than three weeks away, Mail Sport takes a glance back at the year in tennis and looks ahead to what 2025 has in store…
- Join Mail+ for more of Matthew Lambert’s insight into the world of tennis
Draper’s avowed mission is to chase down Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner at the top of the game but first he must crack the top 10 and start to routinely make the later stages of the Grand Slams. At 5ft 3in and change she is not going to blow anyone off the court but the 23-year-old moves beautifully and could develop into that rarest of breeds in Britain: a clay court specialist.
This was the year when battle lines were drawn for the next great rivalries in tennis. Sinner and Alcaraz carved up the majors between them, the Italian winning both hard court Slams and the Spaniard ruling on grass and clay.
BRITS TO WATCH
Two of the above-mentioned stars, Sinner and Swiatek, failed doping tests last year and the fallout was messy.
| On the men’s side is Jacob Fearnley, who has had an extraordinary rise up the rankings since graduating from Texas Christian University in May.
British No1s Jack Draper and Katie Boulter are at 15 and 24 in the world respectively, Emma Raducanu is progressing well as she continues to learn the ways of the tour, Cam Norrie is back in the top 50 after a tough year and there are a couple of other names who could introduce themselves in 2025. GB’s Davis Cup captain Leon Smith has known Fearnley since he was yay high, and said recently: ‘He has gone really quickly. It is really impressive. It is one thing going up the rankings but you also see his quality, you look at the players he’s been beating.’ Surely this is the year when the best players of each gender face off on the biggest stage?
GREAT RIVALRIES EMERGE
The 23-year-old from Edinburgh grew up idolising Andy Murray, of course, and there are echoes of his countryman in Fearnley’s all-court game built on excellent movement. By MATTHEW LAMBERT
We always feared life after Andy Murray would be a barren wasteland for the country that brought lawn tennis to the world but the reality appears pleasingly different.‘We’ve looked too short-sighted. Going forward, we’re looking a lot more holistically: how are we going to build the schedule around the main objectives for this year?’
DOPING CLARITY
They start as favourites to defend their titles and each man must now try to encroach on the other’s territory. On the women’s side, Aryna Sabalenka finally overhauled Iga Swiatek as world No1 and the stage is set for those two to do battle for many years. The onus is on Swiatek to prove she can dominate at majors other than her French Open banker. One wish for these rivalries in 2025: neither has quite captured the public’s imagination, largely because, for all their enthralling matches, none have come with a major title on the line.