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WTA players divided on five-set matches proposal at Grand Slams

WTA players divided on five-set matches proposal at Grand Slams

Iga Swiatek of Poland fields questions on media day during the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden on March 3, 2026
| Photo Credit: Getty Images via AFP

Players on the WTA Tour offered a range of ‌opinions on Tuesday (March 4, 2026) on the idea of women’s matches becoming best-of-five ​sets from the quarter-finals onward at Grand Slam events, a ⁠concept backed by newly named USTA CEO Craig Tiley.

Women’s tennis consists of best-of-three set matches, while men’s matches at Grand Slam events are best-of-five.

Tiley, the longtime head of the ‌Australian Open renowned for championing innovation in the sport, has argued that research shows interest grows as a match goes on.

Iga ‌Swiatek, who has won six majors, did not understand why the sport ‌would ⁠want to make matches longer in an era of ever-shrinking ⁠attention spans.

“It’s a weird approach in the world where everything is becoming faster,” she told reporters at Indian Wells. “So I don’t know if the audience honestly would like that.”

Swiatek concerned there could be dip in quality

She also voiced ​concerns that there could be a ‌dip in quality as players get tired.

“I don’t know if we would be able to keep the quality for five sets. Men are more physically strong and they can handle it better,” she added.

“Also, we have ‌never practiced in a way to prepare for that, so we ​would need to change our whole calendar, because the Grand Slams would be so tough that I don’t think we would ⁠have time to prepare for any other tournaments.”

Australian Open champion Elena Rybakina echoed Swiatek’s concerns.

“You start in one format, and then it gets longer, so mentally, ‌to be ready to play so many sets if it goes to that point, I think it’s not easy,” she said. “It’s a tricky topic, and me, as a player, I would say I wouldn’t want to play three out of five, to be honest.”

Gauff supports change

Other players said the change would play to their strengths.

“It probably would favour me because I’m physically up there with ‌the best,” said Coco Gauff, the winner of three majors.

“But I probably wouldn’t want to ​see that happen, and if it were to happen, I would prefer it to be the whole tournament, not just the ⁠quarters.

“I think changing the format in the middle of the tournament defeats the purpose ⁠of the playing field.”

Power hitter Aryna Sabalenka enthusiastically backed the concept.

“Yeah, let’s do that,” said the world number one, who has won ‌four Grand Slam events.

“I feel like I would have probably more Grand Slams. I feel like physically I’m really strong, and I’m pretty confident ​that my body can handle that. So let’s do it.”

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