
…Andreeva’s results (and on-court moments) tend to bounce from severe highs to troubling emotional lows. It was a good week for the 18-year old in Linz, as she claimed her second and biggest career clay crown (topping her 250 win in Iasi in ’24, which was her maiden WTA title).
Andreeva opened with wins over veterans Sloane Stephens and Sorana Cirstea (the Romanian took her to three sets), then followed up with victories against Gabriela Ruse and, in the final, Anastasia Potapova. The Hordette rallied from a set down vs. new Austrian (and former countrywoman) Potapova to win 1-6/6-4/6-3 and pick up career title #5, as well as jump Victoria Mboko into the #9 ranking, once again making her the top-ranked teenager on tour.
Andreeva is now 5-1 in career tour singles finals, and currently stands just one title behind Coco Gauff’s tour-best six wins (won from 2021-24, but not counting her one pre-2020 title) as a teenager this decade. She’s got more than a calendar year to take the lead (and hope, I guess, that Lilli Tagger doesn’t start to reach winner’s circle soon enough to give her enough time to accumulate *too* much 18-and-under trophy wealth).
LINZ FINALIST! 👏
Anastasia Potapova secures her spot in the Linz final in straight sets against Vekic 6-4, 6-2!#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/u55ypT5NSk
— wta (@WTA) April 11, 2026
…a title winner in Linz three years ago, when the event was held on indoor hard courts (that changed this year), Potapova was back in the final again this time around.
Just 7-8 in ’26 coming into the event, having lost four of five matches, Potapova’s season debut on the dirt proved to be a charm. She ripped off four straight wins — taking down Zhang Shuai, Tamara Korpatsch, Lilli Tagger and Donna Vekic — to reach her seventh career tour singles final. She’s the first player representing Austria to reach the Linz singles final since it became a tour-level event starting in 1991 (Katharina Buche last reached the final in 1990 when the tournament was still an ITF event held in Wels, Austria).
Facing formerly fellow Hordette Mirra Andreeva in the final, Potapova took the opening set but saw the teenager charge back to drop just seven combined games in the 2nd and 3rd sets, preventing Potapova from picking up her first title since winning in Cluj in February of last year.
That run in Romaninia was also Potapova’s most recent appearance in a final, as the former Top 25 player came into the week barely holding onto a Top 100 ranking at #97. Her runner-up finish will help quite a bit with that, as she’ll be at #54 on Monday.
Backhand beauty 👏@Gabriela_Ruse | #WTALinz pic.twitter.com/8dlvqArGP2
— wta (@WTA) April 10, 2026
Ruse’s SF run in Linz was the first of the Romanian’s career at a 500 event, and it came after she’d hit a rut (losing four of her last five matches) following a good 8-4 start to the season that had included qualifying runs in Brisbane and Adelaide, an AO 3rd Round and another Q-run in the Dubai 1000.
Soaking it all in 🤗@Gabriela_Ruse | #WTALinz pic.twitter.com/9efMVHkTx0
— wta (@WTA) April 10, 2026
Ruse posted wins in Linz over Katie Boulter (in two TB) and Dayana Yastremska, then rallied from a set down to defeat Alona Ostapenko to put up her best result since reaching the final at Rosmalen last summer. She lost to Mirra Andreeva, but will still jump from #87 to #61 on Monday.
Oh, and though even potentially greater things slipped away on the weekend, she’ll always have Linz’s wiener schnitzel…
“Have you had a wiener schnitzel yet?”
“no, not yet”
“your team is actually saying you’ve had a schnitzel every day”
😭😭😭😭 pic.twitter.com/wyHKRw2j2P
— Owen (@kostekcanu) April 8, 2026
Key to her win streak? Schnitzel 🤭@Gabriela_Ruse | #WTALinz pic.twitter.com/vBSmfeBif6
— wta (@WTA) April 10, 2026
…Pigato likely first caught the attention of many back in 2021 when she fan-girled her way through the post-match of her WTA debut in Parma after having lost to Serena Williams (even asking the future Hall of Famer for a selfie).
How amazing was this moment? 17-year-old Lisa Pigato stopped Serena Williams and asked for a selfie after their match today. Just Adorable 😍https://t.co/OzA5SJORTE
📸 Marta Magni Images/MEF Tennis Events pic.twitter.com/6kLF0pXAzT
— TennisNow (@Tennis_Now) May 18, 2021
This week in Madrid, the 22-year old former junior doubles star (winner of the 2020 RG girls’ doubles), had her biggest career moment as a pro, taking the WTA 125 crown and zooming past her previous career high of #187 to a brand new one of #158 in the new rankings.
🙌🏽 ¡A lo grande! Así ganó Lisa Pigato 🇮🇹 el Open Villa de Madrid by @SilverwayAM ante Marina Bassols 🇪🇸
La tenista italiana cerró el partido por 6-4 y 6-0 en la Pista Central Silverway 🎾 pic.twitter.com/qcOTFRzwXe
— Federación de Tenis de Madrid (@fedetenismadrid) April 12, 2026
Pigato posted wins during her impressive week over Darja Semenistaja, Laura Samson, Lina Gjorcheska and Polina Kudermetova to reach the final, then Spaniard Marina Bassols Ribera in a 6-4/6-0 finale.
Pigato is 4-2 in ITF finals, all since March 2025, including a 2-1 mark this season.
Lisa Pigato 🇮🇹 aún no se cree su victoria 🏆 en el Open Villa de Madrid by @SilverwayAM
“Se lo agradezco a mi equipo, que también es mi familia. A mis padres, que han venido desde Milán” 🥰 pic.twitter.com/kRmgVW1qRv
— Federación de Tenis de Madrid (@fedetenismadrid) April 12, 2026
All smiles in Linz! ☺️#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/kohki3fZgz
— wta (@WTA) April 10, 2026
…before the start of clay season, Vekic stood at just 7-8 on the year. But the veteran Croatian kicked things off in Charleston by making her her way through quaulifying and posting a MD win, as well.
In Linz, Vekic furthered her momentum with another qualfying run (rallying from a set down to win a 2nd set TB and defeat Iryna Shymanovich in three in the final round), then followed up with MD wins over Katie Volynets and Karolina Pliskova (w/ a walkover from Anhelina Kalinina in between) to reach her first tour-level SF since she picked up the Silver medal after reaching the Olympic final (a loss vs. Zheng Qinwen) in Paris in August 2024. That medal-winning run came at the end of a 13-3 summer stretch during which Vekic also reached a grass court final in Bad Homburg as well as her first career major SF at Wimbledon.
Vekic reached a 125 final in Manila in January after going out in the 1st Round of the AO to Mirra Andreeva, but wasn’t able to get quite that far in Linz, falling to Anastasia Potapova in a loss that prevented what would have been another match-up vs. Andreeva in the final.
Vekic came into the week ranked at #104, having this season dropped outside the Top 100 (in February) for the first time since the spring of 2022. She’ll be back up to #67 on Monday.
Sealing her quarterfinal spot 💪@KaPliskova | #WTALinz pic.twitter.com/Dn530GbqV1
— wta (@WTA) April 9, 2026
…back on a more regular basis after playing just three matches last season after a 13-month absence due to a foot injury that required two surgeries (thanks to an infection following the first), Pliskova has already made a few good early return impresssions. The first came with a 3rd Round result at the Australian Open, followed up by a Top 10 win over Amanda Anisimova in Doha.
Playing for the first time since mid-February, the Czech went to Linz (where she was the champion in 2014, when the event was an indoor hard court affair) and produced her first QF since Nottingham in the summer of ’24. She posted wins over Aliaksandra Sasnovich and defending champion Ekaterina Alexandrova (her second Top 20 win of ’26) before falling to Donna Vekic 7-5/6-4.
Pliskova will jump from #258 back into the Top 200 on Monday.
lilli tagger joining the crowd’s mexican wave after taking the first set 6-2 vs samsonova [3] pic.twitter.com/9gkDqKJHOR
— rheaa (military wife era) (@srirachagod77) April 9, 2026
…at the moment, a whole lot of good seems just around the corner for Tagger, the ’25 Roland Garros girls’ champion, who made her first appearance this past week in her home nation event in Linz and immediately went about getting the crowd on her side, with visions of her bright future dancing in their collective head.
Since late last year, Tagger has reached her maiden tour-level final (in her WTA MD debut in Jiujiang), and reached a 125 final in February after claiming a $100K crown in January (her 4th win at the ITF level, and her first on hard court after three previous titles on clay).
The 18-year old wild card opened play in Linz with a win over Paula Badosa in what was the Austrian’s ’26 clay court opener, then outlasted Liudmila Samsonova in a 24-point 2nd set TB to take out the Hordette in straight sets (saving 8 SP) to reach her first tour-level clay court QF, setting up her Top 100 debut in the coming week, and assuring her spot in what will be her maiden major MD appearance at Roland Garros (she lost in the final round of qualifying in Melbourne in January in her only Q-attempt to date).
Tagger is the youngest Linz quarterfinalist since Coco Gauff in 2019.
She fell to Anastasia Potapova in an all-Austrian match-up, but will climb from #117 to a new career high of #98 as she dives into her first full-time tour clay court season. Last year, she went 29-5 on the surface in pro action, as well as 19-1 in juniors.
LIGHTS OUT TENNIS FROM LILLI! 👏😤👏#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/qp5t1xWL2n
— wta (@WTA) April 9, 2026
In the Madrid 125, 22-year old Mintego del Olmo continued her belated rise up the tour rankings following a series of injury-plagued seasons after her junior slam title run at Wimbledon in 2021.
Having won four ITF titles since last May, this week the Spaniard reached her biggest career SF with wins over Irene Burillo, Nikola Bartunkova and Elina Avanesyan, only to fall to countrywoman Marina Bassols Ribera a round short of the final.
Already at a career-best #294, Mintegi del Olmo will nearly crack the Top 250 on Monday.
🔥 Ane Mintegi demostrando su buen momento de forma en los cuartos de final del Open Villa de Madrid frente a 🇦🇲 Elina Avanesyan. #GrandPrixMadrid pic.twitter.com/cZ8r7U59yQ
— Federación de Tenis de Madrid (@fedetenismadrid) April 10, 2026
…here comes the Waffle!
18-year old Vandromme, the girls’ U.S. Open and Junior Finals winner from a season ago, claimed her biggest career title in the $75K challenger in Calvi, France. It’s her second straight ITF title run.
Vandromme dominated Canada’s Katherine Sebov in a 6-0/6-0 final. Sebov, like the Belgian, had come into the event having not lost a set all week.
Vandromme will crack the Top 200 for the first time, coming in at #189.
Jeline Vandromme pic.twitter.com/U0WxUCS80z
— Ken McKinnon (@mckinnon88877) April 12, 2026
In Santa Margherita di Pula (ITA), 18-year old Grant (still less than a year into her U.S.-to-ITA switch), picked up her third career ITF title, but her first while representing Italy.
Grant, who won four girls’ doubles majors during her junior years (including AO-RG-WI titles in succession in ’25 w/ Iva Jovic), posted wins over Jana Kovackova (2nd Rd.), Martina Trevisan (SF) and Alena Kovackova (F, 6-4/6-2) to take the honors.
Grant had lost to Alena K. in the 1st Round in Santa Margherita di Pula the previous week.
A volta dos que não foram!
🇮🇹 𝗧𝘆𝗿𝗮 𝗚𝗿𝗮𝗻𝘁 vence 🇨🇿 𝗔𝗹𝗲𝗻𝗮 𝗞𝗼𝘃𝗮𝗰𝗸𝗼𝘃𝗮 pela final do ITF W35 Santa Margherita di Pula 🇮🇹 6-4 6-2
Grant volta as glórias em seu 3º título profissional
Kovackova, junior?#ITFWorldTennisTour pic.twitter.com/uCQBivMl7B
— All About Next Gen (@AllAboutNextGen) April 12, 2026
…the pool of young German talent has been growing in recent seasons, and 15-year old Wobker is right in the middle of that mix.
Wobker claimed her biggest junior title to date with a J500 run in Cairo without losing a set, finishing things off with a 7-5/6-4 win in the final over Hordette Felitsata Dorofeeva-Rybas.
Last August, Wobker won a $15K pro title in Dublin, adding her name to the short (but growing) list of players who’ve recently claimed pro singles titles before their 15th birthdays…
Teamwork makes the dreamwork 🤝🏆#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/cMAehplmFi
— wta (@WTA) April 12, 2026
…the veteran pair coasted to the Linz title without dropping a set, finishing things off with a 6-3/6-2 win in the final over the Czech duo of Maleckova/Skoch (they’d reached the final via MTB win in three straight matches), who were playing in their first tour-level title match as a team after having played in 26 finals (10 125, 16 ITF) together at lower levels.
The win, their first together, is the 18th tour title in Zhang’s career, and the 7th for Cirstea. Zhang’s first title came fifteen years ago (2011, w/ Kimiko Date-Krumm), while for Cirstea her maiden doubles win was eighteen years ago (in 2008 w/ Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova).
Zhang’s three titles this season ties her with Katerina Siniakova (with whom she won in Adelaide) and Taylor Townsend for the most on tour in ’26.
From opponents in Miami to doubles partners and champions in Linz!!! 🫂🏆💕#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/lQkefebJP8
— wta (@WTA) April 12, 2026
…a week after losing in the QF to eventual champion Guo Luoyao in the Busan 175, world #2 Li got a measure of revenge 67 miles away in Daego (South Korea) by defeating her Chinese opponent in the 6-3/6-3 final of the 500 level event. It’s AO champ Li’s first singles crown since winning in Melbourne.
Meanwhile, in Miki-City (JPN), #1 Kamiji swept the s/d titles at the smaller 175 event, dropping just nine games combined in *both* disciplines over seven total matches (7 games in 4 WS, 2 game in 3 WD) on the week.
Kamiji defeated countrywoman Saki Takamuro 6-2/6-0 in the final, and combined with Lucy Shuker to defeat Charlotte Fairback and 16-year old Seira Matsuoka 6-0/6-0 to take the doubles crown.

Jelena Ostapenko takes down Alex Eala 6-4, 7-5 in Linz 🎬#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/Hwy3rcYCX2
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) April 8, 2026
…6-4/7-5. After losing twice last year to the Filipina (the last, in Eastbourne, coming via retirement), Ostapenko begins the process of setting the record straight.
Hmmm, or maybe she saw the news this past week of Iga training at the Nadal Academy (ala Eala), and it simply triggered her “Swiatek game.”
Ostapenko rallied from 4-2 down in the 1st, then 5-1 back in the 2nd.
Alex Eala trains at the Rafael Nadal Academy? Like Iga Swiatek?! Alright, I know what I have to do. pic.twitter.com/cdjebl0GGa
— 🎾nebby🎾 (@1gamesetmatch) April 8, 2026
WHAT A MOMENT 🥹
Lilli Tagger is into her first clay quarterfinal, and at her home tournament!
#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/PwZdSXx1dx
— wta (@WTA) April 9, 2026
…6-2/7-6(11). In her short time on tour, Tagger has shown a great ability tor raise her game in “down the stretch” moments (even if she’s stumbled just moments before). She did it again in Linz vs. Samsonova.
After losing a 4-2 2nd set lead, and being unable to serve things out at 5-4, the 18-year old Austrian tightened things up to get off the court in two. Down 6-5, she saved four BP to get the hold and force a TB, then turned around another deficit after falling down SP at 6-4 in the breaker.
After the initial Samsonova SP in the TB, Tagger would go on to save three more (so, 8 in all) and finally convert on her fourth MP to win 13-11 and reach the QF (her first at tour level on clay) and assure her Top 100 breakthrough. She’s the youngest Austrian to reach a tour-level QF since 1993 (Barbara Schett).
“feels like a dream” 💚
Lilli Tagger speaks to the home crowd after her big win!#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/uT9i1Qgs5S
— wta (@WTA) April 9, 2026
Meanwhile, Samsonova, as seems to be her pattern almost every year, is off to another slow start (4-9).
…1-6/7-6(5)/6-4. Stephens didn’t play a match on clay in 2025, and came into Linz having lost in her last five outings on the surface in 2024. So, the former RG finalist’s win over Maria served as #552 Stephens’ first on the dirt since a 2nd Round victory in Madrid over Elise Mertens nearly two full years ago.
She lost in the 2nd Round to top seed Mirra Andreeva.
Round 2 secured 👏@SloaneStephens bounces back for the win over Maria, 1-6, 7-6(5), 6-4.#WTALinz pic.twitter.com/j3LpBUV6Vv
— wta (@WTA) April 6, 2026

…1-6/6-4/6-3. Andreeva’s final weeks as an 18-year old — she’ll turn 19 in two weeks — add another honor, as her fifth title ties Caroline Wozniacki for the most WTA titles won by an 18-and-under player… since Andreeva was born on April 29, 2007.
MIRRA TAKES IT ALL IN LINZ ✨
The No. 1 seed takes out Potapova 1-6, 6-4, 6-3 to win the title! #WTALinz pic.twitter.com/dmReeR3ntx
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) April 12, 2026
1. The
Losing 1-0.
Losing 2-1.
Win 3-2.Elite mentality by the 11-time World Champions 🇨🇿😤#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/SpIBA3E7Dd
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
2. Team GB, on the road
THE MIRACLE IN MELBOURNE!!!🔥🇬🇧
Against all the odds Great Britain🇬🇧 have beaten Australia🇦🇺 with one of their lowest ever ranked squads to qualify for the Billie Jean King Cup Finals👏🏼👏🏼
Absolutely incredible from all of them🇬🇧💪🏼
📸@the_LTA pic.twitter.com/0vW5dVPQxL
— British Tennis Players On Tour🇬🇧 (@BritishTennisUp) April 11, 2026
3. PUTINTSEVA!
She reeled her in and took the match 🎣
Yulia Putintseva was at her most passionate during a huge win against Kayla Cross 🔥#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/PsJ7gJE37a
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 10, 2026
4. A former Bannerette (Kaitlin Quevedo) putting up more singles wins in Portoroz for Team España than the entire U.S. team (1, in doubles, after going 0-3 in singles) in Ostend in a loss to Belgium
Con todos ustedes: Kaitlin Quevedo 🌟🇪🇸
¡Qué orgullo!
📸 @alvarodiazPHOTO /RFET I #BJKCup #VamosEspaña pic.twitter.com/6dcTDbb1gU
— Tenis España (@RFETenis) April 11, 2026
5. A *signature* Cup celebration, courtesy of the defending champs…
The reigning World Champions now get to celebrate in front of a home crowd 🇮🇹#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/t9vbAVd1Ww
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
1. The Aussies Down Under
…Samantha Stosur’s squad waited for Team GB in Melbourne with the team’s top two singles players (Gibson and Birrell) a combined 38-18 on the season, 34-10 since the Australian Open. They went 0-2 on Day 1, essentially sealing the team’s fate.
2. Team Poland
…with a cumulative match time for the squad’s three singles matches in a 4-0 loss to Ukraine coming in at 3:30… nine minutes less than the Putintseva/Andreescu match alone accounted for in the KAZ/CAN qualifying tie

An outrageous shot worthy of winning any game 🔥
Marie Bouzkova’s lob to take the set to a tiebreak is your Gainbridge Play of the Day 👏#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/zgOsZWjPtZ
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
[Ostend, BEL; RCI] – BEL d. USA 3-1 (MVP: Vandewinkel)
[Melbourne, AUS; HCO] – GBR d. AUS 3-1 (MVP: Stojsavljevic)
[Astana, KAZ; RCI] – KAZ d. CAN 3-1 (MVP: Putintseva)
[Portoroz, SLO; CCO] – ESP d. SLO 3-1 (MVP: Quevedo)
[Biel/Bienne, SUI; HCI] – CZE d. SUI 3-2 [ds] (MVP: Noskova)
[Gliwice, POL; RCI] – UKR d. POL 4-0 (MVP: Kostyuk)
…one might think that the Italians might view Cup success as “old hat,” but that “one” just doesn’t understand. Fact is, no Cup teams enjoy their success *more* than the Italians. Thankfully for them, they have a lot of it, including a dominating win this weekend in Velletri that sends the reigning champs back to Shenzhen to defend their title this September.
Perfect Paolini puts Italy 2-0 up 🇮🇹
The reigning World Champions are on the cusp of returning to Shenzhen to defend their crown 🏆#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/mmStNCez4b
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 10, 2026
After Elisabetta Cocciaretto opened things up with a 7-5/6-2 win over Moyuka Uchijima, Jasmine Paolini (last year’s Cup MVP) took over. She downed Himeno Sakutsume to put Italy up 2-0, then teamed with Italian Quartet founding member Sara Errani to make advancement official with another straights sets win (over Aoyama/Hozumi).
Captain Tathiana Garbin’s squad has won seven straight ties, matching Italy’s Quartet-era best from 2009-11.
SI TORNA A SHENZEN!! Italia alle FINALS di Billie Jean King Cup per il 5° anno di fila. Dominato il Giappone 3-0. SETTIMO TIE vinto di fila per le ragazze di Tathiana Garbin. Eguagliato il primato azzurro in BJK, fatto tra il 2009 e il 2011. Straordinarie pic.twitter.com/FCwQlvRVl2
— Giorgio Spalluto (@GeorgeSpalluto) April 11, 2026
Hanne Vandewinkel gets the job DONE against Iva Jovic 😤
Can Belgium cause an upset and take out 18-time World Champions USA? 👀#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/NHLbEtFlxh
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 10, 2026
…the Lindsay Davenport captaincy era for the U.S. hasn’t been a *bad* one (the team reached the final last year, only to be handled with ease by Team Italia), though it often *feels* that way after the reinvigorating stretch that was Kathy Rinaldi’s time at the helm. Thing is, with so many Bannerettes posting big results on tour, one would think that the pool of U.S. women for Davenport to pick from would ensure consistent success, but such a thing hasn’t come about since she took over the reigns starting in 2024, with surprise losses (or near defeats) standing out more than anything.
This tie was another good example, as the Belgians played host and sported the most experienced player in Elise Mertens (so, AD-Waffles, right?). But one *should* still expect better than an 0-3 mark in singles, led by Iva Jovic’s 0-2/zero-sets-won weekend (w/ an opening upset by Hanne Vandewinkel, and clinching defeat by the hand of Greet Minnen). Things *could* have been different, but McCartney Kessler’s retirement vs. Mertens (at 3-3 in the 3rd) on Friday put BEL up 2-0 and essentially sealed the U.S. team’s fate.
Caty McNally & Nicole Melichar-Martinez’s Match #3 tie-extending victory proved to be the lone Bannerette highlight of the trip.
Belgium is in the Finals for the first time since 2022.
A moment this Belgium team will never forget 🥹🇧🇪
The celebrations were worth the wait. See you in Shenzhen 👋#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/JrDO1Wgbya
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
A message from Mika Stojsavljevic ❤️#BackTheBrits 🇬🇧 | @BJKCup pic.twitter.com/MIL3DJjPap
— LTA (@the_LTA) April 10, 2026
…Anne Keothavong’s British squad, despite two consecutive BJK semifinals (and three in four years), remains the most underrated group in Cup play. Still, one would have been hard-pressed to think that they’d travel all the way to Melbourne with a largely unproven group and take down the home Aussie squad (w/ Sunshine Swing star Talia Gibson leading the way), but that’s just what they did.
17-year old Stojsavljevic, the ’24 U.S. Open junior champ, only played one match in the tie, but her key opening upset of Gibson (who came in 21-4 since the AO) in her Cup debut set the tone and pushed the home squad into an unexpected corner; while Harriet Dart’s three-set win over Kimberly Birrell to close out Day 1 made the deficit too large for Sam Stosur’s group to overcome.
Dart teamed with Jodie Burrage to take down Storm Hunter/Ellen Perez in straights in Match #3 to secure the win in the tie, with the final score only “sullied” by the mop-up win from another 17-year old, as Australia’s Emerson Jones defeated Katie Swan to avoid the shutout.
Cue the celebrations 🙌🇬🇧
The moment Harriet Dart and Jodie Burrage punched Team Great Britain’s ticket to Shenzhen.#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/iEUTklQOx9
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
…Astana was alight, as Putintseva stoked a loud Kazakh crowd and battled her way to two wins to send the nation to a second consective BJK Finals event.
In the past, Putintseva might have been forced to three sets in the opening match by young Kayla Cross (meaning *anything* could happen, and with Putintseva in the past it sometimes has), but she managed to break out of a late tie to get things done in straights; while Bianca Andreescu rallied from 4-0 down in the 2nd vs. Zhibek Kulambayeva to win in two and knot the tie after Day 1. Day 2 would prove to be a wild one.
Huge moment in this tie, the celebrations say it all 👏
Kazakhstan def. Canada 7-5, 6-1 in the doubles and are one win away from a place in the Finals 🇰🇿#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/vU325FQeIe
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
Anna Danilina & Kulambayeva teamed to down Andreescu/Cross to give KAZ the lead on Saturday, and then Andreescu returned shortly after to play singles with Canada’s survival on the line. She and Putintseva engaged in a 3:39 marathon (not officially the longest match of the year, as BJK matches don’t count… but no WTA/GS MD match has gone longer in ’26) in which Putintseva saved a SP to take the 1st, then twice erased Andreescu break leads in the 3rd (saving 6 Andreescu GP to get a break for 1-1, then four BP to hold for 6-5) before winning a deciding TB to clinch Kazakhstan’s victory.
Hmmm, if Rybakina plays in September, and Putintseva maintains this level of clutch play, KAZ could be a real “sleeper” in Shenzhen.
All heart from Kaitlin Quevedo… and a touch of class 👌
She came from 5-2 down to win the first set tiebreak and edge Spain closer to the Finals 🇪🇸#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/PmXrUJg3N5
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
…20-year old Florida-born Spaniard Quevedo, in her Cup debut, led Carla Suarez Navarro’s Team España to the BJK Finals for a third straight year, collecting a pair of singles wins over Tamara Zidansek (who retired from Match #1 with an ankle injury w/ the match tied at a set each) and Veronika Erjavec (to secure the tie in Match #4, after Erjavec had knotted things at 1-1 with a Day 1-closing win for Slovenia over Leyre Romero Gormaz) as Spain was one of the four (in seven Qualifier ties) road teams to advance to Shenzhen.
La canción con el billete a China. Sin paabras 🥹🎶#BJKCup #VamosEspaña pic.twitter.com/04DHzmT9AC
— Tenis España (@RFETenis) April 11, 2026
…the Petr Pala era of Czech Cup tennis was a brilliant one, though the last final/title for the nation came back in 2018. So, in 2026, enter Barbora Strycova as the new keeper of the flame. So far, so good.
The CZE/SUI tie in Biel/Bienne was the true gem of the BJK Qualifiers weekend, with Belinda Bencic putting in over *seven* hours of time on the court in a *losing* effort, Linda Noskova saving three MP (also tie-clinching points) to keep the Czechs alive in Match #4, and then Marie Bouzkova rebounding on Day 2 (after a Day 1 three-set defeat vs. Bencic) to clinch the tie on indoor hard courts a week after she’d won a tour title on clay in Bogota.
Day 1 only proved to set the table, as Bencic bounced back to win Match #1 after seeing Bouzkova erase a set and 3-0, double-break lead to force a 3rd, then Noskova knotted things with a straights sets win over Viktorija Golubic.
Bencic/Golubic outlasted Tereza Valentiova & Marketa Vondrousova (yes, the Czech team is still *that* deep… and the young Crushers, nor Karolina Muchova or either of Krejickova or Siniakova, were even involved in this one) in another three-setter that included a pair of tie-breaks, giving SUI a 2-1 lead.
With Bencic back yet again and looking to clinch the win, she held three MP vs. Noskova in the 3rd set TB of Match #4, only to see Noskova surge last and win 11-9 to force the only deciding singles match in the return of the best-of-five (w/ WD as Match #3) format at these Qualifiers. There, Bouzkova returned and took a 1st set TB from Golubic, winning 7-6(4)/6-3 to send the Czechs to Shenzhen after the team saw its season end early in ’25 for one of the few times since 2008.
Starting in 2009, the Czechs have posted Cup finishes of:
2009: SF
2010: SF
2011: W
2012: W
2013: SF
2014: W
2015: W
2016: W
2017: SF
2018: W
2019: QF
2020/21: BJK Finals event (rr)
2022: SF
2023: SF
2024: BJK Finals event (QF)
2025: lost in Qualifiers rr
2026: back to 8-team BJK Finals event
…the one *dud* of the Qualifiers, as the Iga/Frech-less Poles played at home, but barely put up a fight against the Ukrainians, being unable (unlike in the other two weekend ties which saw nations take 3-0 leads) to even notch a “garbage” win in a dead singles match after the final result had already been determined. In all, Poland spent just three and half hours on court in three singles matches, winning only twelve games.
Kostyuk opened things with a strong 6-4/6-0 win over Magda Linette, followed by Elina Svitolina’s 6-2/6-1 dominance of Katarzyna Kawa. Maja Chwalinska & Martyna Kubka put up the best effort for Poland in doubles, but still fell to the Kichenok sisters in three to seal the victory. Oleksandra Oliynykova added a clean-up/shutout Cup win to what has already been an eye-opening ’26 campaign for her.
What it means to represent Ukraine with the Kichenok twins 🥹🇺🇦#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/dIEgOiZB8y
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026

…6-3/3-6/7-6(9). Czech Cup history, already filled will too many big moments to count, added another with this one, as Noskova came within a point — on three Bencic MP — of seeing the maiden tie of Barbora Strycova’s captaincy end in defeat, only to come roaring back and hand the baton to Marie Bouzkova to take over the finish line.
In the 3rd set, Bencic twice saved a pair of BP in games 2 and 4, and found herself up a break at 4-3. She served for the match (and the tie for the Swiss) at 5-4, but was soon forced to a TB by the Czech.
In the breaker, Noskova led 4-1. But Bencic ran off five of six points to reach MP at 6-5. She’d ultimately have three — leading also at 7-6 and 8-7 — before Noskova edged back ahead, finally winning 11-9 on her second MP.
Linda Noskova never stopped believing despite facing three match points 👏
Switzerland and Czechia head to a deciding match in the BJK Cup Qualifiers 🇨🇭🇨🇿#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/VLu0Ljtbuf
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026
Bouzkova then arrived in the “closer’s” position, handing Victorija Golubic a 7-6(4)/6-3 defeat to send the Czechs to the BJK Cup Finals event.
🇰🇿Yulia Putinseva defeats 🇨🇦Bianca Andreescu to send Kazakhstan through to the BJK Cup Finals later this year.
What a battle between these two.
Andreescu goes through a grueling two days in Astana, spending a total of 6 hours and 51 minutes on court‼️ #CdnTennis #BJKCup pic.twitter.com/2Qn7x8DbPF
— Jacob Pacheco (@JacobPacheco6) April 11, 2026
…7-6(5)/3-6/7-6(4). Putintseva has a history of long battles in Cup play, no matter the level of opponent, but she’s often come up short in such situations. Not this time.
Andreescu led 5-3 in the 1st, holding a SP on Putintseva’s serve, but the Kazakh pushed things to a TB and used her early advantage there to take the lead in the match. In the 3rd, back-to-back breaks opened the set, as Putintseva broke the Canadian on BP #3 in an eight-deuce game 2 (Andreescu had six GP) to tie things at 1-all. They traded breaks again in games 7/8, as Putintseva leveled things once more after falling behind, then she saved four BP to hold for a 6-5 edge.
Things went to a TB, won 7-4 by the Kazakh, but ended unceremoniously by a second serve that Andreescu will surely try (as hard as it may be to do after battling for 3:39 only to come up short) to forget as soon as possible. Andreescu was also part of the losing CAN doubles match earlier in the day.
Oh my god…
On match point. After 3 hours and 38 minutes on Court – 🇨🇦Bianca Andreescu with one of the biggest miss hits on her second serve I’ve ever seen to send Kazakhstan🇰🇿 to the #BJKCup Finals in September.
Absolutely. Brutal. @BJKCup #CdnTennis #WTA pic.twitter.com/rTJ0GNDGbP
— Jacob Pacheco (@JacobPacheco6) April 11, 2026
…7-6(4)/7-5. Gibson came home after posting a 21-4 post-AO mark, but the 17-year old Brit made her Cup debut a memorable one.
Despite losing a 3-1 mid-set edge in the 1st. Stojsavljevic seized control of the TB to take the match lead, then avoided letting the 2nd set slip away in similar fashion. The Brit led 5-2, and served for the win at 5-3, but Gibson pulled even at 5-5. At that point, the teenager saved five BP to hold for a 6-5 lead, then broke the Aussie at 15 to complete the upset. Australia never recovered.
Dream debut 🌟
Mika Stojsavljevic defeats Gibson 7-6(4) 7-5 to give Team Great Britain a 1-0 lead.#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/nrEFmK03l6
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 10, 2026
…7-6(3)/2-6/3-3 ret. After Iva Jovic’s surprise defeat in the opening match, the U.S. *had* to have a win in match #2. Kessler put herself in the mix, rallying from 5-2 down in the 1st, saving a SP and forcing a TB. But Mertens dominated the breaker 7-3, a moment that would prove to be even more important later in the match.
Kessler won the 2nd but, tied at 3-3 in the 3rd, she pulled up with a back injury after a second serve, leading to a retirement that gave the Waffles a 2-0 lead after Day 1. It would prove to be too much to overcome.
Caty McNally & Nicole Melichar-Martinez notched a tie-extending win in Match 3 on Saturday to stay alive, making Mertens’ win over Kessler all the more key, as Minnen followed up with a *second* defeat of Jovic to secure the win.
…if things had gone just a *bit* differently (as in converting one of her three MP vs. Noskova), Bencic would have been *the* star of Cup weekend. As it is, the two wins in which she played a hand will have to stand as a testament to her overall effort, even if it all ultimately went for naught.
Incredible 24-shot rally 👏
Belinda Bencic refused to lose that point 😤#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/s3mhOyDt1Z
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 10, 2026
Bouzkova turned the opening match of the tie into tone-setting battle, rallying frm 6-3/3-0 (double-break) down, saving three BP to take a 6-5 lead, then staging a comeback from 4-1 down in the TB to force a 3rd. Bencic won it, but the die was cast.
Teamed up for doubles, Bencic & Golubic lost a 3-1 lead in the 1st, dropping the opener, and let a 4-2 edge slip away in the 2nd. But the Swiss dominated a 7-0 breaker, then took the 3rd at 6-1. A match later, Bencic was a point away (three times) from sending Switzerland to Shenzhen.
But, you know, the Czechs.
In all, Bencic spent 7:43 on the court spread out over three matches… for nothing.
| TOP BJK Q PLAYERS | TOP BJK Q CAPTAINS |
|---|---|
| 1. Linda Noskova, CZE | 1. Anne Keothavong, GBR |
| 2. Yulia Putintseva, KAZ | 2. Barbora Strycova, CZE |
| 3. Mika Stojsavljevic, GBR | 3. Wim Fissette, BEL |
| 4. Hanne Vandewinkel, BEL | 4. Tathiana Garbin, ITA |
| 5. Harriet Dart, GBR | 5. Carla Suarez-Navarro, ESP |
| 6. Greet Minnen, BEL | 6. Heinz Gunthardt, SUI (L) |
| 7. Kaitlin Quevedo, ESP | 7. Yuriy Schukin, KAZ |
| 8. Marta Kostyuk, UKR | 8. Illya Marchenko, UKR |
| 9. Jasmine Paolini, ITA | |
| 10. Elisabetta Cocciaretto, ITA | |
Belinda Bencic/SUI (L) Bencic/Golubic, SUI Burrage/Dart, GBR Marie Bouzkova, CZE Danilina/Kulambayeva, KAZ Errani/Paolini, ITA Kichenok/Kichenok, UKR McNally/Melichar-M., USA (L) Elise Mertens, BEL (L) Elina Svitolina, UKR |
The eight nations still competing to be crowned World Champions 🏆
See You in Shenzhen 👋🇮🇹🇬🇧🇪🇸🇨🇿🇺🇦🇰🇿🇧🇪🇨🇳#BJKCup pic.twitter.com/SFsAidI8Q5
— Billie Jean King Cup (@BJKCup) April 11, 2026

That she can be hounded and stressed out even a little bit by this — THIS — is one of the pure examples of lunacy.
This Miu Miu campaign with Coco Gauff shows off her natural hair and effortless beauty. Yet some folks are out here calling a pulled-back style “civil rights era” as if embracing your natural self is outdated.
The real flex is loving yourself and how you appear and MiuMiu… https://t.co/3FIfIfHVCJ
— Athlete Vanity (@AthleteVanity) April 4, 2026
Coco Gauff wore her natural hair in Miu Miu’s SS26 campaign, and the internet lost it. After a tough Miami Open final, she returned to X only to face more toxicity. She deserves better. pic.twitter.com/Pr05aogRlU
— Feminegra (@feminegra) April 6, 2026
ANYONE who spoke poorly about her… your fucking days are numbered!! Yall made her post an 8 minute video about this shit 🤬🤬 pic.twitter.com/L4eqxHEqyE
— slice and dice (@slice_szn) April 9, 2026
Gauff is such an unproblematic individual that people have to scour the fine print to find something to attack her with. This is actually pretty good advice…
girl stop all this sad shit. forreal i saw your tiktok comments.
ive already been through this so im speaking from experience.
you’re on top of the world. pure talent, hard work, and with no makeup.
you should be laughing like this 😈 every time you open social media. having…
— pink (@iJaadee) April 6, 2026
“I’m not going to apologize for the way that my hair looked.”
Coco Gauff opened up about criticism she received on a Miu Miu sponsored photoshoot. https://t.co/o7JYUAeZkE
— TENNIS (@Tennis) April 10, 2026

New WTA headshots on the player profiles!!! 💜 pic.twitter.com/SDzDNhvSq1
— 🧡 (@VenusGauff) April 8, 2026
The best evidence of the tour’s consistent coming-up-short when it comes to serving the fans — i.e. the people whose interest provides a basis for the WTA’s continuing existence — is the vast overreaction of glee from parts far and wide over the new set of bio head shots that debuted on the tour website this week. People sometimes want so little, and often get so much less than that, that just a smidgen of something nice is met with overwhelming praise.
That said, on the bright side…
finally an official headshot! pic.twitter.com/2pNt1QsBVG
— josh❕ (@leylixshapeescu) April 8, 2026
Of course, that it took nearly a year after her breakout summer to get an official Mboko head shot — after it took far too long *last* season to get *any* sort of photo on her bio — is another long (well, short, really) story altogether.

The WTA has made two tweets this week promoting The Masters.
This week they have made zero tweets talking about doubles in Linz. Or the WTA125 in Madrid. Or the BJK Cup Qualifiers which also start today. https://t.co/SQDlv6325w
— Owen (@kostekcanu) April 9, 2026
I’ve been saying it for the longest time. they don’t truly care about their women. they act like the WTA125s don’t exist. meanwhile the ATP promotes the Challengers regularly.
Hell, they rarely even tweet at all about some of their 250s. really absurd behavior
— Florence (@Floxxyi9) April 9, 2026
@wta Last week they did almost none promotion for the WTA250 in Colombia. It drives me crazy how bad they are in promoting women’s tennis
— Priscila Araujo (@prisciladodgers) April 9, 2026
Oh no WTA, not again! 😅
Mirra Andreeva and Anastasia Potapova will contest the final in 🇦🇹 Linz 🏆 pic.twitter.com/eER8CahqGt
— The First Serve (@TheFirstServeAU) April 12, 2026

Meanwhile, the WTA’s social media team has been occasionally trying to (half-heartedly) sneak in a minor effort at another campaign since the start of the season, this time dubbed #ThisIsOurStage, which is really just an offshoot off last year’s failed marketing campaign with a different name but interchangeable videos.
Lyudmyla Kichenok’s advice: do your thing 💪#ThisIsOurStage pic.twitter.com/aTyfk27oXg
— wta (@WTA) April 8, 2026
For the love of tennis 🤩@evalys_ | #ThisIsOurStage pic.twitter.com/5ZcPIZqq40
— wta (@WTA) April 12, 2026

Donna was ready to enter but Pliskova was announced first 😂😂 pic.twitter.com/n5IWYqm4yG
— Lorena Popa 🕵️♀️🎾 (@popalorena) April 10, 2026

Penko is not happy with the crowd and just told someone to come take her racquet and play so she can learn how to play from them 😭 pic.twitter.com/L6HwSBK9kw
— Owen (@kostekcanu) April 8, 2026

China (2026 host – Shenzhen)
Belgium (qualifier)
Czech Republic (qualifier)
Great Britain (qualifier)
Italy (qualifier)
Kazakhstan (qualifier)
Spain (qualifier)
Ukraine (qualifier)
[in 2026 BJK Playoffs (Nov.)]
Australia (lost in Qualifiers)
Canada (lost in Qualifiers)
Japan (lost in Qualifiers)
Poland (lost in Qualifiers)
Slovenia (lost in Qualifiers)
Switzerland (lost in Qualifiers)
United States (lost in Qualifiers)
Argentina (promoted from Americas I zone play)
Brazil (promoted from Americas I zone play)
France (promoted from Europe/Africa I zone play)
Hungary (promoted from Europe/Africa I zone play)
Indonesia (promoted from Asia/Oceania I zone play)
Sweden (promoted from Europe/Africa I zone play)
Thailand (promoted from Asia/Oceania I zone play)
*WTA TEENAGE CHAMPS in 2020s*
6 – Coco Gauff (2021,2023-24)
5 – MIRRA ANDREEVA (2024-26)
3 – Iga Swiatek (2020-21)
2 – Leylah Fernandez (2021-22)
2 – Maya Joint (2025)
2 – Victoria Mboko (2025)
2 – Clara Tauson (2021)
1 – Linda Fruhvirtova (2022)
1 – Iva Jovic (2025)
1 – Ashlyn Krueger (2023)
1 – Linda Noskova (2024)
1 – Camila Osorio (2021)
1 – Emma Raducanu (2021)
1 – Tiantsoa Sarah Rakotomanga Rajaonah (2025)
1 – Diana Shnaider (2024)
1 – Maria Timofeeva (2023)
*18-and-UNDER WTA TITLES SINCE M.ANDREEVA’S BIRTH (April 29, 2007)*
5 – MIRRA ANDREEVA (2024-26)
5 – Caroline Wozniacki (2008-09)
3 – Coco Gauff (2019-21,23)
2 – Bianca Andreescu (2019)
2 – Belinda Bencic (2015)
2 – Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (2010-11)
2 – Aga Radwanska (2007)
2 – Agnes Szavay (2008)
2 – Clara Tauson (2021)
2 – Dayana Yastremska (2018-19)
*2026 WTA SINGLES TITLES*
3 – Aryna Sabalenka = 2 1000/1 500
2 – Jessie Pegula = 1 1000/1 500
2 – MIRRA ANDREEVA = 2 500
*MOST WTA FINALS in 2026*
4 – Aryna Sabalenka (3-1)
2 – MIRRA ANDREEVA (2-0)
2 – Jessie Pegula (2-0)
2 – Elena Rybakina (1-1)
2 – Elina Svitolina (1-1)
2 – Victoria Mboko (0-2)
[nation]
6 (3 wins) – USA
4 (3) – BLR
4 (1) – UKR
3 (3) – CZE
3 (2) – RUS*
2 (1) – GBR
2 (1) – KAZ
2 (0) – CAN
*2026 YOUNGEST WTA SEMIFINALISTS*
18 – Iva Jovic, USA (Auckland)
18 – Mirra Andreeva, RUS (Adelaide)-W
18 – MIRRA ANDREEVA, RUS (Linz)-W
18 – Iva Jovic, USA (Hobart)-RU
18 – Iva Jovic, USA (Charleston)
19 – Victoria Mboko, CAN (Adelaide)-RU
19 – Victoria Mboko, CAN (Doha)-RU
*2026 OLDEST WTA WD FINALISTS*
41 – Vera Zvonareva (Dubai)
40 – Hsieh Su-wei (Doha)
40 – Hsieh Su-wei (Brisbane)-W
38 – Sara Errani (Miami)
37 – Laura Siegemund (Dubai)
37 – ZHANG SHUAI (Linz)-W
36 – Zhang Shuai (AO)-W)
36 – Zhang Shuai (Adelaide)-W)
36 – SORANA CIRSTEA (Linz)-W
[duos]
73 – Linz: CIRSTEA/ZHANG (36/37)-W
68 – Dubai: Siegemund/Zvonareva (41/37)
*2026 WTA DOUBLES TITLES*
3 – Katerina Siniakova
3 – Taylor Townsend
3 – ZHANG SHUAI
| 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | United States (W) Belgium Czech Republic Spain (RU) |
Russia (W) Belgium (RU) France (Group 2nd) Spain (Group 2nd) |
Italy Slovak Republic (W) Austria Spain (RU) |
|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | Belgium United States (RU) Russia France (W) |
France (RU) Spain Russia (W) Austria |
Russia (W) United States Spain France (RU) |
| 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | Belgium (RU) United States Spain Italy (W) |
Italy (RU) France Russia (W) United States |
Russia (W) United States China Spain (RU) |
| 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | Russia Italy (W) United States (RU) Czech Republic |
Italy (W) Czech Republic Russia United States (RU) |
Italy Russia (RU) Czech Republic (W) Belgium |
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | Russia Serbia (RU) Italy Czech Republic (W) |
Czech Republic Italy (W) Russia (RU) Slovak Republic |
Italy Czech Republic (W) Germany (RU) Australia |
| 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | Czech Republic (W) France Russia (RU) Germany |
Czech Republic (W) Switzerland France (RU) Netherlands |
Czech Republic United States (W) Belarus (RU) Switzerland |
| 2018 | 2019 | 2020/21 | Germany Czech Republic (W) France United States (RU) |
Romania France (W) Belarus Australia (RU) |
Russian TF (W) United States Australia Switzerland (RU) |
| 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | Switzerland (W) Czech Republic Great Britain Australia (RU) |
Czech Republic Canada (W) Italy (RU) Slovenia |
Great Britain Slovakia (RU) Poland Italy (W) |
| 2025 | Italy (W) Ukraine United States (RU) Great Britain |
|


SNL UK does a great job with Melania 🤣 pic.twitter.com/mgidBL3d7A
— Wu Tang is for the Children (@WUTangKids) April 12, 2026

Fascinating!
A lecture on diplomatic decorum from a regime that’s made threats against allies its primary foreign policy tool. And more “preposterous” is the fake outrage from a knob actively campaigning for Orbán, an authoritarian who’s spent years antagonizing NATO and the EU. pic.twitter.com/mrqUWhxu1g— the Astute Brute (@theastutebrute) April 9, 2026

She’s brilliant. pic.twitter.com/Hbm0GY108X
— 𝕷𝖚𝖈𝖎𝖋𝖊𝖗 (@LucifersTweetz) April 12, 2026

Facts spoken by an ex-trumper…
— Y.O.L.O.0311 (@yolo0311.bsky.social) April 6, 2026 at 8:31 AM

I have a new post on my author blog. #NationalPoetryMonth pic.twitter.com/4SPZyJf2Fl
— Diane Elayne Dees (@WomenWhoServe) April 7, 2026

2002 → 2026
Built from the Zamboni used in the 2002 Salt Lake Winter Olympic Games, our Zammoth is a reimagined piece of Utah history. pic.twitter.com/0CSm3QgRlV
— Utah Mammoth (@utahmammoth) April 7, 2026
The NHL has been around 100 years and Utah figured it out in one 😤 https://t.co/0Kug3ezqMJ
— Lieutenant Dam (@Lieutenant_Dam) April 7, 2026
INTRODUCING, THE ZAMMOTH!!! 🤩
📺: @espn ➡️ pic.twitter.com/b4fKKlXPde
— NHL (@NHL) April 8, 2026

Rare picture of a tree sneaking out of the woods. pic.twitter.com/1tXerlxHS9
— Nitor (@Nit0r) April 6, 2026

Ukrainian actress Tania Galakhova portrayed what it’s like to live with depression pic.twitter.com/RcrcrEhGcw
— Science girl (@sciencegirl) April 8, 2026

Alpacas being judgemental pic.twitter.com/PuHPUXzv36
— Science girl (@sciencegirl) April 9, 2026

The day Brazilian TV pulled off one of its best pranks pic.twitter.com/3oyo3O32R1
— Today In History (@historigins) April 12, 2026




