Sports
College baseball 2026: Top storylines, POY picks and MCWS predictions
Welcome to the 2026 college baseball season!
With star players coast to coast, this opening weekend is sure to be as entertaining as ever. Shortstop Roch Cholowsky leads a talented No. 1 UCLA Bruins squad, Alabama’s Justin Lebron looks like the SEC’s premier player, and Georgia Tech’s Drew Burress might just keep racking up wild numbers.
We’ve also got a slew of new head coaches at top programs looking to make their marks early on, such as Josh Elander at Tennessee and Chris Pollard at Virginia. So, what else are we looking forward to this season? Our college baseball experts break it all down, plus give some way-too-early predictions for the end of the year.
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Top storylines | Teams to watch
Under the radar | POY picks
MCWS predictions
What are you most excited about for 2026?
Ryan McGee: How about all these new coaches in some high-profile places? We did Marty & McGee from Starkville, Mississippi, last fall and I went over to The Dude with 15,000 of my friends, and seeing Brian O’Connor in maroon and white was downright psychedelic. Chris Pollard at Virginia, Josh Elander and James Ramsey with the big promotions at Tennessee and Georgia Tech, respectively — that’s a lot of movement at programs that know the road to Omaha.
Chris Burke: There are so many fascinating storylines in college baseball as we get ready to kick off 2026, but two of them are really top of mind. First, can UCLA unseat the SEC from making it seven straight national championships? History has not been kind to preseason No. 1 teams, but UCLA has the star power and experience to run this race. Can the Bruins live up to the hype? Secondly, speaking of UCLA’s star power, its biggest star is consensus projected No. 1 pick SS Roch Cholowsky. He leads a group of three shortstops who could all be top-five picks in this summer’s MLB draft. Alabama’s Justin Lebron and Kentucky’s Tyler Bell are two other DUDES to keep your eye on. This trio could be the best group of college shortstops we’ve seen in a long time!
David Dellucci: Several big programs in the preseason top 25 rankings have never won a national championship. One of the winningest programs historically, No. 16 Florida State, tops the list with tons of Men’s College World Series trips, but zero titles. Others from the rankings who have never hoisted the trophy are No. 5 Georgia Tech, No. 7 Arkansas, No. 8 Louisville, No. 9 Auburn, No. 10 TCU, No. 11 North Carolina, No. 17 NC State, No. 20 Southern Miss and No. 25 Texas A&M. All have strong histories, deep runs, near misses, but no hardware. After watching Indiana’s historic national championship season in football, these teams have to be thinking this could be their year to break through.
Kiley McDaniel: Given my draft-related focus, I’ll be watching the battle between (for now) Cholowsky and Lebron for the top pick in the draft. Cholowsky has the early lead as the clear top prospect due to having four of his five tools grading as plus, but Lebron has the tools to overtake him if he can make more consistent contact this spring. If he can, Lebron may have all five tools as plus.
Mike Rooney: Skip Bertman authored the original LSU baseball dynasty by winning an astounding five national titles from 1991 to 2000. And now Jay Johnson and this current iteration of the Tigers have won two in the past three years. With Tony Vitello leaving Tennessee for the San Francisco Giants, has that paved the way for a 2.0 version of LSU’s dominance in college baseball? Preseason No. 1 UCLA would like a word … as would Mississippi State and its new skipper Brian O’Connor. Regardless, the LSU Tigers are the best program in the sport right now.
Which teams should we be watching?
McGee: The UCLA Bruins fascinate me. They were so good. Then they were so bad. Then we were all like, “They’ll just keep losing players to NIL elsewhere.” Then they joined the Big Ten. Then they nearly lost their ballpark. Now, they are so good again. Like, preseason No. 1 with the No. 1 MLB draft pick good. I’m fascinated, and we all should be.
Burke: Some of the teams I’ll be watching early will have my attention because of changes in leadership. Three of the top 14 teams in the preseason poll have new head coaches. No. 4 Mississippi State, No. 5 Georgia Tech and No. 14 Tennessee will all carry high expectations into a season where they break in new skippers. Mississippi State is led by one of the most accomplished coaches in the sport in O’Connor, who left the national championship program he built at Virginia to head to Starkville, to try to get that storied program back to Omaha. Meanwhile, Georgia Tech and Tennessee have handed the keys of their programs to their previous recruiting coordinators as Ramsey and Elander take over with sky-high expectations. Watching them manage those rosters will be fascinating.
Dellucci: Mississippi State and Georgia Tech are in comparable situations — historic programs that finished the past two seasons with eliminations in road regionals and both having fan bases who value beating in-state rivals as much as trips to Omaha. Although State’s head coach O’Connor and Tech’s Ramsey are entering in Year 1, they are stacked with two of the most talented rosters in baseball. The Jackets will field the top position player group in the country, led by No. 1 outfielder Drew Burress and No. 2 second baseman Jarren Advincula and catcher Vahn Lackey, while the Bulldogs’ lineup consists of a potent offense featuring preseason All-Americans Ace Reese and Noah Sullivan, along with highly touted freshman Jacob Parker.
McDaniel: Anchored by Cholowsky, UCLA is the big dog out west along with Oregon State, Coastal Carolina is the mid-major that’s a big threat, and TCU leads the way from the Big 12. Basically, all of the other teams you need to pay attention to in terms of making it to Omaha are in the SEC and ACC. Traditional powers like LSU, Texas, Arkansas, Florida, Tennessee and a resurgent Mississippi State lead the way in the SEC while Georgia Tech, Louisville and North Carolina are the strongest competitors in the ACC.
Rooney: UCLA returned the majority of its Omaha roster. And then it won the offseason by acquiring transfer ace Logan Reddemann (San Diego), center fielder Will Gasparino (Texas) and high school righthander Angel Cervantes. Cervantes, who was taken 50th overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates, was the highest drafted player to make it to campus. Threats to the Bruins include an LSU program with momentum, a Texas team with pitching for days and two teams in Auburn and TCU with arguably the best sophomore classes in the sport.
What’s something, or someone, under the radar to keep tabs on?
McGee: Maybe it’s because my dad is a former East Carolina pitcher and I’m a little close to it, but I feel like every year I use this spot to point out the Pirates. They are still the greatest baseball program to never make it to Omaha. After a very nice job emerging from a lot of transitional stuff one year ago, might this finally be their ticket to sail that pirate ship up the Missouri River?
Burke: An under-the-radar team to watch is Kansas. Yes, I said Kansas. In case you haven’t noticed, Dan Fitzgerald has turned Kansas into a legit NCAA regional contender and has one of the most talented hitters in the country leading the way this year. Brady Ballinger is the junior first baseman for the Jayhawks. He posted a 1.164 OPS last year, along with 16 homers. Don’t be surprised if at the end of the year KU is in the tournament and Ballinger is the Big 12 player of the year.
Dellucci: Vanderbilt pitcher Connor Fennell is a player to keep an eye on. Fennell defies today’s starting pitcher stereotype with his lean build and sub-90 mph fastball. What he lacks in modern-day analytics, he makes up with pinpoint accuracy, confidence and competitiveness. Fennell improved from a 4-4 record with 4.74 ERA at Dayton to 6-0 and 2.53 ERA at Vanderbilt, and he was a national leader in strikeout percentage, tallying 84 Ks to 11 walks in 53.1 innings. Fennell even held the talented hitters in the SEC to a .174 batting average.
Arkansas Little Rock finished the regular season losing 13 of its last 14 games before sweeping the Ohio Valley Conference tournament earning an automatic bid to regionals, where it outslugged Dallas Baptist for the first regional win in school history. Riding the hot streak, the Trojans then beat LSU before being edged out in a winner-take-all rematch that sent LSU to super regionals.
Coach Chris Curry’s five-year contract extension shows Little Rock’s commitment to its rising program and the immediate effect was keeping veterans like Angel Cano, who earned Baton Rouge Regional MVP after hitting three HRs and 14 RBIs, Ty Rhoades and Malcolm Brown, along with bringing in a talented transfer portal group that includes four players from the SEC.
McDaniel: Southern Miss is always dangerous from the mid-major ranks, but can get lost in the buzz around Coastal Carolina. Texas A&M seems primed to bounce back from a down 2025 season. Shane Sdao and Weston Moss can anchor the weekend rotation while Gavin Grahovac is returning from injury in the lineup, Chris Hacopian is one of the best transfers in the country, and Nico Partida could be one of the better freshmen in the country.
Rooney: Unranked Cal Poly and Arizona State are very interesting, unranked, teams on the West Coast. The Mustangs bring back nearly 70% of last season’s production, and that team was a regional finalist. Shortstop Nate Castellon (.888 OPS) and third baseman Alejandro Garza (.889) might be the best infield duo on the West Coast. Arizona State crushed the transfer portal and this program already returned an elite lefthander in Cole Carlon and one of the best bats in the Big 12 in Landon Hairston. Transfer outfielder Dean Toigo (UNLV) was co-MVP of the Mountain West last season, and the Sun Devils bullpen is flush with velocity and out pitches.
Who are your early player-of-the-year picks?
McGee: That No. 1 MLB pick pretty much everyone here has already mentioned: Cholowsky. He’s the truth. And in Omaha last summer, the country saw what a beast Coastal Carolina’s Cameron Flukey can be. He struck out 117 batters one year ago.
Burke: Cholowsky is too easy of an answer here, so I’ll go with Mississippi State’s Reese. The slugging third baseman posted .352/21/66 last year, and he saved his best work for conference play. If MSU gets back to the top of the heap this year, Reese will be a huge reason.
Dellucci: Cholowsky had a memorable 2025, leading the Bruins to their first Men’s College World Series since 2013 and winning nearly every award, including the Dick Howser Trophy. But even with putting up an impressive stat line of .353/25/74, the national championship and Golden Spikes Award eluded him. With only one hit and one win in Omaha, he will have fuel to surpass his personal stats and the team’s success from last season.
Burress’ start to his college career was so dominant, batting .381/25/67, that I guess last season’s stat line of .333/19/62 could be considered a sophomore slump. Both performances earned him a place on the Golden Spikes semifinalist list in back-to-back years. Along with being one of the most feared hitters in college baseball, Burress is a human highlight reel in center field with game changing speed.
McDaniel: Cholowsky is the easy pick with Lebron also under consideration, but it wouldn’t shock me if Burress has a huge spring and ends up winning the hardware. You can debate what his pro potential is given his stature, but what he’s doing works at the top of the college level without a doubt. I tend to think it’ll work in the big leagues, too.
Rooney: Burress is an undersized outfielder with thunder in his hands and someone will have to wrestle player of the year honors away from him. That said, this is the year of the shortstop in college baseball. Cholowsky, Lebron and Bell are the big three, and all of them are projected top-10 picks. Eric Becker (Virginia), Steven “Monster” Milam (LSU) and Maddox Molony (Oregon) would be Tier 1 in a normal year. And there’s more where that came from.
Give your way-too-early MCWS prediction!
McGee: LSU continues its new gen dynasty, but it’ll have to survive an epic SEC vs. Pac-12, er, Big Ten matchup over UCLA to do it.
Burke: Impossible to pick the Omaha field at this point, so I’ll just keep it general to conference. The SEC will have three, ACC two, UCLA will be there, and that leaves two spots for teams from the rest of the field … Coastal Carolina? TCU? Wouldn’t shock me! Let’s go!
Dellucci: My early prediction: If the bracket is aligned accordingly, LSU edges UCLA in Game 3 of the Men’s College World Series finals, becoming the first back-to-back champs since South Carolina, and the second repeat in program history after the Tigers’ dominant 1996-97 run.
McDaniel: I’ll go with LSU over UCLA. UCLA has top-end talent and depth along with experience, but I worry that the depth of high-level experience from pro-level arms isn’t good enough to compete with LSU’s. Every year we seem to see the team with depth of power arms get through the grueling postseason.
Rooney: We’ve had back-to-back outlier fields in the MCWS: just two conferences represented in 2024 and then a whopping seven last season. In 2026, I believe an ACC team will reach the MCWS finals for the first time since 2015. Clemson, Arizona State, Oklahoma State and Georgia are top of mind programs, too, as former Omaha regulars who haven’t been back in a minute. Several of whom have worn incredible gut punches in the postseason. Two of these four will return to Nebraska this June. Finally, the Big West will send a team to the promised land of college baseball in 2026. Let the games begin.
Sports
Browns safety Ronnie Hickman assaulted at New York City hotel, team says
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Cleveland Browns safety Ronnie Hickman was assaulted by a crew of individuals inside a New York City hotel lobby early Monday morning, the team said.
“Safety Ronnie Hickman was a victim of assault early Monday morning at a New York City hotel,” a Browns spokesperson said in a statement to Fox News Digital. “Ronnie was treated for minor injuries at an area hospital after the incident, was later released, and is home resting with his family.”
Authorities told the New York Post that the incident occurred in the lobby of the SIXTY LES hotel on Allen Street around 4:30 a.m. ET, where Hickman was approached by four individuals and a dispute ensued.
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Safety Ronnie Hickman of the Cleveland Browns celebrates during player introductions before the game against the Buffalo Bills at Huntington Bank Field on Dec. 21, 2025, in Cleveland, Ohio. (Jason Miller/Getty Images)
Police are now investigating what led to the 24-year-old New Jersey native being attacked, and if being a professional football player is a factor.
The Post added that the suspects hit him and then fled the scene.
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Hickman was in stable condition after the assault, and was taken to Bellevue Hospital, where he was released later on Monday.
Hickman, who went undrafted out of Ohio State, is coming off a breakout season with the Browns after starting all 17 games.

Ronnie Hickman of the Cleveland Browns runs during an AFC wild-card playoff football game against the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium on Jan. 13, 2024, in Houston, Texas. (Ryan Kang/Getty Images)
While Cleveland finished the year 5-12, their defense was a formidable unit, and Hickman came out with career highs in tackles (103), passes defended (seven) and interceptions (two).
Hickman made his NFL debut during the 2023 season after joining Cleveland following the draft. He had a pick-six in his 10 games that season, as well as 25 combined tackles.
Hickman has a big offseason ahead, too, as he is a restricted free agent with the Browns.

Ronnie Hickman Jr. of the Cleveland Browns defends in coverage during an NFL preseason football game against the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field on Aug. 17, 2023, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Ryan Kang/Getty Images)
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Cleveland has the option to place one of four tenders on Hickman, which allows them to match an offer sheet from another team that may want to sign him.
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Sports
Three ways the Champions League format could be fixed
We’re midway through Year 2 of the revamped UEFA Champions League, and already we’ve witnessed the dramatic impact of the 2024 switch to a 36-team, Swiss-model league phase unlike anything seen in Europe before.
To take one example, the final matchday of the league phase this year featured Benfica goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin delivering an iconic moment, as he scored a 98th-minute header against Real Madrid to stave off elimination and push the Portuguese club to the knockout rounds. On the flip side, the competition’s format is now so confusing that Trubin himself didn’t know how vital his goal was for Benfica’s Champions League hopes.
It’s clear that there’s no perfect solution, but that doesn’t mean we can’t try! With the knockout playoff round taking place Tuesday and Wednesday, we decided to ask our writers: How would you fix the Champions League format, within the bounds of what might be possible?
Here are three fascinating proposals from Mark Ogden, Gabriele Marcotti and Bill Connelly, ranging from innovative to subtly effective.
Two mini-leagues, one gigantic playoff round
UEFA has introduced several iterations of the Champions League since overhauling the old European Cup format in the early-1990s. Despite the tweaks and changes, the competition is still the pinnacle of club soccer, and they haven’t managed to break it just yet.
But the knockout stages are where the magic happens. That’s part of the problem UEFA must overcome, because no matter how many times they reboot the group stages, those early rounds will never have the jeopardy and excitement of classic two-leg, winner-take-all encounters.
The only reason Matchday 8 of the league phase was so enthralling was because it had a knockout feel to it, with Benfica’s 4-2 win against Real Madrid — courtesy of goalkeeper Trubin’s stoppage-time goal — as good as any knockout tie.
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With all that in mind, how do you fix the format to inject some sense of vibrancy to the group/league stage? We are never going back to straight knockouts from the first round — there’s too much risk and not enough guaranteed money for the top clubs to ever sanction that — so there has to be some form of group stage.
So why not split the league phase in two and have two leagues feeding into the knockout stages, in a similar fashion to the AFC and NFC feeding into the NFL playoffs? Instead of a bloated 36-team league, make it two 18-team sections with only the top two in each guaranteed a round of 16 spot. The remaining 24, 12 in each section, would go into a supersize playoff round — with an open draw!
1:41
Leboeuf: Benfica’s goalkeeper scoring was a Champions League miracle
Jürgen Klinsmann and Frank Leboeuf react to Anatoliy Trubin’s last minute goal to send Benfica to the Champions League playoffs.
Let’s ensure that only the best teams have an advantage, so if you finish outside the top two, you could face anyone in the playoff. You could end up playing Real Madrid or Bodo/Glimt, but it would be down to the luck of the draw rather than a position-based seeding. And all teams would still play eight league phase games, so there would be no reduction in match revenue
It still wouldn’t be an ideal format. Too many teams would still be able to qualify with a mediocre league phase, and you could argue there would be just as many relatively meaningless games, but I want Arsenal vs. PSG or Real Madrid vs. Bayern Munich in November to matter more than they do right now. Having only two automatic spots available would sharpen the tension at the top, and what we all want to see is the big guns playing as though they mean it. — Mark Ogden
Clubs get to pick their opponents
We’re asked to be realistic here, so bear that in mind. We’re not going back to the one league/one team days, and we’re not going back to purely straight knockouts. (Besides, we effectively have a separate straight knockout tournament after the group stage anyway.)
I don’t think there’s much wrong with the current format, but rather, the main problem is with the seeding. Namely, that it’s not particularly meaningful!
Last year, Liverpool topped the group stage, and their “reward” for doing so was a showdown with Paris Saint-Germain, who finished 15th (and knocked the Reds out). Then there was Real Madrid, who finished 11th and ended up playing Manchester City (22nd). Sure, both teams underachieved, but that was “punishment” for both. Had Real Madrid finished just one place lower, they would have faced — no disrespect — Celtic. Who would you rather play?
When we rank teams in the group stage by single points (or, worse, goal difference), it’s not exactly a scientific assessment of their relative strength. So let’s make the seedings mean something: Let clubs pick their opponents.
How would it work? Real Madrid finished ninth, making them the top-ranked team in the knockout round playoffs. Instead of being forced to play the 24th team (Benfica), they can choose any playoff team. Next up, Internazionale in 10th … they too can pick their poison.
Maybe Real Madrid don’t want to see Jose Mourinho again so soon after the fact. Maybe Inter, who are matched up with Bodo/Glimt, don’t want to travel north of the Arctic Circle to play on a plastic pitch in February. Whatever the reason, it would give a club a meaningful reward for finishing higher, in addition to creating a TV event: Imagine giving a representative from each team 60 seconds “on the clock” to pick their opponent. Plus, it would naturally ensure the bigger, better teams are kept apart for as long as possible.
Then you’d repeat this in the round of 16: Arsenal get first pick, followed by Bayern Munich, and so on. While we’re at it, let the higher-ranked team decide if they want to play home or away first. We assume playing at home second is an advantage, but maybe some would rather not, whether due to fixture congestion or style of play or some other reason. Heck, let them decide if they want to play Tuesday or Wednesday, too.
These “sporting advantages” are things you can earn on the pitch and are actually meaningful. They make it less likely that late in the group stage, clubs are going to mail it in or settle for a draw, once they know they’re not making top eight. — Gabriele Marcotti
Actually, the new format is … mostly fine, but let’s make the seeding more concrete
Honestly, I think the biggest change we can make is one of mindset. A giant, eight-match league phase offers minimal jeopardy, yes, but that created some of the best stories of this season. With eight matches, Benfica and Bodo/Glimt were able to weather some early setbacks and play their way into the competition. Hell, Pafos and Union Saint-Gilloise nearly did the same. They played better as they got their footing, and that lack of jeopardy actually benefited us as viewers. Treating the league phase as a true season — albeit a small one — with time for twists and turns and late surprises makes this format awfully fun, even if we know no one’s going to be eliminated in October.
If we’re insisting on making changes, however, I have a couple of small ones.
First, for the countries that provide four or more competitors, I would allow for at least one match against a domestic opponent in the league phase. If we’re going to live in a world in which the Premier League makes all the money and can afford most of the best players, then it actually benefits them even further to not have to play each other. It certainly would have been trickier for Premier League teams to end up with five of the top eight spots in the table if, say, Chelsea had faced a trip to Arsenal, or Manchester City had to play its bogey team (Tottenham Hotspur). And hey, if we end up with a random extra El Clasico or Der Klassiker dropped into the November slate, who would complain?
Meanwhile, though there are plenty of Americanized touches getting proposed, I would actually go even further in one specific area. Forget getting rid of seeding — I’d hard-seed everything!
There’s a potentially huge difference between drawing, say, seventh-place Sporting CP (currently 16th in Opta’s power rankings) and eighth-place Manchester City (second) this year, or 17th-place Borussia Dortmund (19th) and 18th-place Olympiacos (45th). Last year, there was an immense difference in top-seeded Liverpool drawing 15th-place PSG instead of 16th-place Benfica, or 21st-place Celtic instead of 22nd-place Man City. There’s already quite a bit of randomness baked into how the final table looks — we don’t need one last burst of it with the draw. Let the table drive everything: In the round of 16, the first-place team plays the winner of No. 16 and No. 17, No. 2 plays the winner of No. 15 and No. 18, et cetera.
Those aren’t huge changes because, honestly, I don’t think much needs changing. We play a miniseason long enough to have serious plot twists and evolutions, we have a couple of wild matchdays at the end of the league phase, then we have a giant bracket leading us through a few months of action. The competition’s expansion was driven almost entirely by the endless quest for more money, but as tends to happen in this sport, the craven pursuit of cash has given us more fun soccer to watch. — Bill Connelly
Sports
Tennis player claims sport’s culture is ‘racist’ in scathing social media post
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Australian women’s tennis player Destanee Aiava announced Saturday that the 2026 season will be her last in a scathing statement about the sport posted on her social media.
Aiava, 25, described tennis as her “toxic boyfriend” in the statement posted on Instagram. She lamented being so young when she started, with her breakthrough coming when she was just 17.
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Destanee Aiava during her match against Danielle Collins at the Australian Open at Melbourne Park on Jan. 16, 2025. (Mike Frey/Imagn Images)
She wrote that tennis gave her some of her best friends and she was able to travel to places she only dreamed of. But she said the sport “took things from me,” including her relationship with her body, her family and her self-worth.
“I want to say a ginormous f— you to everyone in the tennis community who’s ever made me feel less than,” her statement continued. “F— you to every single gambler who’s sent me hate or death threats. F— you to the people who sit behind screens on social media, commenting on my body, my career, or whatever the f— they want to nitpick. And f— you to a sport that hides behind so-called class and gentlemanly values. Behind the white outfits and traditions is a culture that’s racist, misogynistic, homophobic and hostile to anyone who doesn’t fit its mould.

Destanee Aiava reacts after winning a set against Greet Minnen at Sobeys Stadium in Toronto on Aug. 5, 2024. (Dan Hamilton/USA Today Sports)
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“Life is not meant to be lived in misery or half a–ed. My ultimate goal is to be able to wake up everyday and genuinely say I love what I do – which I think everyone deserves the chance at. I’m 25, turning 26 this year, and I feel so far behind everyone else, like I’m starting from scratch. I’m also scared. But that’s better than living a life that’s misaligned, or being around constant comparison and losing yourself.”
Aiava, then, thanked those who supported her career.

Destanee Aiava serves the ball to Jasmine Paolini during the U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on Aug. 24, 2025. (Geoff Burke/Imagn Images)
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She has 10 International Tennis Federation titles on her resume and is 269-178 in singles matches. In Grand Slam events, she hasn’t made it further than the second round – which came during the 2025 Australian Open.
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