WTA Madrid | 05/02 14:00 | 28 | [1] Iga Swiatek v Madison Keys [20] | 6-1,6-3 | |
WTA Madrid | 04/30 18:00 | 27 | [20] Madison Keys v Ons Jabeur [9] | 0-6,7-5,6-1 | |
WTA Madrid | 04/29 14:15 | 26 | [3] Coco Gauff v Madison Keys [20] | 6-7,6-4,4-6 | |
WTA Madrid | 04/27 15:10 | 25 | [20] Madison Keys v Liudmila Samsonova [17] | 6-2,6-3 | |
WTA Madrid | 04/25 09:00 | 24 | [20] Madison Keys v Irina-Camelia Begu [128] | 7-6,7-6 | |
WTA Charleston | 04/03 00:45 | 25 | [83] Jaqueline Cristian v Madison Keys [18] | 3-6,6-3,6-3 | |
WTA Miami | 03/25 18:00 | 26 | [18] Madison Keys v Elena Rybakina [4] | 3-6,5-7 | |
WTA Miami | 03/23 23:35 | 25 | [43] Xinyu Wang v Madison Keys [18] | 4-6,6-7 | |
WTA Miami | 03/21 20:20 | 24 | [62] Diana Shnaider v Madison Keys [18] | 2-6,4-6 | |
WTA Indian Wells | 03/10 19:40 | 25 | [20] Madison Keys v Yulia Putintseva [79] | 4-6,1-6 | |
WTA Indian Wells | 03/09 04:30 | 24 | [20] Madison Keys v Hailey Baptiste [105] | 6-4,4-6,7-6 | |
WTA Zhuhai | 10/25 07:00 | - | [11] Madison Keys v Caroline Garcia [20] | 3-6,6-7 | |
WTA Zhuhai | 10/24 07:00 | - | [11] Madison Keys v Beatriz Haddad Maia [19] | 4-6,4-6 | |
WTA Guadalajara | 09/20 02:55 | 25 | [12] Madison Keys v Emma Navarro [49] | 2-6,6-7 | |
US Open - Kvinner | 09/08 02:20 | 28 | [17] Madison Keys v Aryna Sabalenka [2] | 6-0,6-7,6-7 | |
US Open - Kvinner | 09/06 23:15 | 27 | [9] Marketa Vondrousova v Madison Keys [17] | 1-6,4-6 | |
US Open - Kvinner | 09/04 16:10 | 26 | [17] Madison Keys v Jessica Pegula [3] | 6-1,6-3 | |
US Open - Kvinner | 09/02 16:20 | 25 | [15] Liudmila Samsonova v Madison Keys [17] | 7-5,2-6,2-6 | |
US Open - Kvinner | 08/31 19:25 | 24 | [85] Yanina Wickmayer v Madison Keys [17] | 1-6,2-6 | |
US Open - Kvinner | 08/29 17:30 | 23 | [45] Arantxa Rus v Madison Keys [17] | 2-6,4-6 | |
WTA Cincinnati | 08/16 02:45 | 24 | [15] Madison Keys v Elise Mertens [29] | 3-6,6-3,3-6 | |
WTA Montreal | 08/10 15:00 | 25 | Jasmine Paolini v Madison Keys | Walkover | |
WTA Montreal | 08/07 23:00 | 24 | Venus Williams v Madison Keys | 2-6,5-7 | |
WTA Washington | 08/04 20:40 | 27 | [9] Maria Sakkari v Madison Keys [16] | 6-3,6-3 | |
WTA Washington | 08/03 00:45 | 26 | Jennifer Brady v Madison Keys | 4-6,0-6 | |
WTA Washington | 08/02 01:30 | 25 | [24] Qinwen Zheng v Madison Keys [16] | 5-7,1-6 | |
Wimbledon - Kvinner | 07/12 12:00 | 27 | [18] Madison Keys v Aryna Sabalenka [2] | 2-6,4-6 | |
Wimbledon - Kvinner | 07/10 10:00 | 26 | [18] Madison Keys v Mirra Andreeva [102] | 3-6,7-6,6-2 | |
Wimbledon - Kvinner | 07/08 16:35 | 25 | [36] Marta Kostyuk v Madison Keys [18] | 4-6,1-6 | |
Wimbledon - Kvinner | 07/07 10:00 | 24 | [139] Viktorija Golubic v Madison Keys [18] | 5-7,3-6 |
Madison Keys (born February 17, 1995) is an American professional tennis player. She has been ranked as high as world No. 7 by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA), which she first achieved in October 2016. Keys has contested a Major singles final at the 2017 US Open, competed at the 2016 WTA Finals, and was a semifinalist at the 2016 Rio Olympics. She has won seven WTA Tour tournaments, six of which were at the Premier level, and won her biggest title at the 2019 Cincinnati Open, a Premier 5 event.
Known for a fast serve and one of the most powerful forehands in the game, Keys has used her aggressive playing style to become one of the leaders of her generation of American tennis, alongside Sloane Stephens, CoCo Vandeweghe, and Sofia Kenin. She debuted in the top 10 of the WTA rankings in 2016, becoming the first American woman to realize this milestone since Serena Williams 17 years earlier. When Keys and Stephens faced off against each other in the 2017 US Open final, they became the first American women other than the Williams sisters to contest a major singles final since 2005. Keys has had success on all surfaces, winning at least one title on each and having reached at least the quarterfinals of all four majors.
Keys was inspired to start playing tennis after seeing Venus Williams at Wimbledon on TV. Originally from the Quad Cities in Illinois, she moved to Florida to train at the Evert Tennis Academy. Her coaches regarded her as a prodigy and believed she had a good chance to win a major title. Keys turned professional on her 14th birthday and quickly showed her potential by becoming one of the youngest players to win a WTA Tour level match a few months later. She also won a World TeamTennis exhibition set against then world No. 2, Serena Williams, later that year. Keys first cracked the top 100 of the WTA rankings in 2013 at the age of 17. She had her first breakthrough at a major in early 2015 when she reached the semifinals of the Australian Open as a teenager.