The 2025 Tennis Season: An Unforgettable Year
The 2025 professional tennis season has come to an end, and what a year it was. From the dominance of stars like Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, and Aryna Sabalenka, to the continued emergence of players like Amanda Anisimova and Ben Shelton, and the return to the top of Naomi Osaka, this season truly had something for everyone. Alcaraz and Sinner practically dominated the ATP, splitting the four Grand Slam titles, but there was much more parity among the WTA Tour’s female elite. Four different players – Madison Keys, Coco Gauff, Iga Swiatek and Sabalenka – won the Slams. Throughout the year, both on the ATP and WTA, there were several surprise winners and captivating stories. Everything combined to make a very memorable season. Alofoke Deportes presents a summary of the most outstanding players of the 2025 season.ATP Player of the Year: Carlos Alcaraz
The 2025 ATP season was defined almost exclusively by two men and their rivalry: Alcaraz and Sinner. While both stood out from the rest, with a minimal difference between them, Alcaraz won the French Open and the US Open and finished the year at number 1 for the second time in his career. Sinner, for his part, was victorious at the Australian Open and Wimbledon and finished the year with the title at the ATP Finals for the second consecutive season. The difference was so minuscule that a choice between them couldn’t be made, so a tie was declared. However, a slight advantage was given to Alcaraz, who won six other titles this year, including three at Masters-1000 events. Alcaraz, who also leads the head-to-head record, defeated Sinner in four of their six encounters in 2025.Regardless of who deserves this distinction, one thing is certain: they are the best players in the world and should continue their collective brilliance in 2026.“I was going to award the ATP Players of the Year award to Sinner and Alcaraz, but I feel that Sinner [lost some months due to the suspension] and not finishing as number 1 at the end of the year tipped the balance towards Alcaraz.” – Pam Shriver
Pam Shriver
WTA Player of the Year: Aryna Sabalenka
While there was little drama on the ATP side, at least in narrowing it down to two, there were a handful of women who were considered for the title this year. The majors were won by four different players, and Elena Rybakina closed out the year with the title at the WTA Finals, and others won multiple 1000-level tournaments and competed in the Slams. However, despite the equality at the top of the WTA, one woman was slightly ahead of the rest of the group and was the unanimous choice for this award. Of course, that was world number 1, Sabalenka, who held the top spot throughout the season. She won the US Open, becoming the first woman since Serena Williams over a decade ago to repeat as champion, and also reached the finals of the Australian Open and the French Open and the semi-finals of Wimbledon. Not to mention that she won three other titles in the year, including two at the 1000 level, and played in a total of nine finals. For Shriver, for all those reasons, “she is the clear player of the year.” Even her opponents praised Sabalenka this year.“Obviously, she’s number 1 and she’s totally capable of playing incredible tennis, as she did today. I give her all the credit for that. I admire her enormously; she works hard, and that’s why she’s here.” – Amanda Anisimova
Amanda Anisimova
Revelation Moment: Madison Keys, Australian Open
Keys, a prodigious talent who turned professional at 14, seemed destined to win a Grand Slam title. She reached her first Slam semi-final in 2015 and was a runner-up at the 2017 US Open. But despite winning nine WTA titles and being a fixture in the top 20, she couldn’t win when it mattered most. Until this year, that is. Nearing the age of 30, Keys had a fearless run at the Australian Open, defeating five seeded players, including Swiatek (number 2) in the semifinals and Sabalenka (number 1) in the final. In the end, Keys lifted her first Grand Slam trophy after an exciting three-set thriller, almost 16 years after turning professional and a decade after reaching her first semifinal.Match of the Year: Alcaraz vs. Sinner, French Open Final
Was this one in doubt? The first Grand Slam final between the two rising rivals lasted five hours and 29 minutes, making it the longest French Open final in history and the second longest in a Grand Slam. It also featured one of the most incredible comebacks of all time.
Most improbable victory: Valentin Vacherot, Shanghai
Upon arriving at the Masters 1000 level event ranked 204th in the world and as the ninth alternate for the qualifying draw, the 26-year-old player, who had only won one match on the ATP Tour in his career, needed a miracle just to be able to play in the tournament. But after a series of withdrawals, Vacherot entered the rankings and needed three sets in both matches there to reach the main draw. Somehow, he found a way, and then did the unthinkable. He defeated a seeded player after another, including Alexander Bublik in the second round, Holger Rune in the quarterfinals, and Novak Djokovic in the semifinals. And, as if that weren’t enough, he then faced his cousin Arthur Rinderknech, then ranked 40th and barely considered a title contender before the tournament began, in the most improbable final. Vacherot finally won the family affair and became the first Monegasque player to win an ATP title, as well as the lowest-ranked Masters champion in history. After the final, the tearful cousins embraced and shared kind words during an emotional trophy ceremony.After the fairytale victory, which more than doubled his professional earnings, Vacherot climbed in the rankings. Thanks to a quarter-final run at the Paris Masters, Vacherot finishes the season ranked number 31 and as a previously unknown figure turned beloved in the sport.“There has to be a loser, but I think today there are two winners. A family that won, and I think for the sport of tennis, the story is unreal.” – Valentin Vacherot
Valentin Vacherot
Honorable mention: Victoria Mboko, Canadian Open
Ranked number 85 in the world and receiving a wildcard entry, the 18-year-old Canadian surprised the field by defeating four Grand Slam champions on her way to winning the local 1000-level tournament. She marked her first WTA title, and her ranking rose to number 24. (She finished the season with another title and a new career-high ranking of number 18).Star performance of the year: Taylor Townsend, US Open
Townsend has long been known to tennis fans for her talent on the singles and doubles courts, as well as her vivacious personality, but she caught the world’s attention with her incredible play and equally remarkable composure at the US Open. Townsend, who reached the number 1 doubles ranking this year for the first time, had an impressive victory over the number 29 seed, Jelena Ostapenko, in the second round, and a distressed Ostapenko aggressively confronted Townsend after the match saying that she “had no class, nor education”.The interaction, and Townsend’s reaction to it, immediately went viral, turning Townsend’s next match against the number 5 seed, Mirra Andreeva, into a must-see event. Townsend delivered, completely dismantling the teenage prodigy in front of a passionate crowd at Arthur Ashe Stadium. (Ostapenko later apologized for her words). Townsend then lost in a thrilling thriller in the fourth round to two-time Grand Slam champion Barbora Krejcikova, and reached the doubles final with Katerina Siniakova, but solidified her status as a fan favorite. She seems to have been everywhere (from the morning talk show circuit to vacationing with Osaka) since her run in New York.“I am very strong. I am very proud as a Black woman to be here representing myself and representing us and our culture. I make sure to do everything I can to be the best possible representation every time I step on the court and even off it.” – Taylor Townsend
Taylor Townsend
Doubles Teams of the Year: Lloyd Glasspool and Julian Cash; Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend
Glasspool and Cash, the world’s two highest-ranked doubles players, reached an astonishing 11 finals in 2025. They won seven titles, one of which was at Wimbledon, becoming the first British pair to do so since 1936. Neither of them had ever won a Grand Slam before, nor had they even advanced beyond the quarterfinals.Comeback Player of the Year: Belinda Bencic
Perhaps the easiest and most obvious award winner on this list, Bencic returned to competitive tennis in October 2024, just six months after giving birth to her daughter Bella. Bencic, 28, played exclusively ITF and 125-level events for the remainder of the year and then made her official return to the circuit in early 2025.
It didn’t take her long to get back into the routine. Weeks after the season, she reached the fourth round at the Australian Open, and followed that up by securing the title at the 500-level Abu Dhabi Open in February. At the end of the season, she had recorded a semi-final appearance at Wimbledon, for the first time in her career, and had won another title at the Pan Pacific Open in October. She started the year ranked number 489 and finished at number 11.Much improved: Amanda Anisimova
There are years of career, and then there’s what Anisimova did in 2025. A strong candidate for Player of the Year, as well as a moment of revelation and stellar performance, Anisimova lived up to the high expectations placed on her as a junior. The 24-year-old American, who took an eight-month break from the sport in 2023 for her mental health, won the then-biggest title of her career at the Qatar Open level 1000 in February and entered the top 20 for the first time.
But that was just the beginning. Anisimova found her rhythm on grass, reaching the final at the Queen’s Club and then achieving a memorable upset over Sabalenka in the Wimbledon semi-finals and reaching her first Grand Slam final. She lost, astonishingly, to Swiatek, but got her revenge at the US Open. And in New York, Anisimova reached the final again. While she didn’t win the trophy, her ranking and profile continued to soar. At the end of the year, she had won another 1000-level title at the China Open, qualified for the WTA Finals for the first time (where she reached the semi-finals) and now has a career-high ranking, number 4 in the world. What a year, indeed.Honorable Mention: Learner Tien
It’s difficult to compare with what Anisimova did, but 19-year-old Tien also had a monumental season. Ranked number 121 in the world, the American overcame the qualifying rounds to make his main draw debut at the Australian Open, and what a debut it was. In the second round, Tien defeated former world number 1 and 2021 US Open champion Daniil Medvedev, winning the 10-point tiebreak in the fifth set. After defeating Corentin Moutet in the third round, Tien became the youngest male player to advance to the fourth round in Melbourne since Rafael Nadal in 2005.
Tien would go on to defeat Zverev at the 2025 Mexican Open, becoming the youngest American man to win against a top-three player since 2001. Tien finished 2025 with his first ATP title at the Moselle Open and closed the season with a new career-high ranking of number 28.