The first Grand Slam of the year takes place at Australian Open in Melbourne as Jannik Sinner and Aryna Sabalenka look to defend their titles.
The opening major of the season begins just 12 days into the new year but there are a number of questions surrounding the fitness of Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper, while Andy Murray is back in Melbourne – but this time in the corner of record-chasing Novak Djokovic.
The top-ranked players in the world enter the tournament automatically at the main draw stage, with 104 ranked players going directly into the singles draws alongside eight wildcard entries and 16 qualifiers.
Qualifying for the 2025 Australian Open started on January 6.
The main tournament (singles) starts on January 12, with the women’s final on January 25 and the men’s final on January 26.
The Australian Open takes place at Melbourne Park, Melbourne – home to the Grand Slam event since 1988.
Melbourne Park has three show courts – the Rod Laver Arena (the second largest indoor sports venue in Australia with a capacity of 15,000), as well as the John Cain Arena (capacity: 10,500) and Margaret Court Arena (capacity: 7,500).
The Australian Open singles draw will be made on Thursday, January 9 at 2.30am UK time.
The tournament takes place every day from midnight UK time each day on the outside courts and 1am on the show courts. Night sessions will start at 8am for UK viewers.
Jan 12-14: First Round (Women and Men)
Jan 15-16: Second Round (Women and Men)
Jan 17-18: Third Round (Women and Men)
Jan 19-20: Fourth Round (Women and Men)
Jan 21-22: Quarter-finals (Women and Men)
Jan 23: Women’s semi-finals
Jan 24: Men’s semi-finals
Jan 25: Women’s final (8.30am UK time)
Jan 26: Men’s final (8.30am UK time)
The Australian Open schedule also includes:
1. Aryna Sabalenka
2. Iga Swiatek (POL)
3. Coco Gauff (USA)
4. Jasmine Paolini (ITA)
5. Qinwen Zheng (CHN)
1. Jannik Sinner (ITA)
2. Alexander Zverev (GER)
3. Carlos Alcaraz (ESP)
4. Taylor Fritz (USA)
5. Daniil Medvedev
There are four British players with main draw entry into the women’s singles.
Katie Boulter will be seeded in Melbourne this year after her best season to date – winning two WTA titles (San Diego and Nottingham) and making another final in Hong Kong.
Emma Raducanu has made the second round in each of the last three seasons and will be hoping to push on further in 2025.
She was forced to withdraw from the ASB Classic in Auckland last week with a back problem but will be hoping to be ready for the Grand Slam after hiring renowned fitness trainer Yutaka Nakamura to help end her litany of fitness issues since winning the US Open in 2021.
Sonay Kartal is in the main draw for the first time while Jodie Burrage is in on protected ranking.
British No 1 Jack Draper will lead the line-up in the men’s singles off the back of reaching his first Grand Slam semi-final at the US Open and has risen up to a career-high world No 15.
Draper comes in this year having skipped the United Cup team event in Sydney because of a hip injury and will be playing competitively for the first time since losing at the Paris Masters at the end of October.
Cameron Norrie and rising star Jacob Fearnley both have direct entry into the main draw.
If you haven’t heard the news, Djokovic announced the surprise appointment of long-time rival and good friend Andy Murray to his coaching team in late November.
Britain’s two-time Wimbledon champion Murray ended his playing career following the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in August.
But the 37-year-old decided to take on his first coaching role in Djokovic’s team in a blockbuster link-up with the Serbian targeting a record-extending 11th Australian Open title and historic 25th Grand Slam crown. Will Murray’s presence will be enough to motivate Djokovic to Grand Slam glory?
The total prize money for the Australian Open has increased by 11.56 per cent year on year and the singles winners of this year’s tournament will go home with a A$3.5 million (about £1.74m) cheque.
Full 2025 prize money breakdown:
Champion: A$3,500,000
Runner-up: A$1,900,000
Semi-finalists: A$1,100,000
Quarter-finalists: A$665,000
Fourth round: A$420,000
Third round: A$290,000
Second round: A$200,000
First round: A$132,000
Qualifying
Third round: $72,000
Second round: $49,000
First round: $35,000
3 – Aryna Sabalenka will be attempting to win a third consecutive women’s singles title at Melbourne Park, something last accomplished by Martina Hingis from 1997 to 1999.
24 – The number of Grand Slam singles championship won by Novak Djokovic, tied with Margaret Court for the most by anyone in the history of tennis. One more will give Djokovic sole possession of the record.
Sky Sports+ has officially launched and will be integrated into Sky TV, streaming service NOW and the Sky Sports app, giving Sky Sports customers access to over 50 per cent more live sport this year at no extra cost. Find out more here.
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