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Cracked Racquets Editor-in-Chief Alex Gruskin previews the Indian Wells Women's Singles Draw. He breaks down each quarter of the draw, names his sleepers looming within each section, shares his predictions, plus SO much more!!
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Sabalenka Quarter - 7:00
Gauff Quarter - 13:30
Rybakina Quarter - 20:35
Swiatek Quarter - 25:30
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All day long, got the chance to broadcast two of our best victories of the day at a front
row seat as Mateo Baratini earned his best victory of this young 2026 season, the 29-year-old
Italian, a come from behind three-set win over Adrian Manorino, particularly impressive,
given of course Baratini's lack of success in these unique Indian Wells conditions throughout
the course of his career.
Now, if that wasn't good enough, my second match of the evening, a primetime match, which
I got to broadcast with my dear friend Bradley Klons, he did right beside me.
We got to watch one of the young ascending stars in our sport, who certainly we have spent
plenty of time discussing on this show over the years.
He's no longer just your friendly neighborhood's fight-a-man, sacks fight as a top 100 player,
here in one of the best victories of his career, a straight set victory over Marin Chilich,
where Sveta put together a serving performance quite frankly, I just didn't know the 23-year-old
American was capable of, so yeah, I'm having fun.
I bring all of that up to say to get to broadcast those matches, have a front-row seat to
such exceptional action to get to hang out in a studio with some of the brightest minds
in tennis, some of the voices that guide all of us through each and every year, particularly
here in the United States.
If you're a tennis channel subscriber like myself, by the way, 77 bucks to subscribe to
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a broadcast they hope to continue to improve each and every day.
Yeah, I'm a little biased, but I just want you to know, having had a front-row seat to
the behind the scenes here today, what an exceptional team, what an awesome effort.
It was really fun, and I only get this opportunity.
I only get to experience this sort of joy, and yes, I know it's my job.
I take it extraordinarily seriously, but I get to have this sort of fun, smile on my face
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Hopefully you hear that in the broadcast, and I only get that opportunity because so many
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By the way, fun matches tomorrow.
I get to be on the call for Sonya Kenan's, around one battle, Kenan, of course, taking
on Catarina Sinyakava, fun battle between vets there that I get to be on the call with
VK once again, is he and I are going to enjoy another prime time match, believe it, stadium
one court.
We're going to be in the call for Cepi Corda's match up.
I'm blanking at this precise moment, oh, he's playing my birthday brother, Francisco
Comasagna.
So, yeah, two fun matches to get to call tomorrow.
If you're intrigued, you can hear me on the tennis channel app, and again, 77 bucks
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Come watch some fun tennis.
Come be on the ride with us all day long as we enjoy more opening round action.
But of course, speaking of that opening round action and apologies for indulging you
with five minutes of reveling in my day, I don't know.
This is where I recap it.
I'm sitting in my hotel room.
I don't have someone to discuss these things with tonight, so I suppose I'm discussing
it with you, the listener.
But of course, what haven't I done yet?
I promise I would do for all of you tennis fans today.
I want to preview the 2026 Indian Wells draw.
I want to run you through both the women's and men's action.
Again, I'll talk more about Baratini's victory.
I'll talk more about Svita's victory in our men's preview show, which I will record immediately
after this one.
It's just a little easier for me to separate things into two distinct podcasts I want to
run through.
All four quarters of each of these draws were the biggest winners of the draw, who has
the most pressure placed upon them, as we get ready for this sunshine swing to get
underway.
Again, what are the matchups to look forward to most in the opening week and moving forward
throughout the event?
I want to try and cover those things in an efficient draw preview here over these next
two episodes.
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All right.
Let's break down.
Again, these four sections of the Indian Wells draw.
We start at the top of the draw with, of course, top seed rating finalist at this event
on Rina Sabalanka.
It doesn't matter who's in Sabalanka section.
She's going to be the favorite to advance no matter what.
You look in her immediate first week of this event.
You know, she's going to end up taking on the Qualifier Himano, Sakatsume, Sakatsume,
a victory over Wildcard Alicia Parks in a round one today.
The seed in her section is Maya joint.
I don't even know if Maya joint's favorite two advance out of her opening round matches.
She'll take on the always tricky top 40 Jacqueline, Kristian, whomever it is, Sabalanka will
be favorite against and will be the favorite to reach the round at 16.
It's interesting after that, right, if we get the best version of Naomi Osaka, who was,
she wasn't quite in US open form, but she was sound in that opening month of the year.
I mean, obviously, Eva Yovic looks like one of the top 20 players in the world and one
of the most impressed things about Eva Yovic is how quickly it feels like she learns and
adapts to whatever circumstance she faces, see how she went from the Spitalina loss first
two weeks of the season to bouncing back and beating Palini at the Australian open.
Would love to see Yovic going to swing at her in her home state in the round of 16.
How is that not one of the five most desired matches?
Certainly, I would think that tournament keepers want to see, but us as tennis players,
just another data point.
How does her game stack up against elite pace?
By the way, you have two of the three highest ranked and two of the three most promising
teenagers in the world right now, Emboko and Yovic both find themselves in this Sabelanka
section of the draw.
It's crazy that because of that fact, 25th seeded Amarada Kanu feels like an afterthought
like, right?
No way.
She gets to get a swing at Sabelanka.
She's not getting out of a section featuring Emboko, 6th seeded Amanda and Esomova.
By the way, the number 23 seed on a Kalanskaya, sitting in this section as well.
Yovic has some heavy hitters, Anisemova, who of course beat her at Wimbledon.
Emboko, who yes, lost to her at the Australian Open, but asked Miran Dreeva what it's like
to play Victoria Emboko that second time, a Kalanskaya who is only lost to top 8 players
in the world so far this season.
And in Yovic, she's been one of the 20 best players in the world certainly was in the
opening month of the year and is now back on home soil and conditions that you just
feel like have to favor her.
It's an awesome section for tennis fans because no matter what permutation emerges from
it, you're going to get some fun back half of the week matches.
It's fun, early matches as well.
The idea of Emboko taking on an on a Kalanskaya in what would that be, a third round matchup.
They played earlier this year in Adelaide, 7-6 in the third, Emboko knocked out Kalanskaya
on that occasion, like again, come on now.
I think that's very likely the idea of Anisimova facing Radakanu.
Again, these are two early to mid 20s players who have all, I mean, in the case of Radakanu,
literally a slam champion, Anisimova slam finalist, and that's a round three projected
matchup.
Again, that just speaks to where the depth is now in the women's game.
I mean, dangerous floaters, no, because the seeds are too good in this section.
I don't know that there is a particular sleeper.
I think Victoria Jimenez-Kassenseva, who gets a victory round one over Katie McNally, 6-4
in the third, the lefties just top 100 good.
It will be fascinating to see how she acclimates to more in, like the pace, how is she going
to match up in the face of the pace that Naomi Osaka can play with, even if it's not
a particularly battle-tested Osaka right now, Jimenez-Kassenseva extraordinarily matched
tough right now.
By the way, a potential Sloan Stevens-Yovic round two matchup, even if Stevens doesn't
have the juice she once did as a competitor, I don't know that she, I don't think she's
certainly not a favorite to get through her round one matchup with Kamiosorio.
That matchup might be done now.
Yeah, she didn't get through her round one matchup with Kamiosorio.
So yeah, Kamiov receive, by the way, that's a really fun round two matchup.
You did have McCartney Kessler in the section.
She gets knocked out by Zainab Sanmez.
Look, you have heavy hitting seeds, heavy hitting seeds in this section.
Callin's guy is the sleeper because she could beat him Boko.
She could beat Anisimova.
Absolutely reach a quarter finals.
I'm serious.
I do think her level's been that high so far this year.
So I guess technically, because I see a pathway for her to the semi-finals, I'll qualify
the number 23 seed as a sleeper within this section.
I mean, if Rada Kano does something special, she'll have caught me sleeping at the
wheel.
We could very well get it, you know, the idea of an Anisimova going through Rada Kano,
then either a Boko and Callin's Gaia, and then a Saba-Lank, a brutal section of the
draw for an American who, again, still has three months of runway.
But only two more hardcore events, then obviously everything on the clay, then she has round
of 16 Roland Garros and all those grass points, all those North American hardcore stretch points
to defend.
If Anisimova is going to make a serious push for World No. 1, she's got to have a massive
sunshine.
So again, I know that is a massive thing to ask, but 24-year-old who is still relative
to the arc of her career, very fresh, to the top of the tennis world.
She's also 24 years old.
It's a fascinating section, brutal one, again, maybe my favorite section of the draw,
Saba-Lank has got a tough quarter, but a lot of them have to go through one another
before they could even get to her.
So again, on paper, it's a tough section.
By half of the draw and the way things broke out, I actually think Saba-Lank will feel fine
and whoever gets to that semi-final might just be cooked.
Saba-Final excuse me, quarter final might just be cooked.
Picking Saba-Lank to not reach a semi-final or further is a fool's errand.
If you've paid attention for the last 24 months, yeah, I would expect her to get out of
a section, ultimately reach the quarter finals and say, excuse me, semi-finals in one
of the still, again, more broadly, a very, very fun and loaded quarter of the draw.
Of course, top seed in that top half of the draw with Arena Saba-Lank, a fourth-seated
cocoa-coff, who's got to like her section of the draw.
You know, again, by crowd popularity, yeah, that third round match up projected between
her and Alexiella might be the only match of the tournament where there's actually a player
who can produce a crowd that would make it anything but 50-50 or better for cocoa-coff.
But beyond that, Alinda Noscafa, who didn't have the greatest month of February, Diana
Shiner, who's been good, but not top 12 good and a lefty, always like that match up for
golf, Tossin's been better, not playing top 10 tennis, Alex Androva, weird month of
February, one good week, everything else off.
Alongsion, you had a great January, didn't follow it up with a particularly notable February,
and a Jasmine Palini, who was in my stockdown category on yesterday's podcast and certainly
has not done anything particularly notable to start 2026, even if there is some particular
history with Palini and Goff, matches they've played, excuse me, at the 1000s over the years.
Still, she avoided Saba-Lank or Bakunashviantek, obviously, she avoided a big hit or like
a Madison Keys, a big hit or like an Amanda Nisimova, a Jessica Pagula, not in that cocoa
golf section of the draw.
She had to end up somewhere else, no Carolina Mouhova, who of course just won that 1000 level
event in the Middle East.
She avoided the heaviest hitters, and for a cocoa-golf, who again right now ranks 40th
by hold percentage over the last 52 weeks, who double-faults more than one out of every
10 points that she plays, number one by double-fault percentage.
I know she made a semi-final in the Middle East, but to have a section of a draw, that
hypothetically could allow her some leeway.
She's not going to have to face Bianca and Drescu and Drescu, grabbing the first set,
but a massive blister, she just was not healthy the rest of the way, Rakimova, 616, love
the rest of the way, Rakimova is an ideal, round one match up for Goff, Iala or maybe
even more challenging would be if it's Diana Estremska, in round number three, again,
that's a tricky round three match up as it goes relative to the draw.
But you look beyond that, like whether it's again by Sida Schneider or Naskava, I think
she's feeling okay, whomever emerges out of that bottom half of her section, the semi-final
said, if you're cocoa-golf, you're favored in every match you play, and that just wouldn't
have been the case if Apagula, if in an Isimova.
I don't know if you'd go there with a Belinda Benchitz, would you go there with Mirandriva,
maybe not, and Boko certainly you would favor Overgolf, I think by their recent form,
Svitalina, I think you would favor Slythly Overgolf in their recent form, but again, that
gets interesting, certainly again, these are players who maybe you're not outright favoring,
but it's very easy to make a 50-50 case for, and cocoa-golf avoided all of them in her
section of the draw again, that's just acknowledging what we see, that doesn't mean there can't
be tricky matches, that doesn't mean she's going to have the form to reach the semi-finals
ultimately.
I hope we get every a-leg off-match, because it just puts butts in seats, and when butts
are in seats, it's a better environment.
Who are the sleepers in this section?
Serrana Kristaya could straight up make a quarter, or maybe even a semi, if she continues
to play well.
I'm curious, Serrana Kristaya, what's her history at Indian Wells?
Has she ever made a run to a final eight even in her career at Indian Wells, you look for
Serrana Kristaya, who just a reminder, is 37 and 17, with two titles over her last 52
weeks.
Again, since the start of Cincinnati, where she made the round of 16, what is she during
that time span, because that's pretty darn impressive stretch.
She made the round of 16, she's won Cleveland, obviously, she wins Glutianapoca, as well.
Since the start of Cincinnati, since coming back from injuries, Serrana Kristaya is 32
and 10, 32 and 10, three of those losses are to either Sapulanka, Origa, 32 and 10.
Serrana Kristaya, for her career at Indian Wells, she has indeed made the quarter finals,
only one of them.
It was kind of recently, 2023.
It's made the round of 16 a couple of times.
I mean, I think she is a legitimate contender in this section.
Certainly, you look for her, again, first round matchup, or first second round, but first
matchup for Diana Schneider, that's a brutal draw.
She can absolutely get through a Linda Naskava, or Bozes Maniero, the round after that.
Again, you look, if it's Herver's Goff, I think that's an interesting matchup.
Serrana Kristaya is the ultimate sleeper in this section.
I mean, what Yastraemska shows up, I suppose, she's ultimately a sleeper, of course, as
well, keep it on, Clara Tossin, because you make a 1000 level quarter final here, just
slowly but surely start inching her way back towards that top 10 conversation, things
to watch in each of these sections.
I actually think quietly for Tossin to be dealt in that penaltyly Wang Xinyu, Alexandra
Ova, as your seeds before you get to a quarter, the epitome and the draw is there.
Go make a run, Clara Tossin.
Interesting.
Okay.
Well, the power rankings of people who now need a big Indian Wells, because the draw is
there for her to do.
So I mean, the draw is certainly there for Coco Goff, and boy, when Coco Goff loves some
sort of catalyst to get her 2026 season really going.
I mean, she made a 1000 level semi-finals, she made Australia an open quarter.
So again, it hasn't been a bad year for Coco Goff by any stretch of the imagination.
You look for Coco Goff in her career at Indian Wells, best result to date, semi-finals
in 24, quarters in 23.
Go make a final, Coco Goff.
Show me something.
It's as close to Clay Court conditions as we get before we get to a Clay Court season
where again, she's got two 1000 level finals and a Roland Garros title to defend.
Yeah, again, keep an eye on Coco Goff section of the draw.
Maybe because it feels so certain that's usually when you're most wrong about something
in the prediction business.
So that's the Goff section.
Do I want to be bold and take Clarathos and that's the bold pick here, Alex.
A toss and a nosc of a quarter finals, the bold pick.
I'll be bold.
I'll go Clarathos and I don't think she's playing.
I mean, it was better.
It was better for Clarathos in February.
Abu Dhabi semi's lost to Baylick.
Dubai quarters, three-set loss to Pagula.
Didn't beat anyone particularly notable, but much better matches against Pagula.
It was much better in Australia even if she did ultimately lose to Emboco.
Yeah, let's make this a signature run for Tossum.
Do something special in this Sunshine Swing.
I'll take her to make the semi-finals.
That feels about right.
Rebok in a quarter of the draw.
Brutal.
Absolutely brutal.
And again, the fact that you have fourth-seated Rebok in the Australian Open Champion,
fifth-seated Jessica Pagula, who I think is the best American right now.
I had her as high as, again, four on my rankings.
Rebok and I was two when they're both in this section of the draw.
Right there, surface level, brutal.
You've also got a blinded bench-ish who, through week one of the season, was number one.
On my personal power.
Oh, two behind Zappelanka, who also had a good opening week.
But like, bench-ish has been really good over the last year.
Madison Keys, semi-finalist at this event last season.
Give her a little bit more time.
And her power is going to work everywhere.
Certainly, why can't she find her best form?
You've got the desperation of an Emma Navarro needs anything to get her 20-26 season going.
If we get week one marked the cost-joke, I mean, then this section of the draw just gets
drunk and exceptionally excellent.
It's a very fun section of the draw.
A Haley Baptist unseated, who's obviously played Top 50 Ball all year long.
Taylor Townsend, qualifying into the main draw, fresh off of the Austin final as well.
It's a lot of tennis.
Christina Bucha, the marina champion.
Maybe the most fascinating round one matchup for me, as tomorrow she'll take on former
NCAA singles, doubles, team champion.
I call out of these players my guys.
Can I call her my gal?
I mean, I love Dasha.
Dasha is very funny.
You guys know my thoughts on Dasha, but no, I'm smiling as I say it.
Dasha versus the number newly minted world number 31, Christina Bucha.
I'm picking Dasha to pull off the upset.
By the way, she's not going to beat both Bucha and Mertens, but it'd be fun if she did.
She's a fun sleeper in this section.
Of course, Teresa Valentova, a teenager, you should not forget about even if her success
hasn't been as loud as Andriva's hasn't been as loud as Embokos hasn't been as loud
as Yovic's, Teresa Valentova's freaking good.
So really interesting round one matchup between her and Donna Vackage.
Valentova, according to tennis abstract, 69.9% favorite to win the match.
Yeah, that sounds honestly about right to me.
Venus, for what it's worth in this section, I mean, obviously any time you get to see
one of the games, great champions, still an action at this point of her career.
How can you not value that opportunity?
She'll take on Dion Peri, match number one.
I mean, heck, I didn't say the name Bojkova.
Name just about everyone in this section, do I'm going to just go through the rest of
the names?
It's a loaded, loaded, loaded quarter of the draw.
Look for both seeds, it's tough, right?
For Rabakina, if it's bad taste, match number one, or honestly, in these conditions,
the grinding tennis of Emiliano Amino, Rabakina's game is just built, especially the second
serve.
It's a rush, I think, Aranka.
Bad taste has weapons.
That one gets fun.
She gets through that, again, depends which version of Kostya we see.
That would depend on the difficulty now for the Rabakina match.
After that, if it's the pace of medicine keys, followed by the pace of Jessica Pagula,
followed by that semi-final of your holding seed, Iga, Ben Sabelanka, it's a brutal draw
for the Australian Open Champion, the pathway to a title, which I do think is the standard
we hold her to, and again, to be dealt Pagula, and that's the, she's just, I mean, she's
the number five seed, so duh, but you wanted to avoid Jessica Pagula, like that's just one
of the names you did not want in your section of the draw, and lo and pull, she's in that
section.
Again, I think Indian Wells Madison keys to is a different sort of beast because she
typically peaks at these sorts of events.
It's a brutal section, I mean, who needs it most, I've said it before, I just, I think
I've said this three days in a row, maybe even five days in a row, say it with me now,
we're in the Pagula window.
If she's going to pick up a big title, make that continued push, like it sunshine swings
the place for it.
Now, obviously, Miami historically have been far better conditions for her, but given
plays on the horizon, go do something here, like set a tone, who cares about slow conditions?
I mean, pick against her back and on hard courts at your own peril, I'm not picking against
her back and when she's, she's been that good for six months, consecutively, obviously,
she's fresh off of her second major title, was a little banged up in the month of February,
and her health is an open question.
So if that's if you're picking against her, I'm sure that's a big reason why I actually,
but the problem is just so slow, but it's the Pagula window, Alex.
Now I'm picking her back and I'm sorry, I know it's boring, but that's what I'm going
with.
And then last but not least, the Iga Shvian tech section of the draw, mixed back, because
on the one hand, there are some big seats in this section, right?
You have eighth-seated Mary-Andreva, you have ninth-seated Alina's Fiddalina, you have
thirteenth-seated Carolina Mughva, you have thirty-second-seated Maria Sockery, who obviously
beat Shvian tech in the month of February.
Let me make the case for why this is actually a great draw for Iga Shvian tech.
First and foremost, we're at Indian Wells, conditions that have always suited her game
a multiple-time champion of this event.
Second off, it's the style of play.
First of all, again, the immediate seed Maria Sockery, she's not losing to Maria Sockery
twice in a row.
I'm sorry, she's just not.
I have to see that, to ever believe it.
Look again, the winner of Chinwen Mughva, if the seeds hold, and you get the healthiest
version of Chinwen, a Chinwen who obviously has beaten Iga in some big spots before, and
a big spot, particularly the Olympics before, okay, but at that point, it would be match
number three on the week for Chinwen.
Does she still, can that, and after a match of Mughva, can she still be that good in a
third match?
You'd have to see it to believe it.
Mughva is tricky, but it's round four of the tournament.
Things are going to be tricky.
I just don't know.
The Mughva slice back in, gives Iga Shviantec time.
If you give Iga Shviantec time, you're in trouble now.
Here's the difference again.
Mughva usually gets forward behind that slice back in, but can she do enough damage with
it?
Is it someone who's going to, I mean, she'll play downhill, she will pressure Shviantec.
Will she be able to hit through her in these conditions?
That's when I question a little bit more.
Again, Mughva is good, but I think Shviantec would be fine.
And then look, I know Andriva beat her here literally last year.
Sitalina has played some really fun matches with Iga everywhere, but those aren't the
overwhelming power tennis players in Sabalanka, in Ribak and in Anisimova, who can just
take the racket out of Shviantec's hands.
And if you can't take the racket out of her hands in these conditions in particular,
I just think you're in trouble.
And again, she avoided the biggest hitters, the informed version of Jessica Pagula.
I would like to see the Emboko match, but I've seen this Sitalina match before.
Again, I know she got through Mirandriva got through her last season.
It's a much better version of Iga March 2026 than we had in March of 2025 when that title
is Drout was lingering in the background of everything she was doing.
I think it's a great draw for Iga Shviantec.
Yeah.
I think there's some serious pressure on Iga Shviantec.
I know she won Cincinnati and beat Ribak on her way to that title could win over Pellini
in a final still as well, particularly 2025, Pellini.
But I don't know.
It's just again, it's the rush of Canada Cincinnati.
Everyone feels so fatigued in that moment and trying to take a second to enjoy the end
of summer before US Open obviously begins like, I want to win the last time she had, again,
since 2024 when she won the treble, which is still ridiculous again, to win Rome, Madrid
and Roland Garros in the same play court season, it's her Serena, that's the modern list.
Since then though, she hasn't had allowed first half a result, right?
Like last year, the first half was so uninspiring.
And then again, I'm a fan of dominance, you're talking to someone who unfortunately,
and this tells you a lot about me, like couldn't help it, gravitated towards Duke basketball,
gravitated towards Alabama football.
I like watching the best of the best be their best, like that's what inspires me at least
is being like, okay, so that's the heights one has to aspire to, to be the best in their profession.
And tennis is more fun, certainly the play court season is more fun when you have
a once in a generation play court talent playing like it.
And I just think a big Indian Wells result would be the catalyst for all of them to be like,
yeah, she's back to where she needs to be in her best places.
And I think the draw is perfectly set up for her to do so.
Now again, I think we're going to get some good matches in between, right?
Like, by the way, really cool, we've got Jennifer Brady, the Wild Card, back in action tomorrow
she'll take on Antonia Ruzic, Lily Tagger, Wild Card into the main draw.
There's a world where we get Tagger, Shvian Tag, round three of Tagger, can beat Grachivan Sockery.
And God, again, I've compared physically what Lily Tagger's capable of doing on the court
to pop on her forehand to the earliest versions of Shvian Tag.
I mean, can we get a healthy chin one?
If we do, that's the sleeper in this section, in this draw.
Yeah, I think Shvian Tag's getting through, like I do.
And then I think she's going to get through a wounded or belay, a beaten down Atlanta, Rabakina.
I think we're getting stopped me if you've heard this before.
I will say this again.
I'm going to keep predicting it until it actually happens in a tournament I predict it.
I think we're getting a Shvian Tag Zabalanka final.
And I'm actually going to take ego over Zabalanka.
I just think we're getting the ego run at this Indian Wells.
I think it's time.
I feel it in the ether.
I'll take ego Shvian Tag to win at a place where obviously she has done plenty of winning in the past.
That's your rapid fire.
Indian Wells draw prees you again.
You look at the day one results.
I know I mentioned some of them.
Some of the big ones certainly across the board.
The him and his cast and save a win.
Three sets of Arcadia McNally.
Zainab Sanma has been really sound.
She's like one of the 60 best players in the world, which I know doesn't move the needle for some.
But that's a massively forward in her young career.
6-0 over McCartney Castle.
That's a really good one.
It's been tough star for Castle's 2026.
Bozes Manero.
Three sets over Hadad Maya.
Kristaya.
Three sets over Tatiana Maria.
Talia Gibson.
Straight sets over Anne Lee.
Here's a sad one.
Putin's have a 4-in-2 over Paula Bedosa.
4-in-2.
Come on now.
Oh, by the way, Kristia on 7-6 in the 3rd over Janice Chen.
That was always going to be a blockbuster of the high bouncing kick for Chen in these conditions.
A nightmare to deal with.
Kristian hanging on 8-6 in that 3rd set.
Buster.
Those are the highlights from day one.
Those are my thoughts as we head into this Indian Wells again.
I'll go with the eGashvian Tech title run.
But look, it's the kickoff of a fantastic month.
If you're healthy, you're playing these events.
And that means we're guaranteed to get the best in the world going head to head at some point.
I mean, we already have the best in the world going head to head in around number one.
And from there, certainly, it's only going to get better.
So make sure you're subscribed to this crack rack.
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So you don't miss out on any of our coverage of the event.
I'll be back with daily recaps.
I'll be back here in a little bit as well for an Indian Wells men's drop.
You'll recap of the day one action on the men's side.
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Making all of our content possible.
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Try them out.
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