Madison Keys won the first Grand Slam title of her career in 2025 at the Australian Open. Ahead of her title defense this month, she recently opened up about how winning the Melbourne Major did not significantly change her life.
The 2026 Australian Open is scheduled to take place from Jan. 12 to Feb. 1, 2026, at Melbourne Park, with the main draw matches starting on Jan. 18.
Madison Keys Reveals How Winning the Australian Open Has Impacted Her ‘Life’
Last year, Keys was seeded 19th at the Australian Open and began her campaign by defeating fellow American Ann Li in the first round, and then advanced past Elena-Gabriela Ruse in the second round. Keys eliminated the 10th seed Danielle Collins and sixth seed Elena Rybakina in the third and fourth rounds, respectively.
In the quarterfinals, the former world No. 5 triumphed over the 28th seed Elina Svitolina and secured her spot in the final by defeating the second seed Iga Świątek in the semifinals. In the championship match, she overcame two-time defending champion, top seed Aryna Sabalenka, with a scoreline of 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 to win the tournament, claiming her first Grand Slam title.
Recently, during a press conference, Keys was asked how winning the Australian Open had changed her day-to-day life. She responded that winning the Grand Slam title was a “huge accomplishment” and something she feels “massively proud” of, but it hasn’t considerably altered her life.
Keys mentioned that she is “different” as a first-time Grand Slam winner because, unlike many young players who win their first Grand Slam while still relatively new to the tour, she has years of experience and was already well-known in the tennis world.
“Everyone loves to ask me if it’s changed my life. I don’t think that it’s really changed my life. It’s a huge accomplishment, and it’s something I’m massively proud of myself for. But I think I’m a little bit, I’m a bit of a different first slam winner than we’ve had the past couple of years. A lot of them have been like 19, or they came from qualies, or things like that. So seeing as I’ve had many more years on tour, and everyone kind of knew me,” Keys said.
The former world No. 5 explained that since she had already achieved “high levels of success” before winning the 2025 Australian Open, her life hasn’t changed much, except that she can now include her name in the “history book.”
“I’ve had pretty high levels of success already, it was just kind of one of those things that people are really happy that I finally achieved it, but it wasn’t quite a shock across the sport. So things haven’t changed that differently, other than just the fact that I just kind of get to put my name in the history book there,” she added.
Currently, Keys is in Adelaide to defend her title at the 2026 Adelaide International. She is seeded second and will begin her campaign in the second round after receiving a first-round bye. In her opening match, she will face the winner of the first-round match between Jeļena Ostapenko and qualifier Tereza Valentová.
