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Belinda Bencic’s tennis comeback and the challenge of returning to the WTA Tour after pregnancy

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Belinda Bencic’s tennis comeback and the challenge of returning to the WTA Tour after pregnancy

A dominant win in the last warm-up tournament before a Grand Slam doesn’t sound like an occasion for an Olympic gold medalist to express disbelief. But in Adelaide, after a 6-2, 1-0 (ret.) victory over world No. 14 Anna Kalinskaya, Belinda Bencic is at a loss.

“I didn’t even think I’d be here,” Bencic, 27 and the world No. 421, said in her on-court interview.

Bencic isn’t returning from a long injury. She’s done that already, recovering from wrist surgery and a five-month layoff in 2017 to rise from the 300s to a high of world No. 4 and then that Olympic gold in Tokyo in 2021, where she beat Marketa Vondrousova in the final. She’s doing what so many women do outside of tennis, but has until recently been a rarity in the upper echelons of the sport: coming back from a career break during which she gave birth to her first child, Bella in April 2024.

She may not have believed the speed of her return to form, but she has no doubts about where she can go now.

“I’m really confident about getting back to where I was and even better,” she said in a recent interview via Zoom from Slovakia, where both her parents are from.

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“I felt really inspired and brave enough to have a baby mid-career because a lot of other athletes and tennis players have done it before. It’s not like this is not possible. Everyone showed that it’s possible, and they got back to the same level.”

There was a time not that long ago when having a baby was considered the end of a tennis player’s career. Margaret Court, Evonne Goolagong Cawley and Kim Clijsters won Grand Slams after giving birth, but generally players would only start families in retirement.

Then, in 2016, Serena Williams won the Australian Open while eight weeks pregnant. She went on to reach four more Grand Slam finals after giving birth to her first child, Olympia, in September 2017 and coming close to death from complications. Williams’ announcement of her pregnancy was a watershed moment for tennis, with an increasing number of players feeling comfortable having a mid-career break to start a family as a result.

Victoria Azarenka reached the U.S Open final in 2020, almost four years after her son Leo was born, and the woman she lost to that night, Naomi Osaka, returned to the tour for the 2024 season after the birth of daughter Shai in July 2023. Osaka, 27, is looking to get back to her best in 2025 after an up-and-down comeback last year. In the 2024 Indian Wells main draw, Azarenka and Osaka were among seven mothers competing, including former world No. 1s and Grand Slam champions Angelique Kerber and Caroline Wozniacki, who faced off in the fourth round.

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Elina Svitolina enchanted the Wimbledon crowd in 2023 by reaching the semifinals only three months after returning to the tour and nine months after giving birth, equalling her best-ever showing at a Grand Slam in the process. The Ukrainian ended the year as world No. 25, winning the WTA’s ‘comeback player of the year’ award. America’s Taylor Townsend, 28, had her best-ever season last year. She won the Wimbledon women’s doubles with Katerina Siniakova (her first Grand Slam title), reached the U.S. Open mixed doubles final with Donald Young and achieved a singles career-high ranking of No. 46 following a run to the quarters of the Canadian Open WTA 1000 (one rung below the Grand Slams). Her son, Adyn, was born in March 2021.

Bencic, who enters the first Grand Slam of the season with her special ranking of No. 15, credits the significant shift in attitudes for helping her believe that she could follow in their footsteps.


Belinda Bencic and Martin Hromkovic celebrate her Olympic gold in singles at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. (Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

She cites the legendary American athlete Allyson Felix, who continued to win Olympic medals and break world records after giving birth, while also namechecking Williams, Azarenka and less-heralded tennis players such as Stefanie Voegele and Yanina Wickmayer as inspirations. She’s had conversations about the realities of coming back with Kerber, who retired at the Paris Olympics in July 2024 and has discussed balancing tennis and childcare with Swiss compatriot Roger Federer.

Bencic is also aware that, as with returning to the tennis court, preparation can sometimes be overtaken by factors beyond a player’s control. America’s world No. 11 Danielle Collins planned to retire in November aged 30 to start a family, but put that on hold when she was told that her endometriosis was presenting complications with her getting pregnant. Ons Jabeur, a three-time Grand Slam finalist, has spoken poignantly of her desire to have a baby — but only once she’s landed that elusive first major title.

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“It felt like it was right for us at this moment of our lives,” Bencic said of her and her Martin Hromkovic’s figuring out when to start a family.

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The WTA Tour has become a more hospitable place for players returning after having children in the last few years. Since 2019, players have been able to use the ranking they had before going on hiatus to enter 12 tournaments over a three-year period from the birth of their child. If ranked high enough to be seeded in any of their first eight tournaments back, players are also protected from facing a seeded player in the opening round. When Williams began her comeback in 2018 having previously been world No. 1, she was having to enter tournaments unseeded.

There is also a performance health team, which offers tailored services throughout the process from support with breastfeeding or postpartum health to diaphragm and core physiotherapy to prevent delays in recovery. It offers personalized nutrition plans for lactation and athletic performance, and bespoke recommendations for postpartum sleep disturbances. At the Grand Slams and events ranging from WTA 1000s like Madrid and Rome to 500-level tournaments like the United Cup and Stuttgart, there is on-site childcare, but this is not a standard across the circuit. Wozniacki last year told PA that she had been treated well but also that “there should be more done for women coming back from maternity leave.”

A WTA spokesperson told The Athletic that regulatory differences in childcare provision across host countries make a universal childcare policy unworkable. They added that the WTA “encourages” tournaments to offer childcare on a case-by-case basis.

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“We remain committed to providing resources to help balance parenthood and the demands of competing at the highest level,” the spokesperson said.

So far, those resources do not include maternity pay. Osaka last year said “having a kid shouldn’t feel like a punishment” from a financial perspective in an interview with the BBC, but there has been no movement on the subject since November 2023, when Steve Simon, then chief executive of the WTA, described it as “scheduled for review” in a letter to players.

Sources briefed on the initiative, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect relationships within the sport, have told The Athletic that the WTA is keen to institute such a policy and discussions with the players are ongoing. Osaka and Azarenka both emphasized that it would be lower-ranked players who need such an initiative more than former champions with significant sponsorship like themselves.

“I think we have a lot of work to do but they’re definitely moving on the right track because the questions are being asked,” Townsend told The Athletic in a recent interview.


Taylor Townsend waves to her family after winning the women’s doubles at Wimbledon in 2024. (Clive Brunskill / Getty Images)

Like Bencic, Townsend believes that the normalization of having children while on tour will help to effect change. “Things can definitely move quicker now because there are a lot more moms on tour,” Townsend said.

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“I think we’re going to see more as the years go on.”

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Bencic, who won the 2015 Canadian Open by beating four of the top six players in the world — including Williams — and reached the top 10 the following year at 18, played the San Diego Open in September 2023 while around eight weeks pregnant. Her first tournament back with a ranking was an ITF W75 in Petange, Luxembourg, in November 2024, when she was world No. 1213. By early December she was No. 913, leaping to world No. 421 after reaching the final of the WTA 125 in Angers, France and beating world No. 123 Chloe Paquet in the United Cup at the end of the month.

But the beginning of her return to the court was far from the start of her journey back. Around eight weeks after giving birth to Bella, Bencic starting doing pelvic floor and core stability exercises. Gradually she started trying to rebuild some of her muscle and playing a bit of tennis just in the forecourt. After about four months, she felt like she could start hitting again, but she says that it’s “your reactions” that take the longest to come back into focus. “On the return, your eyes are basically trained by playing every day and seeing the ball,” she explains. “This is not talent. You don’t have that, you have to train it.”

She described the transformation of pregnancy as at first “really strange,” a view shared by other players in a similar position to her. Speaking in a news conference at the Australian Open, Osaka said that it was “really tough to even run” post-partum.

“I do understand why it’s very difficult to, I guess, get to a professional level,” she added.

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For Bencic, she quickly acclimatized to the changes to her body — until, as she puts it, “you’re not pregnant anymore, then it’s weird.”

“The only difficult thing was not being able to move or do a lot of sports. And in the end, it felt very limiting and I couldn’t wait until I could have a run again or go to the gym. So it really went from 100 to zero,” Bencic said.

“I have to say kudos to every woman out there because it’s really crazy how fast it changes in such a little time. You go from being 100 percent fit to pregnancy and then afterwards it takes like a lot of time. I think they say you’ve been pregnant for nine months or so and you need the same amount of time afterwards to feel like you were before.

“I’m so amazed by how the body works,” she said.

Bencic used the events in Luxembourg and France as a testing ground — not just to see where her game was at, but also how things would work logistically with a baby daughter in tow. The practice court and match court initially felt like “two different universes,” but that final in Angers and her win over Paquet helped build confidence. Even a sobering 6-1, 6-1 thrashing at the hands of world No. 4 Jasmine Paolini at the United Cup was both a reminder of how steep the top of the tennis mountain is and a positive reality check for where she wants to be.

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Belinda Bencic in Hamburg, where competed without a ranking in one of her first events back. (Gregor Fischer / Press Alliance via Getty Images)

Logistically, she’s found a way of making it work, helped by Bella being a very good sleeper and Hromkovic, who is also Bencic’s physical trainer, looking after Bella while Bencic trains and competes. Hromkovic can often be seen with Bella in a sling on his chest, watching on while Bencic practices; both of Bella’s grandmothers pitch in and Bencic’s mother, Dana, will join mother, father and daughter at the Australian Open. Bencic is adapting to playing on less sleep, such a crucial thing for any athlete, but is grateful that Bella generally has pretty uninterrupted nights.

Logistical decisions like these also carry an emotional weight, with the feelings of guilt so many parents feel when having to prioritize their careers over childcare. Dealing with these challenges forms part of the mental health support players get from the WTA, and while Bencic is only just figuring these things out, for Townsend it’s been an ongoing concern.

“There’s a guilt sometimes that I feel being gone for so many weeks, then a guilt about coming home for two days after being gone for three weeks, that is so tough for me,” she said.

“So ultimately I focus on the quality over quantity and just try to be sure that the time I do spend with him is something that he’ll remember.”

Becoming a mother has lent Bencic this kind of perspective, both on her family life and her tennis. “Tennis used to be my one and only life, everything I ever worked for,” she says.

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“I would put so much pressure on myself to deliver a good match and a good performance, and if I would have a bad practice, I would think all day about it. That’s completely different now.

“It’s more like a job, it’s more separate. It’s still important to me, I still have the passion and everything, but it’s not everything. I can lose a match and I don’t feel like ‘My god, this is it.’”

(Top photo: Steve Christo / Corbis via Getty Images)

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Justin Thomas, Keegan Bradley get heated with official over pace of play at PGA Championship

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Justin Thomas, Keegan Bradley get heated with official over pace of play at PGA Championship

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After a slow first round at Aronimink Golf Club in Philadelphia on Thursday, pace of play was a point of emphasis at the PGA Championship on Friday.

However, when an official approached Justin Thomas and Keegan Bradley, they became animated.

Thomas, a longtime Team USA Ryder Cup member, and Bradley, last year’s United States captain, were on the fourth hole when they were approached by an official in a cart, and the conversation quickly turned into finger-pointing.

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Justin Thomas and Keegan Bradley watch from the tenth green during the second round of the PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown, Pennsylvania, on May 15, 2026. (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

Thomas said after the round that he, Bradley and fellow USA Ryder Cupper Cameron Young, who won the Cadillac Championship earlier this month, were put on the clock, with the official telling them to pick up the pace. However, both Bradley and Thomas appeared to point at the group in front of them.

“We just didn’t really agree with it,” Thomas said, citing course conditions, high winds and tough pins. “We were behind. That wasn’t our issue… It’s just the fact that we weren’t holding up the group behind us.”

Thomas said they were caught up with the pace on the very next hole.

Justin Thomas plays his shot on the 15th tee during the second round of the PGA Championship in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, on May 15, 2026. (Bill Streicher/Imagn Images)

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Thomas had a lengthy conversation with the official, while Bradley appeared to make his point short and sweet — though he was definitely not happy with the call.

It is a large PGA Championship field, with 156 golfers at the course and groups even starting their rounds on the back nine. The scores have also been rather high, with just 25 players below par at the time of publishing.

Aronimink also features a shared tee box on 1 and 10, holes 9 and 17 crossing paths, and a lengthy par-3 eighth hole that’s causing problems. Three par-3s are over 200 yards on the course, and there is also a 457-yard par 4 on the fourth.

Keegan Bradley prepares to putt on the 14th green during the first round of the PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, on May 14, 2026. (Bill Streicher/Imagn Images)

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As Chris Gotterup put it on Friday, “You’re not going to get any four-and-a-half hour rounds out here.”

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Sparks hold off late Toronto Tempo rally, earn first win of season

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Sparks hold off late Toronto Tempo rally, earn first win of season

The Sparks are finally in the win column, but the outcome was in doubt late Friday night.

Behind double-digit scoring from all five starters, the Sparks had by far their best offensive showing of the season, shooting 63.8% during a 99-95 win over the expansion Toronto Tempo.

The Tempo didn’t make things easy, cutting the deficit to two points late and later trailing by just three with 31 seconds remaining and possession of the ball. Marina Mabrey missed a three-point attempt before late Tempo fouls gave the Sparks enough of a cushion to win.

Kelsey Plum nearly claimed a double-double with 27 points and nine assists, while Dearica Hamby had 19 points with seven rebounds and Nneka Ogwumike scored 20 points.

Erica Wheeler, who started in place of Ariel Atkins (concussion), scored 10 points with seven assists and was a plus-16 as the primary ball handler after starting the season two for 16 from the field. That freed up Plum to be in position to score, setting up a much more efficient Sparks offense.

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Toronto was shorthanded in the frontcourt without starting center Temi Fagbenle (right shoulder), and the Sparks trio of bigs had a field day with 54 points in the paint.

The Sparks came out firing on Friday, opening with a 17-2 run.

The Tempo went on a 10-0 burst heading into the second quarter but the Sparks countered to maintain momentum and led 46-38 at halftime.

A Wheeler three-pointer early in the third quarter gave the Sparks a 20-point lead. The Tempo cut it to three midway through the fourth while Brittany Sykes (27 points, seven assists) sparked Toronto’s rally. The Tempo put up more shots than the Sparks, 70-58, largely because of a 10-2 offensive-rebounding gap.

Cameron Brink’s 10 points were the only ones provided by the Sparks’ bench, while the Tempo got 42 points from reserves.

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Toronto was coming off its first win in franchise history on Wednesday when it defeated Seattle but struggled against a more complete offensive team in the Sparks.

In her return to Los Angeles after winning a national championship with UCLA this spring, Tempo rookie Kiki Rice netted 11 points.

Kate Martin made her Sparks debut as a developmental player with Atkins and Sania Feagin (lower left leg) unavailable and picked up one rebound in six minutes.

The Sparks will face Toronto again on Sunday at Crypto.com Arena.

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Sky vs Mercury betting preview: Why the over 166.5 looks like the play in this WNBA matchup

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Sky vs Mercury betting preview: Why the over 166.5 looks like the play in this WNBA matchup

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The WNBA season has been in session for about a week, so it is far too early to make assumptions about teams. That doesn’t mean we won’t make them; it’s just too early to really believe it. I lost my first WNBA bet this season, so I’m hoping to avenge that loss here as the Sky take on the Mercury.

The Chicago Sky are one of the most poorly run franchises in basketball. They have had some great names on their team and only one championship to show for it.

Phoenix Mercury forward DeWanna Bonner shoots over Indiana Fever guard Aerial Powers in the first half at PHX Arena. (Rick Scuteri/Imagn Images)

There really isn’t a clear indication of what is wrong with the franchise, but they’ve never been able to retain their talent. Aside from Kamilla Cardoso, I can’t name a player on this team that they’ve actually drafted. They just seem to get good players and then show them the door.

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Even though they’ve had questionable front office decisions, they seem to have put together a solid team for this season – something I didn’t expect before the season started.

They are 2-0, which is too early to really say they are a good team. I also want to reserve judgment until they face a team with a longer history than last year. The Portland Tempo played their first-ever game against the Sky, and Golden State was good last year, but still is in just their second season of existence.

The Phoenix Mercury are actually considered one of the best franchises in the league. I’m sure there are issues that people have reported, but for the most part, they have good facilities, and people want to play for their team. They made it all the way to the WNBA Finals last season before falling to the Las Vegas Aces. This year, they are looking to restart that journey and see if they can win the last game of the year.

Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper dribbles the ball in the second half at CareFirst Arena in Washington, D.C., on July 27, 2025. (Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images)

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It will need to come with some better play than they’ve shown through three games this year. They are just 1-2 for the year with a 0-1 home record. The lone win was a blowout victory over the Aces (a clear revenge game if we’ve ever seen one). Then they lost the next two games against Golden State and Minnesota. Losing to the Lynx wouldn’t be a problem, but they didn’t have Napheesa Collier, who still has an ankle injury.

I expect the Mercury to make some adjustments for this game. They haven’t looked very crisp to begin the year, but they’ve been strong on offense, averaging 87 points per game.

The Sky are going to keep relying on their offense to do just enough and their defense to lock in. The Sky do have an edge on the interior, so they can get buckets fairly easily down low. I like the over 166.5 in this game.

Chicago Sky guard Skylar Diggins chases the ball during the fourth quarter against the Golden State Valkyries at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on May 13, 2026. (Bob Kupbens/Imagn Images)

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I also think it is worth betting on Kahleah Copper to go over her point total. Copper had two rough games before she broke out in the last game. Now she has the same sight lines and can attack the bigs from the Sky with her athleticism. Since going to Phoenix, she has scored 29, 7, 16, 25 and 28 points in five games against them.

For more sports betting information and plays, follow David on X/Twitter: @futureprez2024 

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