Tennis made up for lost time last week. After a month and a half away, the sport returned with a deluge: Five tournaments across three continents. The players did what they could to get their reps in before the Australian Open starts next Monday.
That means there have already been a lot of winners so far in 2019. We rank the Top 10, in terms of potential significance, below.
10. Roger Federer and Serena Williams
After 20 years on tour together, the two Goats of the Open era finally met on the same court, at Hopman Cup. More important, they each went undefeated in singles. Yes, Hopman Cup is an exhibition, but if you were worried how these two 37-year-olds would look in the new year, you can probably relax. They look as fit as ever.
9. Lesia Tsurenko (Brisbane runner-up)
As I wrote last week, 30 is the new 20 in tennis, and this 29-year-old Ukrainian looks poised to keep the trend going. In Brisbane, Tsurenko made Naomi Osaka pay for a lackluster performance in the semifinals, then served for the title against Karolina Pliskova in the final. That’s when the bottom suddenly fell out, and she lost 13 points in a row. Otherwise, though, Tsurenko’s newfound cool effectiveness from the baseline will make her one of the proverbial “players no one wants to face” in Melbourne.
8. Tomas Berdych (Doha runner-up)
Yes, he’s back again—hopefully with a fully recovered back. After injuring it last spring, Berdych had to cut his 2018 season short. At 33, how much did he have left? Berdych, who contemplated retiring, wondered the same thing. But he answered his own question this week, with a runner-up finish in Doha. No seed in Melbourne is going to want to see this two-time Australian Open semifinalist in his section.
7. Bianca Andreescu (Auckland runner-up)
We ask again—what’s in the water in Canada? The nation of 37 million has wasted no time in showing off another potential new star for 2019. Andreescu, an 18-year-old from Ontario via Romania, came to Auckland ranked No. 152, qualified for the main draw, and just kept winning. She doesn’t have crazy speed or power, but she can compete: You don’t beat Caroline Wozniacki and Venus Williams, and come one game from the title against Julia Goerges in the final, if you can’t.
6. Daniil Medvedev (Brisbane runner-up)
The 22-year-old Russian has always had a lanky, quirky talent that surprised and frustrated opponents. The question seemed to be whether he had a reliable first-strike weapon that could blow them away. This week in Brisbane he found one: His leaping put-away forehand; at 6’6’, Medvedev gets some serious leverage on the shot. In a changing-of-the-guard type run, Medvedev beat Andy Murray, Milos Raonic, and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, before losing to Kei Nishikori in three sets in the final.
5. Kei Nishikori (Brisbane champion)
It may not have been the most awe-inspiring title run of his career—he didn’t beat anyone in the Top 15 in Brisbane—but it still must have come as a relief. Nishikori had lost his last nine finals, dating all the way back to the now-defunct Memphis Open of 2016.
MATCH POINT: Kei Nishikori d. Daniil Medvedev in Brisbane final