Facing the World No.1, Madison Keys will need to deliver the performance of her career in the Australian Open final. Her coach, Bjorn Fratangelo, believes she has both the focus and firepower to pull off a career-defining victory.
The American is into the final in Melbourne, with husband Bjorn Fratangelo as her coach. This is how the married couple work it out
The newly crowned Australian Open champion delivered a touching tribute to her close-knit team after claiming an elusive first grand slam crown with a nerve-shredding 6-3 2-6 7-5 victory over world No.1 Aryna Sabalenka at Melbourne Park on Saturday night.
Madison Keys' coach and husband Bjorn Fratangelo was full of praise for Aryna Sabalenka. A little over 12 hours since Keys' gritty effort to edge No.2 Iga Swiatek in a third-set tiebreak, Fratangelo was back at Melbourne Park to devise the gameplan for his ...
Bjorn Fratangelo, realized that this wasn’t the time for happy talk. Keys, the No. 19 seed here this year and a previous two-time semifinalist at Melbourne Park, had won the first set.
But Keys saved her most special praise for her life partner Bjorn Fratangelo ... this century to snare a hat-trick of titles at Melbourne Park. To stop the Belarusian powerhouse, Keys knew ...
Former teenage prodigy Madison Keys arrived in Australia with the goal of seeing how well she could perform with her 30th birthday approaching next month. Keys ended her season early in October last year and married her coach,
The Madison Keys who will play two-time defending champion Aryna Sabalenka for the title at the Australian Open is not the same players who was the runner-up at the U.S. Open in 2017.
Madison Keys is set to play in her first Australian Open finals. Cheering her on—and coaching her—is her husband, fellow American tennis player Bjorn Fratengelo. Keys, 29, and Fratengelo, 31 ...
There was a moment on Monday afternoon, during Madison Keys’ Australian Open fourth-round match against No. 6 seed Elena Rybakina, when her coach, Bjorn Fratangelo, realized that this wasn’t the time for happy talk.
The newlywed Keys, whose husband and coach is former American tennis player Bjorn Fratangelo, said after some much needed sleep, they'll be "back to work on Monday" to prepare for "lots of tournaments" including the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells and the Miami Open back to back in March.
Go for it. Those were the mantras Madison Keys turned to as she confronted the most significant points of her tennis career, trapped in the cauldron of a third set that was tied at 5-all, 30-all in the Australian Open final against two-time defending champion Aryna Sabalenka on Saturday.