Pro Media & News

Emma Navarro wins first WTA title in Hobart

Arthur Kapetanakis | January 13, 2024


After a standout 2023 season that saw her rise from world No. 149 to No. 31, Emma Navarro has hit new heights early this year. The 22-year-old American reached the Auckland semifinals last week, losing to eventual champion Coco Gauff, and has now gone all the way in Hobart.

 

Less than two years after winning the 2021 NCAA Championships singles title as a University of Virginia star, the Charleston native is a WTA champion for the first time.

"I don’t know if I could put words to the emotions, but it’s been a lot of years in the making," the second-seeded Navarro said after her triumph. "My coach [Peter Ayers] and I have been together for eight years, I think. From where we started to now, it’s really crazy to think about.

 

"Probably six, seven years ago, I was hoping to be a decent college player, and that was going to be good enough for me. So to be here now, it’s really crazy, and just a testament to the work we’ve both put in."

 

Navarro's Hobart run included three three-set wins in five matches, capped with a 6-1, 4-6, 7-5 final victory against top seed Elise Mertens. The American led for much of the second set in the final, but was forced to a decider after former world No. 12 Mertens, a two-time Hobart champ, surged late in the frame.

Down the stretch of the final set, Navarro leaned on her forehand to close out the match. She clinched the title with an explosive winner off that wing, her 39th winner of the title match.

 

Set to rise to a new career-high of No. 26 following her trophy run, Navarro also kept the Hobart title in American hands after Lauren Davis' triumph last season.

 

Next up for Navarro is her Australian Open debut. As the 27th seed in Melbourne, she will open her campaign against China's Wang Xiyu. Competing in her fifth major main draw, Navarro is seeking to advance to the third round at a Grand Slam for the first time. 

 

Taylor Townsend joined Navarro in the winners' circle this weekend with her third Adelaide title—all with different partners. After winning both stagings of the WTA 500 last season with Asia Muhammad and Luisa Stefani, the American teamed with Brazil's Beatriz Haddad Maia to extend her reign at the event this year.

 

Townsend and Haddad Maia did not drop a set as the third seeds in Adelaide, with a 7-5, 6-3 final victory against Frenchwomen Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic sealing the title—the fifth WTA doubles crown of the doubles world No. 10's career.

Skip Advertisement

Advertisement

Related Articles