Will Emma Raducanu win another Grand Slam? Why 2025 is critical moment for Brit to prove US Open miracle was not one-off
THE sight of Emma Raducanu, her bloodied knee patched up, booming down that ace to seal her miraculous US Open title is one of the most iconic moments in tennis history.
The qualifier, the British teenager, just a couple of months after finishing her A-Levels elevating herself into a stratosphere she could never have imagined.
The big questions for fans, pundits and sponsors alike is whether or not Raducanu can win another Grand Slam[/caption]Quite rightly, Raducanu was hailed as the new queen of British tennis, the poster girl – and some of the biggest brands in the world wasted no time in snapping her up with lucrative endorsements.
But three years on from that fairytale fortnight in New York and the mood around Raducanu is rather underwhelming.
She has played just 83 matches since, winning 42 of them, and has been plagued by injuries as her body struggles to get used to the rigours of professional tennis.
Five retirements between February 2022 and January 2023 were evidence of that – as was her need for three surgeries on both wrists and an ankle last year, ending her season in April.
There remains, though, one question on everyone’s lips, from casual tennis fans, to expert pundits to the accountants at Dior, Tiffany and Porsche…
Will Emma Raducanu win another Grand Slam?
If the answer was a simple no, that would be totally fine.
On the face of it, Raducanu, 21, has achieved more in her tennis career than anyone could have expected from her, she gave British tennis fans the most fantastic scenes in 2021 and she set herself up for life financially by tapping into the unignorable opportunities presented.
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She doesn’t owe anybody anything.
The lazy demands quips that she has done it once and should do it again are nonsense.
There is a reason why 99 per cent of professional tennis players never win a Grand Slam – or even get close.
It’s ruddy hard.
And yet, and yet, the answer is not a simple no because there is the flip side of the same coin.
The side that shows she is an incredible tennis player that did win a Grand Slam aged 18 and propelled her into a global superstar virtually overnight.
The side that keeps the flicker of the candle still burning in the hope she could just do it again.
That she could prove Flushing Meadows was not just a spectacular, miraculous flash-in-the-pan one-off.
That she could win another Grand Slam.
But if that is the case, and the answer to that multi-million dollar question is going to be a yes, then 2025 is absolutely critical.
That’s not to say she must win that elusive second Major in the next four attempts or she may as well give up.
It’s to say that she has reached a crux point in her career and the decisions she makes over the next 12 months may well determine how the rest of it plays out.
Emma Raducanu's Career
AGE: 21 (BORN NOVEMBER 13, 2002)
TURNED PRO: 2018
CURRENT WORLD RANKING: 72 (AS OF SEPTEMBER 10, 2024)
HIGHEST WORLD RANKING: 10 (JULY 2022)
CAREER TITLES: 1 (US OPEN 2021)
BEST GRAND SLAM RESULTS: AUSTRALIAN OPEN – R2 (2022, 2023, 2024), FRENCH OPEN – R2 (2022), WIMBLEDON – R4 (2021, 2024), US OPEN – CHAMPION (2021)
WIN-LOSS RECORD: 116-61 (66% WIN RATE AS OF SEPTEMBER 10, 2024)
TOP-TEN WINS: 2
PRIZE MONEY: £3,386,000
Emma Raducanu has got two of the best ingredients for success in the bag already: talent and experience.
Ironically, not dropping a set in ten matches as a qualifier en route to the 2021 US Open showed she had the former and gave her the latter.
Now it’s time for her to build up the other blocks to put herself in a position to compete at the top of tennis again, and to do so consistently.
Speaking of consistency, that is an undeniable necessity for the next chapter in Raducanu’s career.
The hire-and-fire conveyor belt approach to coaching didn’t work and she finally seems to be settled with childhood coach Nick Cavaday and Jane O’Donoghue in her corner.
Now it’s time to couple stability off the court with stability on the court, namely playing and winning tennis matches.
Eyebrows were understandably raised when Raducanu skipped qualifying for the French Open, one of the four Grand Slams of the year, to train and prepare for the grass-court season.
Arguably it paid off with runs to the Nottingham Open semis and the quarters at Eastbourne including her first top-ten win before losing to qualifier Lulu Sun in the fourth round at Wimbledon.
However, the refusal to attempt to qualify for either of August’s WTA 1000 events in Toronto or Cincinnati was simply a mistake.
A mistake an emotional Raducanu admitted after her first-round exit at the US Open as she vowed to play a fuller schedule going forward, starting with a quadruple-header in Asia to close her season.
2025 is a crux moment in her career[/caption] Raducanu admitted she made a mistake by skipping two tournaments before the US Open[/caption] She has found some stability alongside childhood coach Nick Cavaday[/caption] Pep Guardiola confessed Jack Grealish struggled for motivation after Manchester City’s Treble[/caption]Yes, 2023 was a write-off and 2024 was about making a sustainable comeback without her body breaking down again.
But 2025 has got to be the year Raducanu knuckles down, putting in the hard graft in the gym and on the tour.
It is only by entering tournaments, even if she has to swallow some pride and go through qualifying, that she will play regular matches and therefore can accumulate wins to rise up the rankings once again.
She has shown she is a form player who feeds off rhythm and performs best with recent victories under her belt, epitomised in 2021.
However, for all this to happen, Raducanu must want it, must have that fire and hunger.
The comedown after reaching the pinnacle is real.
Pep Guardiola called out Jack Grealish for dropping his levels for Manchester City last season after winning the Treble in 2022-23.
But the mark of the very best sportspeople is to go again and again and again.
Raducanu doesn’t have to look far for the perfect examples of relentless pursuits of achieving greatness, none more so than Novak Djokovic and his 24 Grand Slam titles in her very own sport.
Tennis stars’ new careers
PLENTY of tennis stars have stayed involved in the sport since retiring.
But others pursued very different careers. Here are some of the best…
- I reached French Open and Wimbledon finals as a teenager but I quit to become a nun
- I won Wimbledon mixed doubles with my sister but got fed up with English weather so now run luxury B&B
- I was tipped for stardom aged 12 but retrained to become high-flying lawyer
- I earned £9m and won French Open before setting up bistro with Brazilian model girlfriend
- I’m last Frenchman to win Roland Garros, now I’m singer with six albums hitting No1 in charts
- I’m former world No1 but quit aged 29 – instead I went on to play professional poker and golf
- I was destined for the top but swapped lobs for labs as award-winning Harvard physicist
The rise of her fellow Brits and friends Katie Boulter and Jack Draper in the last 18 months will help.
On one hand, their loftier rankings and particularly Draper’s Grand Slam ambitions will take some of the pressure off the Bromley ace from fans and media alike.
On the other, that spotlight of attention shifting from her to them will no doubt hurt, fuel up the competitive juices and make her even more determined to be the headline act in British tennis again.
Raducanu boasts a significant headstart on both Draper and Boulter.
She is the youngest of the three – not turning 22 until November – and, of course, has a far bigger profile as a global superstar already thanks to the US Open win.
So after a positive end to this year and the oh-too-short off-season, 2025 is the reset moment for Raducanu where expectations can return to something closer to resembling normal and her career can kick back into gear.
She must somehow find that difficult balance of using the US Open trophy at home as evidence and motivation to achieve more success while also putting that so-far anomalous fortnight aside to progress up the tennis ladder from her current rung of world No72 with just eight Grand Slam match wins in these three years.
Embrace that challenge – and it is a real challenge that requires humility and wise guidance around her – and Raducanu can lay the foundations to push on and be a somebody at the upper echelons of tennis again.
Do that and that answer can be an emphatic yes. An emphatic yes we would all love to see.
Her injury struggles struck again in the fourth-round Wimbledon exit[/caption] Jack Draper was the British story of the US Open as he reached the semis, losing to champ Jannik Sinner[/caption] Raducanu is behind both Katie Boulter and Harriet Dart in the world rankings[/caption] The Kent ace has proven to have the talent to trouble the world’s best players[/caption] A happy and confident Emma Raducanu is good news for British tennis[/caption]