Over the first 10 days of 2017, we're examining the Top 10 players on the ATP and WTA tours—how will they fare during the new season? All of the previews can be found here.
Is it better to judge a player by her long-term results, or look more closely at how she plays from one match to the next? As with Karolina Pliskova, the two methods yield different results for Madison Keys.
Long-term, the Illinois native is trending in the right direction. Since 2012, she has moved from 149 to 37 to 31 to 18 to 8 in the rankings. In 2016, Keys became the first U.S. woman to make her Top 10 debut in 16 years. She has become a regular in the fourth round and quarterfinals at majors, she barely missed out on a medal at the Olympics in Rio and she finished 2016 by qualifying for the WTA’s season-ending championships for the first time. The expert consensus says that Keys will be a Wimbledon champion within the next four years, and Serena Williams herself has told her that she’s going to be No. 1 someday—Serena doesn’t say that to just anybody. All this, and Keys is still only 21. Is there really anything for star-starved U.S. tennis fans to worry about?