Teen tennis star Mirra Andreeva is on a roll, upsetting world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in Sunday’s final of the 2025 BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells and launching five spots to No. 6 in the WTA rankings as a result.
Sabalenka entered Sunday’s match having not dropped a single set all tournament, then started the final strong with a 6-2 first-set victory.
The three-time Grand Slam winner’s advantage didn’t last past the first break, however, as Sabalenka’s 17-year-old opponent came back roaring back to finish off the match 6-4, 6-3.
“In the second set, I tried to play a little bit more aggressive,” Andreeva said after the match. “I didn’t try to overhit her, because I don’t think anyone can overhit Aryna, because she’s super powerful player.”
“I tried to really create something to make her uncomfortable, and point by point, game by game, I managed to do that.”
WTA Tour-leading Andreeva still hunting first Slam title
With Sunday’s win, Andreeva became the youngest Indian Wells champion since then-17-year-old Serena Williams defeated Steffi Graf to win the tournament in 1999.
Even more, Andreeva did so in dominant fashion, ousting top players like No. 22 Elina Svitolina, No. 8 Elena Rybakina, and even the contest’s defending champion, No. 2 Iga Świątek, to advance to the championship match.
By defeating both Sabalenka and five-time major champion Świątek, Andreeva added her name next to Williams’ in another line of the tennis history book, becoming the first player under 18-years-old to defeat the world Nos. 1 and 2 at the same WTA tournament since the US legend did so at the 1999 US Open.
Perhaps most impressively, Andreeva now sits atop all other players on tour with a 19-3 record on the season, after adding Sunday’s Indian Wells trophy to last month’s 2025 Dubai Championships title.
That said, Andreeva’s current hot streak isn’t just a warning to her opponents on tour — it’s a signal that the teen could be on the precipice of lifting her first-ever Grand Slam trophy, as her chances of reaching the sport’s apex skyrocket with every top-ranked victory.