keys charleston

CHARLESTON—Madison Keys ended her press conference by dropping a bomb on Friday, revealing her relationship with clay courts is getting serious at the Credit One Charleston Open.

Though the 2025 Australian Open champion would still take a hard-court swing over any other time in the season, Keys confessed a growing appreciation for the higher-bouncing of the natural surface after claiming a quarterfinal victory over Belinda Bencic.

Sorry grass courts:

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Madison Keys marches into first semifinal of 2026 | Charleston Interviews

Q. I was curious how you would assess how your relationship with clay courts have evolved over the years because obviously you've had some really great results on clay, but I would imagine you probably still prefer hard and grass and how that mentality takes you into the season each year?

MADISON KEYS: I have grown to not dislike clay. I think when I first started, it kind of always felt like it was slower. I think at the start of my career I kind of would try to change who I was as a tennis player. And I felt like I lost my own tennis identity throughout the clay swing, and then you get back on grass and you just kind of feel like everything is front-foot tennis.

So, I think over the years I've stopped trying to make these drastic changes to how I play tennis. It's just the smaller tweaks and how can you actually use the court to help your game. And, honestly, I think I almost like clay better than grass. Right? Crazy, I know!

Keys later clarified that, to be fair, Wimbledon’s grass has gotten slower over the years.

“Queen’s Club is still pretty fast,” she told me before filming a video for the tournament’s social media page.

And indeed, one could look at four-time Roland Garros winner Iga Swiatek’s run to the 2025 Wimbledon title and think Keys may not be far off.

A champion in Charleston back in 2019, Keys is closing in on a second green-clay title as she awaits the winner of either McCartney Kessler or Yuliia Starodubtseva.