With Elina Svitolina clinching her 19th career title in a stunning victory at the 2026 ASB Classic in Auckland, and the 2026 Australian Open drawing record crowds, tennis fans around the world are gearing up for an adrenaline-fuelled year. For the elite athletes stepping onto the court, preparation begins long before their first serve.
From the age of nine years old, Sarah Mildren knew she wanted to be a professional tennis player. “I started playing when I was about six years old at our local club in the Adelaide Hills,” says the now 17-year-old, the day before competing in the 2026 Adelaide International, one of the lead-in tournaments for the Australian Open.
“I’ve always been a super-competitive kid in everything I’ve done. When I started training with Todd Langman at Langman and Ley [Elite Tennis Academy] at Glenlea Tennis Club in Glenelg, I knew I just wanted to get better and better.”
Having played on the circuit since 2021, this will be her final crack at the junior title at the Australian Open before she moves to the adult tour.
For 19-year-old Maya Joint, 2026 is shaping up to be her best year ever. Following wins at the Rabat Grand Prix and Eastbourne Open last year, she enters the Australian Open as the first local seeded women’s player since Ash Barty in 2022.
Here, Sarah and Maya reveal how they ready themselves, both physically and mentally, to prepare for the gruelling nature of playing professional tennis and overcome the intense pressure to perform.
Reaching physical peaks
“My goal is always to improve my game,” says Maya, whose parents – Michael, a former professional squash player from Melbourne, and Katja, who played tennis, squash and badminton in Germany – encouraged her from a young age. After her first big successes at the Open level, Maya began training with the Tennis Australia National Academy in Brisbane in 2023, at the age of 16, so she could represent Australia. Her entire family moved to Australia two years later.
“All my work with Tennis Australia has got me to play at my best level in the past two-and-a-half years,” she says.
She works on her game and fitness throughout the day, stopping for a break at lunch time. “I tend to eat whatever I want,” Maya says of her nutritional goals. “Although I do try to include more protein, especially at breakfast time.”
After finishing school last year, Sarah is now able to spend much more time concentrating on improving her fitness and her game as she transitions on to the Women's Tennis Australia (WTA) tour.
“When I’m at home and training, I'll start off nice and early with a gym session at QT Athlete,” she says. “We either work on strength and power or conditioning and footwork. After that, I’ll do a technical session with Todd, where we’ll work on going through all the shots: slice, drop shot, serving. Then I'll do some drilling and, after that, practice sets.”