• 11 - 1987: The Debate for Number One
    Jan 24 2026

    In 1987, women’s tennis was transformed as Steffi Graf dethroned legends, seized the No. 1 ranking, and ignited a fierce season-long debate: Does greatness mean dominating all year, or winning the biggest titles? As Martina Navratilova fights to defend her crown, a generational showdown unfolds—culminating in one of the sport’s most dramatic years and the ultimate question: Who really deserves to be number one?

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    28 Min.
  • 10 - French Open 1987: Steff Graf's First Slam
    Jan 21 2026

    In Paris, 1987, Steffi Graf arrives as the rising No. 2 seed—crushing early rounds, surviving a tense semifinal with Gabriela Sabatini, and stepping into a final that feels like a referendum on the sport’s future. Across the net is Martina Navratilova, the reigning No. 1, brilliant but visibly under pressure to hold off the new era. In the deciding set, Martina surges to a lead and serves for the championship—only for the match to swing on free points, nerves, and a closing stretch where Graf stays steady and capitalizes. The result is a French Open final that doesn’t just crown a champion—it signals a changing of the guard.

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    25 Min.
  • 9 - Monica Seles: The Baltic Basher
    Jan 17 2026

    In March 1987, tennis fans are introduced to 13-year-old Monica Seles not through match footage, but through a hype machine. Nick Bollettieri brands her “the Baltic Basher,” calls her the best young player he’s ever seen, and frames her family’s ambition as singular: nothing less than No. 1. In this episode we learn the truth about Monica's first few months at the Bollettieri Academy, the price she paid for a tennis education that seemed too good to be true, and the Seles family that rallied not to make Monica No. 1, but to make her happy.

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    18 Min.
  • Bonus - If You Can't Beat Her, Use Her Racket
    Jan 14 2026

    When Martina Navratilova loses in Rome in 1987, she doesn’t just brush it off—she bristles at the idea that the world is already rehearsing her dethroning. She stays on the clay to grind, watches 17-year-old Steffi Graf’s surge, and admits the chase is real. Then comes the detail that says everything: Martina starts experimenting with the exact Dunlop model Graf uses—trying a Max 200G in Rome, and arriving in Paris with a black-painted version that fools no one. This bonus episode is a tense prologue to Roland Garros 1987: the reigning queen feeling the heat, rewriting her own habits, and reaching for the future’s weapon, just to try and hold onto the present.

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    15 Min.
  • 8 - Lipton 1987: When Steffi Crushed Martina and Chris
    Jan 10 2026

    Steffi Graf arrives at the 1987 Lipton as “the future” and leaves having crushed both queens of the game. In this episode, we pick up after her heartbreaking 1986 US Open semi vs Martina Navratilova, track her rise to No. 2 over Chris Evert, and then walk through 1987 Key Biscayne: the windy beatdown of Navratilova in the semis and the 6–1, 6–2 dismantling of Evert in her home state. Was this the week women’s tennis unofficially changed hands?

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    29 Min.
  • 7 - Peter Graf: Signals From the Stands
    Jan 7 2026

    From basement drills in Brühl to center court at Amelia Island, Steffi Graf’s rise wasn’t a solo act—and it definitely wasn’t quiet. In this episode, we zoom in on Peter Graf: the restless figure pacing the stands, flashing “support” signals, arguing with officials, and clashing with the press long before tax scandals and tabloid headlines.

    We follow Peter and his growing friction with journalists, and the way his courtside behavior finally spills over at Amelia Island, where Steffi faces Claudia Kohde-Kilsch for the title.

    If you’re interested in the line between devoted tennis parent and disruptive sideline presence, this is the episode where we put Peter in the spotlight.

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    20 Min.
  • Bonus - The Day Steffi Almost Toppled The Queen: US Open 1986
    Jan 3 2026

    Relive the electric 1986 US Open semifinal where 17-year-old Steffi Graf went toe-to-toe with world No. 1 Martina Navratilova and came within a swing or two of the biggest win of her young career. We walk point-by-point through that epic third-set tiebreak, break down Steffi’s ruthless run through the draw, and revisit contemporary reports from New York that crowned her Martina’s “natural successor.” A deep-dive for tennis fans, Graf obsessives, and anyone who loves high-stakes, coming-of-age sports drama.

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    23 Min.
  • 6 - Forty-Seven Attempts: Steffi's First Title
    Dec 31 2025

    Before Steffi Graf became a 22-time Grand Slam champion, she was a teenager grinding through Futures events, qualifiers, and lonely early-round losses. In this episode, we zoom in on the moment everything changed: her first WTA Tour title in Hilton Head, 1986, where a 16-year-old Steffi finally breaks through and beats Chris Evert in the final.

    We follow Steffi from the satellite circuit and junior dominance to the setbacks that almost sent her back to school, the thumb injury in Australia, the “I never want to play on grass again” meltdown, and the Olympic breakthrough in Los Angeles. Then we track her 1985 run of near-misses—constantly running into Evert—and how that all builds toward Hilton Head, where she turns the tables on the queen of the baseline and finally announces herself as a real threat to both Evertand Martina Navratilova.

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    32 Min.