Thứ Năm, Tháng 7 3, 2025

Carson Branstine serves style and strength in Wimbledon debut against world No. 1

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Model and rising tennis talent Carson Branstine made her highly anticipated Wimbledon debut on June 30, facing off against world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka. Though the 24-year-old lost in straight sets, her performance — and her unique dual career — is turning heads far beyond Centre Court.

Balancing the runway and the baseline

For most athletes, making it to Wimbledon is the dream of a lifetime. For Carson Branstine, it’s just one chapter in an already multifaceted career. The American-Canadian tennis player, who is also a professional model signed with Wilhelmina, stepped onto the grass courts of Wimbledon for the first time this week, ultimately falling to top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets, 6-1, 7-5.

Ranked No. 194 in the world, Branstine didn’t walk away with a win — but she made a statement. With a resume that includes modeling gigs for fashion heavyweights like Zara and Lululemon, Branstine is proof that high performance and high fashion don’t have to be mutually exclusive. “I love being in front of the camera during a shoot. It’s fun, I love fashion,” she told reporters before her debut match. “It’s been one of the reasons I’ve been able to pay for some of my trips.”

Carson Branstine; Carson Branstine of Canada in action against Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus during the Women's Singles First Round match during day one of The Championships Wimbledon 2025

Calling modeling “a cool little side hustle,” Branstine has approached both careers with a fierce sense of independence. “I didn’t want to ask my parents for anything,” she said. “I wanted everything to come from me and my tennis.” For her, the runway has become not just a creative outlet but a practical tool to support her professional goals.

Two industries, one identity

Juggling tennis and modeling might seem like a contradiction, but for Branstine, the parallels are striking. “Modeling and tennis are weirdly similar,” she reflected. “You are an object a lot, and people sometimes forget you’re a person too.” That insight reveals a depth of awareness often missing from conversations around female athletes and models alike — both are roles that can easily become defined by how others see you.

Her dual identity has also equipped her with a unique form of resilience. Confidence, she says, is everything. “I’m one of the best athletes on tour,” she declared without hesitation. “I believe in that. I’m fast, I lift a lot of weight, and I’m pretty agile for someone my height.” It’s the kind of self-assurance that translates both on the court and in front of the camera — a refusal to be underestimated in any arena.

And while her Wimbledon run may have ended quickly, Branstine’s poise and power didn’t go unnoticed. Her ability to hold her own against a dominant player like Sabalenka — particularly in a tight second set — speaks to potential that could soon translate into more victories, both in major tournaments and in the broader tennis conversation.

Brains behind the brand

Carson Branstine of Canada in action against Aryna Sabalenka during the first round on Day One of The Championships Wimbledon 2025

Branstine’s ambitions stretch far beyond tennis and modeling. In 2023, she earned her bachelor’s degree in society, ethics and law from Texas A&M University, where she was also part of the NCAA championship-winning team. Her next goal? Law school — after wrapping up her professional tennis career, of course.

“I’m dying to go back to law school after tennis,” she said, “but I also want to become a mom and start a family.” It’s an ambitious roadmap, but entirely on-brand for someone who’s been defying expectations from the start. With a background in ethics and a firsthand view of high-pressure industries, Branstine is poised to bring nuance and strength to whatever path she chooses next.

Her cousin, Los Angeles Dodgers star Freddie Freeman, may have blazed his own trail in baseball, but Branstine is charting something even more rare: a career that spans sport, fashion, and intellectual ambition. She’s as comfortable in a courtroom as she is on Centre Court — or in a campaign shoot.

A future worth watching

As the world meets Carson Branstine for the first time on tennis’s biggest stage, it’s clear that her story is just beginning. She’s not simply the model-turned-athlete trope; she’s a modern, multidimensional competitor who happens to have an eye for couture and a killer backhand.

Carson Branstine

Despite the loss at Wimbledon, Branstine leaves the tournament with momentum — and new fans. Her fearless approach to sport and life alike challenges the conventional boxes women in the public eye are so often placed in. She doesn’t choose between power and poise; she embodies both.

With aspirations ranging from Grand Slams to graduate school, and a grounded sense of self that keeps her centered through it all, Carson Branstine isn’t just playing the game — she’s rewriting the rules.

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