By Chris Oddo | @TheFanChild | Sunday May 7, 2023
After dropping her first six units towards Iga Swiatek on clay (successful simply 14 video games throughout the three matches), Aryna Sabalenka flipped the script on Swiatek and notched a shocking victory on the crimson clay of the Caja Majica on Saturday in Madrid.
The 6-3, 3-6, 6-3 conquer the World No.1 and clay juggernaut marks Sabalenka’s fourth win over a World No.1-ranked participant.
For Sabalenka, who struggled to win video games, not to mention units or a match towards Swiatek on clay, the victory represents an enormous step. The incontrovertible fact that the competition was performed at altitude in Madrid, the place the Belarusian’s bruising baseline recreation will be more practical than at sea stage, doesn’t change that reality.
Swiatek wasn’t prepared to make excuses after her loss on Saturday, saying “I don’t think we should talk about that, because she played a really good match. I don’t want to blame my loss on conditions or something else. That’s why we have variety in tennis, and that’s why sometimes players are playing better on some surfaces.
“It doesn’t really matter because she won, and I just respect that and I don’t want to kind of take it from Aryna.”
As for Sabalenka, give her credit score for serving to to chip away at Swiatek’s invincible aura. The Pole entered the match with a mind-blowing 53-7 file on clay. If she had been in a position to win the title in Madrid, in her least favorable clay courtroom circumstances (because of the aforementioned altitude), it could have made her a lock to proceed the domination at Rome and Roland-Garros.
Now, because of Sabalenka’s heroics, there may be an air of intrigue surrounding the WTA’s highway to Roland-Garros. Swiatek has not dipped, however Sabalenka has demonstrated that she’s worthy of extra consideration on the floor as we head to Rome and Paris.
The victory was not misplaced on the World No.2. In this her finest season, she has engineered considered one of her best victories.
“I definitely respect her a lot,” Sabalenka mentioned on Saturday in Madrid. “She’s a great player, and what she did last season and what she’s keep doing, it’s really motivating me a lot to improve, to keep working hard, to to keep fighting.”
“It was really tough for me, but I kept thinking ‘If you want to beat Iga you have to keep running, you have to keep pushing yourself.’
“That’s why I respect her loads.”
Aryna Sabalenka’s #MMOPEN Champions Corner: https://t.co/ymaUhESgsq pic.twitter.com/mjm1uFLxW0
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) May 7, 2023
Sabalenka instructed Courtney Nguyen, WTA Insider of the large respect she has for 21-year-old Swiatek and what she has completed and the way she goes about her business on tour.
“That’s why I respect her loads and that is why I’m saying that what she’s carried out in tennis motivates me loads,” Sabalenka mentioned on the Champion’s Corner podcast. “First of all, it’s tough physically against her and secondly, mentally. Because you feel like you don’t have these few games to drop your level. You always have to stay high with her.”
Moving forward, does Sabalenka consider herself one of the favorites heading into Rome and Roland-Garros, now that she has claimed her second title at Madrid? (editor’s note: Sabalenka lost to Swiatek in the semis at Rome last year and owns a 4-4 lifetime record at the Foro Italico; at Roland-Garros she owns a 7-5 lifetime record and has never been beyond the third round).
“It’s not like I feel that way, but I really want to be one of those players,” she instructed WTA Insider. “I’ll hold working laborious and hold attempting to convey my finest tennis in Rome and Roland Garros. We’ll see after the clay-court season how good I’m on clay or if I used to be simply fortunate these few weeks.”
Source: www.tennisnow.com