Top-ranked Iga Swiatek on Saturday came through “the most intense and crazy final” she has ever contested to avenge her loss to Aryna Sabalenka in last year’s Madrid Open final with a grueling three hour, 11 minute victory in the Spanish capital.
Coming back from 1-3 down in the decider and saving three match points in total, Swiatek claimed a 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (9/7) victory to secure the Madrid Open trophy for the first time.
“Well, who is going to say now that women’s tennis is boring, right?” Swiatek said.
Photo: Reuters
Swiatek, who picked up the 20th title of her career, and ninth at the WTA 1000 level, has now won her past eight consecutive finals and joins Elena Rybakina with a tour-leading 30 victories this season.
The 22-year-old Pole said she felt tight in the first two hours of the contest, but drew inspiration from Rafael Nadal, and his ability to step up mentally when it mattered.
“I was surprised that in the third set I felt the best mentally,” said Swiatek, who improved to 7-3 lifetime against two-time Madrid champion Sabalenka.
“One thing that came through my mind was that I think Rafa had a couple of matches like that.
“I remember exactly when he was playing [Daniil] Medvedev in [the Australian Open final in 2022] and it clicked for him. He also struggled for a bit of time, he was tense and I think stressed. That kind of gave me hope that maybe it will click, even after two hours.”
The pair traded breaks to start the final and were neck and neck until Swiatek drew a forehand error from Sabalenka to break for 6-5 and closed out the 61-minute opening set on her first opportunity.
Despite squandering a 2-0 lead early in the second, Sabalenka manifested a set point on Swiatek’s serve in game 10, forcing a decider with a lightning-fast down-the-line forehand winner.
It was the fifth time in six matches this fortnight that Sabalenka found herself embroiled in a three-set duel, and she was clearly ready to go the distance.
The defending champion broke for 3-1 in the decider, peppering Swiatek with deep, powerful shots, but her lead was short-lived.
Swiatek saved a pair of match points on her own serve at 5-6 as the high-quality affair fittingly went to a deciding tiebreak.
Sabalenka produced an ace to save match point at 5-6 in the breaker and saw one of her own slip away as Swiatek survived for 7-7.
Moments later, the world No. 1 flung herself to the ground in disbelief as she sealed a heroic victory on a long backhand from Sabalenka.
“I think it was the most intense and, like, crazy final I played,” Swiatek said.
Despite the loss, Sabalenka said she feels she has recaptured her best form and that she was proud of her efforts against her fellow “Big Three” rivals, Rybakina and Swiatek this fortnight.
“I really want to see many more finals against her,” Sabalenka said. “I really hope that we’ll be able to increase the level every year. I’m really happy to be one of these Big Three, as you call us.”
“It’s really motivating me a lot to keep working and to keep improving myself,” she added.
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