'It was as if I was playing Jannik Sinner'

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June 01, 2025 22:50 IST

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Fifth seed Iga Swiatek stages revival to stay in hunt for 4th French Open crown.

Poland's Iga Swiatek celebrates winning her match against Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan at the French Open at Roland Garros in Paris on Sunday

IMAGE: Poland's Iga Swiatek celebrates winning her match against Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan at the French Open at Roland Garros in Paris on Sunday. Photograph: Susan Mullane-Imagn Images/Reuters

Four-times champion Iga Swiatek clawed her way back from the brink to qualify for the French Open quarter-finals as she beat her clay court nemesis Elena Rybakina after a high-octane decider on Sunday.

The fifth-seeded Pole looked out of sorts as she trailed 6-1, 2-0 on Court Philippe Chatrier, leaving the crowd stunned, but Swiatek found her groove and some grit to prevail 1-6, 6-3, 7-5.

Her final opponent from last year, Jasmine Paolini, was on the wrong end of another dramatic last-16 clash against 13th seed Elina Svitolina of Ukraine as the Italian wasted three match points in a 4-6, 7-6(6), 6-1 defeat.

 

Svitolina will provide the next test for Swiatek, who continues her quest to become the first female player since tennis turned professional to claim the singles' title four times in a row at Roland Garros.

The only women to win the singles at Roland Garros in four straight years were Jeanne Matthey from 1909-12 and Suzanne Lenglen from 1920-23 when only French players competed.

Poland's Iga Swiatek shows her frustration 

IMAGE: Poland's Iga Swiatek shows her frustration. She had three double faults in the 2nd set. Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters

Since tennis turned professional in 1968, Swiatek is one of three women with Monica Seles and Justine Henin to enjoy three consecutive triumphs in Paris and on Sunday it looked like her quest for a fourth straight was going to crash to a halt.

The 12th-seeded Rybakina made a bullet start, putting Swiatek on the back foot with some powerful baseline play and racing to a 5-0 lead, threatening to inflict on the former world number one her first bagel at a Grand Slam.

"It was as if I was playing (men's world number one and heavy hitter) Jannik Sinner," Swiatek joked.

If there was any sign that Swiatek was rattled, it was her three double faults at 2-2 in the second set.

The fifth seed still held though and it proved to be a turning point as she went on to break to love and move 4-2 up, bagging 10 consecutive points in the process to send the clash into a decider.

Kazakhstan's Elena Rybakina 

IMAGE: Kazakhstan's Elena Rybakina returns. Photograph: Denis Balibouse/Reuters

At 4-4, with Rybakina serving at 15-40, the Kazakh appeared to have double-faulted on break point.

Both players were walking towards their benches when chair umpire Kader Nouni's deep voice overruled the line judge's call.

The reversal -- met with murmurs from the crowd -- offered Rybakina an unexpected lifeline as the air filled with electricity.

Swiatek later saved a game point with a blistering forehand winner, but it was Rybakina who ultimately secured the crucial hold, shifting the weight of expectation squarely onto her opponent's shoulders.

Swiatek cooled down and held, then broke and finished it off on the second match point before unleashing a huge scream and bumping her chest in a mix of released anger and relief.

"In the first set, with her playing like that I felt I did not have a single chance," said Swiatek, who had lost to Rybakina in their two previous encounters on clay.

"Using the top spin was the plan from the beginning but I did not feel she gave me the space to do that. But I'm happy that I was patient enough to stay in the game and use any opportunity that came to me."

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