Tennis

Top-ranked Swiatek dominates No. 2 Sabalenka to claim her 3rd Italian Open title

The latest matchup between top-ranked Iga Swiatek and No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka was hardly a contest. Swiatek was in control from the start as she won the Italian Open final 6-2, 6-3 on Saturday, earned her third trophy on Rome's red clay and established herself as the overwhelming favourite at the French Open again.

Sunday's men's final features Alexander Zverev vs. Nicolas Jarry

A female tennis player is seen up close as she makes a fist in celebration during a match.
Poland's Iga Swiatek, shown in this file photo, won her third Italian Open title on Saturday in Rome. (Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

The latest matchup between top-ranked Iga Swiatek and No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka was hardly a contest.

Swiatek was in control from the start as she won the Italian Open final 6-2, 6-3 on Saturday, earned her third trophy on Rome's red clay and established herself as the overwhelming favourite at the French Open again.

Roland Garros starts next weekend and Swiatek will be aiming for a third straight title in Paris and fourth overall.

After congratulating Swiatek during the trophy ceremony, Sabalenka told her rival: "I hope we're going to make it to the final in Roland Garros, and I'm going to get you there."

Then Sabalenka added, "Just kidding. I'm just going to try to do better than today."

During her speech, Swiatek replied, "We'll see about that Roland Garros final."

Swiatek extended her tour winning streak to 12 matches and became the first woman to complete the "dirt double" of winning Madrid and Rome back to back since Serena Williams in 2013.

The final was quite a contrast from when Swiatek had to save three match points before beating Sabalenka in a third-set tiebreaker in the Madrid Open final two weeks ago.

"After Madrid I knew it was not going to be easy. Thanks for sharing the court with me and pushing me to get better," Swiatek — who didn't drop a set in the tournament — told Sabalenka.

This time, Swiatek applied so much pressure early on that Sabalenka slammed her racket onto the clay in the fourth game and then had to grab a new stick from her bag.

Even on points when the hard-hitting Sabalenka seemed in control, Swiatek used her superb footspeed and accurate groundstrokes to turn the dynamics around and force Sabalenka into errors.

Sabalenka stepped up her game at the start of the second set but Swiatek saved seven break points in her opening two service games.

Swiatek produced only 11 winners to Sabalenka's 18 but also had just eight unforced errors to Sabalenka's whopping 28.

Swiatek crushed a backhand return up the line on her second match point and when Sabalenka's weak reply landed in the net, Swiatek dropped her white racket to the clay and then began jumping around in celebration after shaking hands with Sabalenka.

Adding to her titles from 2021 and 2022, Swiatek improved her career record in Rome to 20-2. At 22, the Polish player could approach the women's record of five Italian Open titles held by Chris Evert.

Rafael Nadal, Swiatek's idol, holds the overall record with 10 Rome trophies.

"If I win next time, there is going to be a tiramisu in here," Swiatek said as she took the lid off the trophy cup.

The men's final on Sunday features 2017 champion Alexander Zverev against 24th-ranked Nicolas Jarry.

Swiatek also improved her career record against Sabalenka to 8-3. Swiatek has also won nine straight finals since she lost to Sabalenka in Madrid last year.

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