We were about to witness the collapse of one of the outsiders for the US Open title, but Iga Swiatek stepped up at the right time to show why she is one of the biggest hopes of her generation.
Down 6-3, 2-0 against a very inspired Fiona Ferro, the No 7 seed finally found a way to cut down the unforced errors (28 before the end of the second set but only three in the third set) and to cool her nerves before it was too late. After two hours, three minutes, Swiatek was finally able to breathe a bit easier, having overcome not only her opponent but also her anxiety to win 3-6, 7-6 (3), 6-0.
Always pretty honest about her performances, Swiatek didn’t try to sugarcoat it at all: she’s in a rough place at the moment, struggling with the pressure. What pressure? Surely the one coming from outside, to prove she’s not a one-slam-wonder. And the one, coming from inside, telling her she has what it takes to go all the way and needs to stop missing her chances, as she did at Roland-Garros earlier this summer.
Forbes has released the list of highest-paid tennis players of 2023, and Novak Djokovic emerges first in the list, with a total of $38.4 million. Despite...
Swiatek pulled well ahead of the pack last year following Ashleigh Barty's retirement, collecting her second and third Grand Slam titles at Roland Garros...
Predicting the future is a business best left for gamblers and fools. But here is one regardless. Shortly after 1pm on Tuesday, Iga Swiatek will hit...
Daria Abramowicz can think of no better research lab for sports psychology than the high-stakes, high-stress world of Grand Slam tennis. The 33-year-old Warsaw...