Top-ranked Swiatek faces tough foe in Jabeur at U.S. Open final
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[September 10, 2022] By
Amy Tennery
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Poland's world number one Iga Swiatek will look
to underline her claim as tennis' fiercest champion when she faces
off against Tunisian Wimbledon finalist Ons Jabeur in Saturday's
final at the U.S. Open.
Swiatek quickly picked up the torch from shock retiree Ash Barty
earlier this year when the Australian called time on her career at
25, collecting a second French Open title during a staggering
37-match unbeaten streak.
The clay specialist showed she could be lethal on hard courts, too,
with wins at Indian Wells and Miami, and despite a pair of early
exits in Toronto and Cincinnati looks perfectly in-form at Flushing
Meadows and ready to add another title to her stellar season.
"Even though I lost in Toronto and Cincinnati pretty early, you're
going to kind of have your chances and you have to be ready," she
told reporters, after recovering from a set down to beat Aryna
Sabalenka in the semi-final.
"I'm pretty happy that on this tournament I just was kind of fresh
actual mentally to actually use the chances."
Standing in her path is hard-hitting fifth seed Jabeur, Tunisia's
"Minister of Happiness," who wrote herself into the history books as
the first African woman to reach the final in New York.
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A crowd favourite for her creative playing style,
she rolls into her second straight Grand Slam championship match
brimming with confidence, with lessons learned from her
heartbreaking loss at the All England Club to Kazakhstan's Elena
Rybakina.
"I just feel like now I can do whatever I can do and what I want to
do on the court, which is surprising for me and I surprise myself so
many times. It's going very well, especially this tournament," said
Jabeur, who flattened France's Caroline Garcia 6-1 6-3 in the
semi-final.
Swiatek and Jabeur have something of a burgeoning rivalry, with
their career head-to-head tied up at two apiece. Swiatek most
recently triumphed in the Rome final on clay, while Jabeur got the
upper hand in their last hard court meeting in Cincinnati last year.
"There are a lot of challenges because she's a really solid player,"
said Swiatek.
"She has different game style than most of the players. She has a
great touch. All these things mixed up, yeah, she's just a tough
opponent. That's why probably our matches are, yeah, always kind of
physical and really tight."
Jabeur said she was all too aware of the challenge that awaits in
Arthur Ashe Stadium: "Iga never loses finals."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York; editing by Richard Pullin)
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