Clay queen Swiatek rules again at
Roland Garros
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[June 10, 2024]
By Shrivathsa Sridhar
PARIS (Reuters) -Iga Swiatek produced a ruthless performance to
crush 12th seed Jasmine Paolini on Saturday and win a third straight
French Open crown and fifth Grand Slam title of her career.
Swiatek's 6-2 6-1 win, her 21st in a row at her happiest hunting
ground, put her fourth on the list of longest streaks at Roland
Garros in the Open era behind Chris Evert (29), Monica Seles (25)
and Justine Henin (24).
She also became the third woman to capture three consecutive French
Open crowns after Henin (2005-07) and Seles (1990-92).
The 23-year-old Pole extended her run of victories on clay to a
career-best 19 matches to clinch her fourth French Open title in
five years.
"It means a lot. This tournament has been pretty surreal with its
beginning and the second round, and then I was able to get my game
better every match," Swiatek told reporters, with the shining
Suzanne Lenglen cup beside her.
"I'm really proud of myself because the expectations have been
pretty high from the outside. Pressure, as well. I'm happy that I
just went for it and I was ready to deal with all of this. And I
could win."
Swiatek, now 5-0 in major finals having claimed the U.S. Open in
2022, is the first woman to lift the same Grand Slam title for three
successive years since American Serena Williams from 2012-14 at
Flushing Meadows.
But she said that the demands of being a perfectionist had weighed
on her this year.
"It's when the pressure from the outside hits me, then it's a little
bit worse," Swiatek said. "But I managed it well at this tournament.
"It was an emotional win, because I felt a lot of stress yesterday
and today in the morning. I felt really proud of myself."
GUNS BLAZING
Swiatek came out all guns blazing but after narrowly missing the
opportunity to break from 0-40 down in the second game, the top seed
Pole made heavy weather of the next to surrender her serve, before
bouncing right back.
The diminutive Paolini, the third Italian woman after Francesca
Schiavone and Sara Errani to reach the Roland Garros final since the
sport turned professional in 1968, went toe to toe with Swiatek
before cracking in the sixth game.
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Paris, June 8, 2024. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner
With the momentum shifting, Swiatek began to
dominate the exchanges from the baseline, superbly working the
angles and sealing the opening set in 37 minutes after winning 20
out of 24 points since going down a break.
A shell-shocked Paolini smiled and won odd points early in the next
set, but her challenge faded in the afternoon sun as Swiatek broke
twice to build a 4-0 lead.
Swiatek, who dropped only one set throughout the tournament in a
second-round clash with Naomi Osaka, won 10 straight games before
Paolini finally got on the board but there was to be no late
comeback.
Swiatek closed out the win in 68 minutes when Paolini hit a shot
long, dropping to her knees and pumping her fists while letting out
a huge roar, before joining her entourage in the stands to
celebrate.
"To play you here is the toughest challenge in this sport," Paolini,
who will compete in the doubles final with Errani on Sunday, told
Swiatek at the presentation ceremony.
The 28-year-old, who will rise to number seven in the world on
Monday, expanded on the difficulties of playing Swiatek.
"She's taking the balls early... She can defend really well,"
Paolini said. "She won four titles and she's still 23. These numbers
aren't normal. They're unbelievable."
(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Paris; Additional reporting by
Julien Pretot; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Ed Osmond)
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