Iga Swiatek Saves Three Match Points To Beat Aryna Sabalenka in Madrid Open 2024 Final

Swiatek will seek her fourth French Open title later this month as the two-time defending champion at Roland Garros. Swiatek improved her head-to-head record with Sabalenka to 7-3. She has won her last seven finals, since her loss to Sabalenka here in 2023.

Iga Swiatek with Madrid Open Trophy (Photo Credit: Twitter/@iga_swiatek)

Iga Swiatek avenged her loss in last year's final to Aryna Sabalenka and won the Madrid Open on Saturday after a third-set tiebreaker. The top-ranked Swiatek beat No. 2 Sabalenka 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (7) for her third title of the season. The 22-year-old Polish player became the youngest player to reach 20 titles since Caroline Wozniacki in 2012. Swiatek faced two match points when she was struggling with her serve at 5-6 in the third set. But she held on to force the tiebreaker, where she saved a third match point. Tennis Star Carlos Alcaraz Confirms Withdrawal From Italian Open 2024 Due to Arm Injury (See Post).

Swiatek collapsed on the red clay after Sabalenka hit long to end a match that lasted 3 hours, 11 minutes, the longest WTA final so far in 2024. Each player broke serve five times.

“Who is going to say that women's tennis is boring now? Congrats as well to Aryna because we both had an amazing effort today.” Swiatek said.

Swiatek will seek her fourth French Open title later this month as the two-time defending champion at Roland Garros. Swiatek improved her head-to-head record with Sabalenka to 7-3. She has won her last seven finals, since her loss to Sabalenka here in 2023.

Sabalenka got the better of Swiatek last year at Madrid in three sets for the first win over her rival on clay. The two-time Australian Open champion was seeking a record-tying third title in Madrid. Madrid Open 2024: World Number One Iga Swiatek Edges Past Madison Keys To Book Spot in Final.

“I had my opportunities,” Sabalenka said. “I wouldn't say that I kind of missed them or lost them. It was just incredible play from her, and I think that's the lesson I have to learn.”

Madrid was the only European clay-court tournament at the WTA 500 level or above that Swiatek had yet to win. Now her collection is complete.

On Sunday, Andrey Rublev plays Felix Auger-Aliassime in the men's final. (AP)

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