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Report: Rybakina overpowers No.1 Swiatek to reach AO quarters

  • Dan Imhoff

Women's singles fourth round

World No.1 Iga Swiatek’s hopes of a second straight hard-court major are over following a resounding defeat to Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina in the Australian Open fourth round.

Round of 16 showdowns did not come any bigger than two reigning Grand Slam champions at this stage.

After the Pole’s benchmark-setting feats of 2022, the 23-year-old Rybakina served a reminder she is in the box seat to further shake up the top order this season with her 6-4 6-4 triumph.

The build-up

The two women shared the major spoils since Australian Open champion Ash Barty’s retirement last year and on Sunday, they met for just the second time, following Swiatek's straight-sets victory indoors in Ostrava in 2021.

Neither placed too much weight on that previous encounter, given the heights both have scaled since.

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A runaway world No.1 last season, thanks largely to her Roland Garros and US Open successes, Swiatek had barely raised a sweat against qualifier Cristina Bucsa in the previous round, but she was yet to really hit her straps as she bid to better her semifinal run at Melbourne Park last year.

That campaign ended to the heavy-hitting Danielle Collins, incidentally the player Rybakina had outlasted in three sets to reach the fourth round here for the first time on Friday.

Story of the match

It was an inauspicious beginning before the first ball was even struck on Rod Laver Arena when Swiatek was handed a code violation warning for taking too long.

It set the tone for a slow start to proceedings as she subsequently dropped her opening service game.

The top seed soon managed to settle, but she was not having it all her own way.

Rybakina is among a select group who possess the sheer force capable of pushing the Pole around the court and she found tremendous success clobbering hard and flat into her opponent’s forehand.

The Kazakh’s third ace capped a statement start as she sealed the opening set after 42 minutes.

Struggling with the depth and pace of shot headed her way, Swiatek needed to orchestrate quite the turnaround if she was to survive this onslaught.

She had done so from a set down in her past three Grand Slam fourth rounds and raised her intensity immediately at the beginning of the second set, adding greater sting to her forehands to jump to 3-0 at the one-hour mark.

It was an all-too-fleeting swing in momentum.

No sooner was Swiatek in the driver’s seat than she again found it exceedingly difficult to drag her heavy-striking opponent out of her hitting zone.

Rybakina had reimposed her authority, and with a break again in hand, she advanced to her maiden Australian Open quarterfinal with a sixth ace and seventh forehand winner in succession.

Key stats

Deep in the first set, Swiatek’s struggles on serve were laid bare. Only 7 per cent of her first serves were unreturnable, compared to Rybakina’s 45 per cent.

It was a telling indication of the Kazakh’s grip on the match and her first-strike strategy as she ended up winning 44 of 77 rallies under five shots.

What it means for Rybakina

The 22nd seed has now reached the quarterfinals at three of the four majors, having first done so at Roland Garros in 2021, where she defeated Serena Williams.

Elena Rybakina and Serena Williams at net after their fourth-round match at Roland Garros
Elena Rybakina (L) defeated Serena Williams (R) 6-3 7-5 in the fourth round of Roland Garros in 2021. (Getty Images)

She next faces former Roland Garros champion Jelena Ostapenko for a semifinal berth, an opponent she has not found success against in two prior meetings.

The magnitude of the upset on Sunday was not lost on the softly spoken 23-year-old, even if she did not appear to show it.

“It was a really tough match. I really respect Iga because the (streak) she has and her Grand Slams,” Rybakina said. 

“She's a young player and I think she plays really well and today I think I was serving also good, just struggling a bit on one side but in the end in the important moments I played really well so it made the difference.

“Of course, I’m nervous every time I go on the court, like everybody, but I'm calm always. 

“At least I'm trying not to show so much emotions. My coach says I need to show (more emotion) sometimes so I’m kind of also learning.”

What next for Swiatek?

Swiatek was consigned to her third fourth-round defeat at Melbourne Park in four years after her 11-match winning streak at the majors was broken.

It marks only the seventh time in the Open Era that the top seed has failed to reach the quarterfinals at the Australian Open and the first since Simona Halep four years ago.