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Sports

‘I’ll be good,’ says bruised Swiatek ahead of Australian Open

Published January 7, 2025 Updated January 7, 2025 12:01pm
Photo: AFP
Photo: AFP
By

WARSAW: For Iga Swiatek, whose confidence has been shaken by slipping to world number two and more so by serving a one-month doping ban around the WTA Finals in November, the 2025 Australian Open may be the most defining tournament of her career so far.

“I’ll be good,” the 23-year-old Swiatek, who wants to dominate women tennis once again, said in response to her loss to American Coco Gauff in Sunday’s United Cup final, trying to dispel concerns about an apparent issue with her left thigh ahead of the Melbourne Grand Slam.

The five-times grand slam champion, whose best performance on the Australian Open’s hard courts was the 2022 semi-final she lost to American Danielle Collins, tested positive in an out-of-competition sample in August for trimetazidine.

The ITIA, which runs tennis’s anti-doping programme, accepted that it was caused by contamination of her sleep medication.

Swiatek was provisionally suspended from Sept. 12 until Oct. 4, missing three tournaments, and served the last eight days of the ban after playing at November’s WTA Finals in Riyadh.

She won five titles in 2024, including a third straight French Open prior to the suspension, but the tally trails that of her six and eight titles in the two previous seasons.

After having tussled all year with the Australian Open defending champion, the big-hitting Aryna Sabalenka, she now lags behind the Belarusian by 1,536 points in the WTA rankings.

Although Swiatek leads Gauff 11-3 in their meetings, the loss at the United Cup was the second straight defeat to the American, who is showing signs of mastering her answers to the Pole’s heavy forehand.

In October, Swiatek added Belgian Wim Fissette, a former coach to top-ranked players such as Naomi Osaka and Kim Clijsters, to her team after parting way with Tomasz Wiktorowski.

Sabalenka ready to summon the tiger inside for Melbourne three-peat bid

The Australian Open will be the first serious test of chemistry between the new coach and Swiatek – and of their joint strategy.

After her tumultuous last season that was also marked by public backlash following the acceptance of her doping suspension, things can only get better in 2025 for the introverted Swiatek, Polish sports media say.

Swiatek herself said in a recent interview with Tennis Insider Club that she was changing her attitude away from allowing tennis to be her whole life.

“I’m trying to enjoy life a little more,” she said. “You have to balance it out.”

Whether the desire for a bit of flamboyance alters her traditionally deliberate style of play remains to be seen.

On Sunday, she said she was happy with her performance at the United Cup where for the first time ever she defeated her longtime nemesis Elena Rybakina on a hard court.

“I pushed myself to the limits of my abilities,” she said. “I knew I had nothing to lose.”

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