Aryna Sabalenka stood stoically ever so briefly, before crouching for an emphatic fist pump to go with a scream.
Yeah, the seventh-ranked woman in the eight-player WTA
Finals couldn’t hide the emotion, because she knew exactly what she had done.
Sabalenka ended world No. 1 Iga Swiatek’s 15-match winning
streak against top-10 opponents, taking a 6-2, 2-6, 6-1 victory in the
semifinals of the season-ending event Sunday night.
The stunner puts Sabalenka in final Monday night against No.
6 Caroline Garcia, who streamrolled Maria Sakkari 6-3, 6-2 and can become just
the second Frenchwoman to win WTA Finals after Amelie Mauresmo in 2005.
Swiatek, the French Open and U.S. Open champion and runaway
leader with eight tour victories, cruised through three round-robin victories,
losing just 13 games to give her the longest winning run against top-10
opponents since Steffi Graf won 17 straight in 1987.
Just like that, it was over when the 21-year-old from Poland
lost the last five games against a player she had beaten in all four meetings
this season.
Sabalenka was No. 1 when she beat Swiatek in round-robin
play at last year’s WTA Finals, but neither player made the semifinals.
With that much out of the way for both, Sabalenka showed how
comfortable she was on the temporary indoor hard court at Dickies Arena. Nine
of her 10 career victories have come on hard courts.
“I just want to make sure that every time she plays against
me, she knows that she really has to work hard to get a win,” said Sabalenka,
whose fourth loss this year to Swiatek was a three-setter in the U.S. Open
semifinals. “Only because of this thinking, I was able to play at this amazing
level tonight.”
Swiatek fell behind one break in the final set with two wide
forehands before another one put her down two breaks. Sabalenka gave herself a
match point with her 12th and final ace, then hit another serve so good,
Swiatek’s lunging return was wide and long.
After a tour-best 67 victories and a 37-match unbeaten run
from February to June that was the longest in women’s tennis in a
quarter-century, this wasn’t quite the ending Swiatek had in mind.
“In the third, I just started making mistakes from shots
that I wouldn’t make mistakes usually,” Swiatek said. “At the beginning of the
first set, I just wanted to be kind of focused. Maybe I didn’t realize soon
enough that I should be more pepped up.”
Garcia was playing just 24 hours after beating Daria
Kasatkina in a tense 80-minute third set to secure the last spot in the
semifinals, but needed just 74 minutes total for a career-best fourth victory
over a top-five opponent this season.
Garcia never trailed, dominating the fifth-ranked Sakkari in
winners (21-8) and aces (6-0).
“I don’t know,” Garcia said when asked where she found the
energy to dominate after the quick turnaround. “Yesterday, I was a little bit
tired, but it was nothing unusual after such a big match.”
Garcia has advanced out of group play in both WTA Finals
appearances. The 29-year-old lost in the semifinals in the eight-player event
five years ago, which also was the most recent time a player older than Garcia
reached the semis (Venus Williams).
“I guess I’m five years older, maybe five years wiser,” said
Garcia, who was No. 74 about this time last year. “You try to learn from
everything. I’ve got a good team behind me, supporting me when I was a little
bit doubting myself.”
Sakkari also was among the five players who have reached the
semis their first two times since the round-robin format was reintroduced in
2003. She lost in the semis last year.
Garcia used a 120 mph ace to help erase a break chance for
Sakkari and extend her lead to 4-0 in the second set.
Garcia’s sixth and final ace answered a double fault that
gave Sakkari another break point. Garcia closed out that game for a 5-1 lead on
the way to a 3-0 career record against Sakkari.
Sakkari had three straight-set victories in the tournament
after coming in with just one win over a top-10 opponent this season.
The 27-year-old from Greece never recovered after dropping
her first set of the week, finishing with 11 more unforced errors (19) than
winners.
“Not taking away anything from her, I played a very average
match from my side,” said Sakkari, who didn’t qualify for the WTA Finals until
the final event of the regular season. “I wasn’t sharp. I wasn’t energized.”
Defending doubles champs Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina
Siniakova advanced to the title match with a 7-6(5), 6-2 semifinal victory over
Lyudmyla Kichenok and Jelena Ostapenko.
The Czech duo will play Veronika Kudermetova and Elise
Mertens, 6-1, 6-1 winners over Desirae Krawczyk and Demi Schuurs.
The event was moved to Texas from China over concerns about
the safety of Peng Shuai, a Grand Slam doubles champion who accused a former
government official there of sexual assault. Coronavirus restrictions also
played a part in the decision. It’s the first WTA Finals in the U.S. since 2005.
-AP
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