Iga Swiatek suddenly seemed lost in the French Open final. Her strokes were awry. Her confidence was gone. Her big early lead vanished, too.
She kept looking up into the stands, seeking guidance from
her coach and her sports psychologist.
So much was amiss right up until she was two games from
defeat against unseeded Karolina Muchova on Saturday. And then, when she needed
to most, Swiatek transformed back into, well, Swiatek. The No. 1 player in
women’s tennis for more than a year. The defending champion at Roland Garros.
Aggressive. Decisive. Full of clarity.
Swiatek overcame a second-set crisis and a third-set deficit
to beat Muchova 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 and collect her third career championship at the
French Open and fourth Grand Slam title.
“I really love being here,” Swiatek said. “Basically, it’s
my favorite place on tour.”
Looking comfortable as can be at the outset, she raced to a
3-0 lead after just 10 minutes in Court Philippe Chatrier — taking 12 of the
initial 15 points — and then was ahead 3-0 in the second set, too, before
Muchova made things more intriguing.
Swiatek seemed out of sorts, unable to find the right
strokes and unable to figure out why. Players are allowed to communicate with
their coaches, but whatever Tomasz Wiktorowski — or sports psychologist Daria
Abramowicz — might have been trying to tell Swiatek, either the message wasn’t
getting through or it wasn’t working right away.
“I know much how much teams are important in our sport. Even
though it’s an individual sport, I wouldn’t be here without my team,” Swiatek
said afterward. “So, really, thank you, guys. Sorry for being such a pain in
the” — and she let the sentence end there.
Muchova grabbed five of six games on the way to pulling even
at a set apiece. She carried that momentum into the deciding set, going ahead
by a break twice.
That’s when Swiatek returned to her usual brand of crisp,
clean tennis, scurrying around the red clay with sublime defense and finding
just the occasions to try for a winner. She claimed the last three games of the
match.
When it ended on a double-fault by Muchova, Swiatek dropped
her racket, hunched forward and covered her face as she cried.
The 22-year-old from Poland has won the French Open twice in
a row now, along with her 2020 title there and her triumph at the U.S. Open
last September. That makes Swiatek the youngest woman with four Grand Slam
trophies since Serena Williams was 20 when she got to that number at the 2002
U.S. Open.
Swiatek is also only the third woman in the professional era
to start 4-0 in major finals, joining Monica Seles and Naomi Osaka.
“This was so close, but yet so far,” said Muchova, who is
ranked 43rd and was participating in a championship match at a Slam for the
first time.
“That happens when you play one of the best: Iga,” Muchova
said. “So I want to congratulate you out loud once again and your team.”
The contest was filled with sections where Swiatek — the
dominant player in women’s tennis for more than a year now — was better, and
sections where Muchova was.
Every time one woman or the other seemed to be wresting
control, every time one or the other raised her level enough that the end
appeared in sight, the road curved in a different direction.
Swiatek’s brilliant beginning meant little.
As did Muchova’s edges of 2-0 and 4-3 in the third set.
One point in particular captured the essence of Muchova’s
unwillingness to count herself out.
Serving for the second set at deuce while ahead 6-5, Muchova
pushed to the net and ranged well to her right for a forehand volley. Swiatek
then sent her scrambling to the left, and Muchova somehow slid and stretched
for a backhand volley while losing her balance. Her racket fell, and so did
she, placing her hands on the clay to brace herself.
The ball, somehow, landed in to take the point, and a moment
later, when Swiatek’s backhand return sailed long, Muchova raised her right
fist and let out a yell.
Suddenly, it was a set apiece. Suddenly, the outcome was
entirely in doubt.
So then the question became: Might Muchova be able to
fashion another dramatic comeback, the way she did in the semifinals on
Thursday? In that match, against No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka, the reigning Australian
Open champion, Muchova faced a match point while trailing 5-2 in the third set
and then completely reversed things, taking 20 of the last 24 points and each
of the last five games to win.
That result made Muchova 5-0 for her career against foes in
the Top 3.
Any hope she had of making that 6-0 dissipated down the
stretch.
Once again, Swiatek produced what it takes to win. Once
again, she was holding a trophy — although she bobbled it during the postmatch
ceremony, causing its top to fall. -AP