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Wednesday January 08, 2025

Sabalenka eyes Australian Open hat-trick but Swiatek, Gauff lurk

By AFP
January 08, 2025
Belarus Aryna Sabalenka in action during their womens singles final at the Brisbane International tennis tournament on Pat Rafter Arena in Brisbane on January 5.— AFP/File
Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka in action during their women's singles final at the Brisbane International tennis tournament on Pat Rafter Arena in Brisbane on January 5.— AFP/File

MELBOURNE: World number one Aryna Sabalenka is gunning for a third consecutive Australian Open crown but will face a stiff challenge from Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff and last year´s runner-up Zheng Qinwen.

Sabalenka won the Brisbane International on Sunday but the headline was in Sydney where a red-hot Gauff beat Swiatek in the United Cup final in a statement victory.

The 20-year-old American Gauff bounced back impressively from parting with coach Brad Gilbert to win the WTA 1000 in Beijing and the WTA Tour Finals to end 2024. The world number three again looked in prime form as she inspired the US to victory over Poland in the mixed-teams event and confidence is high heading into Melbourne.

“Honestly, before every Grand Slam I have the belief that I can win,” said Gauff, who triumphed at the 2023 US Open for her only major title so far. “And especially after the US Open, I proved that I could do it. I definitely have belief that I can win.”

The United Cup was Swiatek´s first event since it was revealed she had served a one-month doping suspension. The world number two began her 2025 campaign with four straight singles wins until coming up against Gauff, where she went down 6-4, 6-4 a week before the start of the Australian Open.

Swiatek is a five-time major champion but she has never shone at Melbourne Park, only progressing beyond the fourth round in 2022, when she was upset by Danielle Collins in the semi-finals.

The Pole also appears to be carrying a niggling left thigh injury that needed strapping during the week, but she brushed off any fears after the United Cup final. “I was just tired,” the 23-year-old said. “You know, the volume at the beginning of the tournament especially has been pretty big. But honestly, it´s all good.”

Sabalenka is the woman to beat in Australia after the best season of her career in 2024, capped by being named WTA Player of the Year last month. The Belarusian will be the first woman to win the Australian Open three years in a row since Martina Hingis in 1999 should she go all the way.

The 26-year-old showed she was in the mood with a romp to the trophy at the season-opening Brisbane International, dropping only one set. “Mentally, physically, I´ll be ready to go at the Australian Open,” she said.

“I definitely feel confident in my game.” The victory continued her superb form from 2024 where she reached seven finals and won four tournaments. She began 2024 by successfully defending the Australian Open and bookended it by lifting her first US Open, as well as winning WTA 1000 events in Cincinnati and Wuhan. Sabalenka recaptured the number one ranking from Swiatek, who had mysteriously pulled out of the WTA´s Asian swing citing “personal matters”.