
Aryna Sabalenka ends Iga Swiatek's French Open reign in semi-final rollercoaster
The irresistible force beat the immovable object as runaway world number one Sabalenka inflicted the four-time champion's first defeat at the tournament in four years.
In the first meeting between the WTA's two most dominant players at a grand slam since the 2022 US Open, Swiatek's run of 26 consecutive victories at the Paris grand slam was halted in a 7-6 (1) 4-6 6-0 defeat.
A three-time grand slam champion on hard courts, Sabalenka finally made her first final on the red dirt of Roland Garros.
After a match which would have graced the final – and it probably would have been had Swiatek's ranking not slipped to five – Sabalenka said: 'Honestly it feels incredible.
'I understand the job is not done yet but I'm thrilled with the performance and this win.'
Sabalenka's powerful, deep returns unsettled 24-year-old Swiatek at the start as she raced into a 3-0 lead with two breaks.
Iga Swiatek's French Open reign is over (Lindsey Wasson/AP)
The Belarusian thought she had served an ace for a 5-1 lead, only for a let call from umpire Kader Nouni, who felt it had flicked the net cord.
The momentum suddenly shifted with Swiatek winning four successive games, before Sabalenka held and then produced a stunning forehand winner on the run to break for 6-5.
She could not hold, though, with Swiatek's returns now doing considerable damage, but Sabalenka regrouped impressively to take the tie-break for the concession of just one point.
The quality increased in the second set, so much so that any slight mistake from one player was brutally punished by the other.
Iga Swiatek levels the match! 💪
The defending champion roars back, taking the second set 6–4 against Aryna Sabalenka. All square in this Roland-Garros semi-final thriller!#RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/N4czbXeZrp
— TNT Sports (@tntsports) June 5, 2025
Polish star Swiatek was making far more forays to the net than usual, and it paid off when a perfect cushioned volley into the corner levelled the match.
Sabalenka's levels – including her noise levels – moved up a notch again in the decider and the 27-year-old drew first blood with a break for 2-0.
A second break knocked the stuffing out of the defending champion, who looked resigned to her fate long before Sabalenka's final backhand winner flew past her.
Swiatek, now without a single title to her name – her last was Roland Garros 12 months ago – said: ' I love playing here, so for sure I'm happy that I was fortunate enough to play so many great tournaments here.
'Even this one, you know, I feel like I played better than in the weeks before. I'm just happy that I have this place to come back to every year and just try to push myself.'
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