Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Swiatek seizes three-peat

Clay master smothers Paolini for French Open title

- By Howard Fendrich

For a few minutes, anyway, it seemed as if Iga Swiatek was a bit off in the French Open final against Jasmine Paolini. Swiatek kept making mistakes early Saturday, got broken in the third game and trailed at Court Philippe Chatrier.

Might a true surprise be in the offing? Could Paolini not only make a match of this, but actually win it? Um, no. Not even close. Not with the way Swiatek can dominate opponents, especially on red clay.

The top-seeded Swiatek quickly recalibrat­ed her wayward strokes and simply overwhelme­d Paolini, grabbing 10 games in a row en route to a 6-2, 6-1 victory that gave her a third consecutiv­e championsh­ip at Roland Garros and fourth in five years.

The 23-year-old from Poland had to save a match point in a second-round victory against Naomi Osaka last week, but in the five matches after that three-set escape, Swiatek dropped a total of only 17 games.

“This tournament has been pretty surreal with its beginning and with second round, and then I was able to get my game better and better every match. I’m really proud of myself, because the expectatio­ns obviously have been pretty high from the outside. Pressure, as well,” said Swiatek, who is 35-2 overall at the French Open, including a current streak of 21 straight victories. “I’m happy that I just went for it and I was ready to deal with all of this — and I could win.”

She is the first woman with three trophies in a row in Paris since Justine Henin from 2005 to 2007.

The 12th-seeded Paolini, a 28-year-old from Italy appearing in her first Slam final, called facing Swiatek at Roland Garros “the toughest challenge in this sport.”

Swiatek also won the French Open in 2020 and the U.S. Open in 2022 and is now 5-0 in major finals.

She added this triumph to those on clay at Madrid and Rome last month, becoming the first woman to win all three events since Serena Williams did it in 2013.

“I never played a player that has this intensity before in my life,” Paolini said. “For me, right now, I think it was the most challengin­g match I played in my entire career.”

During Saturday’s postmatch ceremony, Swiatek was flanked by a pair of women who each won 18 Grand Slam singles titles, Chris Evert and Martina Navratilov­a. Evert said before this French Open that she thinks Swiatek could eventually surpass her women’s record of seven championsh­ips in Paris.

Paolini, who will rise to a career-best No. 7 in the rankings Monday, had never been past the second round at one of the four most important tennis tournament­s until getting to the fourth round at the Australian Open in January.

Once Swiatek got going, there was nothing Paolini could do to slow her down.

“I got broken at the beginning, so it wasn’t maybe perfect,” Swiatek said, “but I think the level was pretty high.”

Absolutely.

After just 1 hour, 8 minutes of play, Swiatek was celebratin­g by dropping to her knees behind the baseline.

Soon, she was sitting on her sideline bench and using her phone to snap a selfie while holding up four fingers to represent her haul of French Open trophies. No one would be shocked if that number keeps rising.

 ?? Aurelien Morissard
The Associated Press ?? Iga Swiatek plays a shot Saturday during her 6-2, 6-1 victory over Jasmine Paolini to capture her fourth French Open championsh­ip at Roland Garros in Paris, improving to 5-0 in major finals.
Aurelien Morissard The Associated Press Iga Swiatek plays a shot Saturday during her 6-2, 6-1 victory over Jasmine Paolini to capture her fourth French Open championsh­ip at Roland Garros in Paris, improving to 5-0 in major finals.

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