Stuttering Sabalenka seeks to set down marker at Roland Garros
Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka reacts after winning a point to US' Hailey Baptiste during their 2026 WTA Tour Madrid Open tennis tournament singles match at the Caja Magica in Madrid, on April 28, 2026. (Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP)
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Aryna Sabalenka looked unbeatable when the clay-court season
got underway last month, but now as the world number one arrives in Paris for
her latest tilt at winning Roland Garros, her dominance of the women's game has
started to show cracks.
The four-time Grand Slam champion still holds more than
1,000 ranking points on her closest challengers but foremost on her mind over
the next fortnight will be going one better than her runner-up finish last year
in the French capital, when she lost in three sets to Coco Gauff.
If her aims ahead of the tournament, which starts on Sunday,
mirror that of her men's counterpart, Jannik Sinner who is also hunting a first
title on the red dirt in Paris, Sabalenka's stranglehold over her competitors
is suddenly a lot less dominant than the Italian's.
When Sabalenka swept to the Sunshine Double at the WTA 1000
hardcourt events in Indian Wells and Miami in March, she had then won three of
the four tournaments she had played in this season -- the only blight on that
record being a three-set defeat to Elena Rybakina in the Australian Open final.
And as she jetted into Madrid for the start of the European
clay swing on a 15-match winning streak, it had seemed little would stand in
her way to claiming a fourth career title at the Caja Magica as she began preparations
for the French Open.
But a quarter-final exit at the hands of 30th seed Hailey
Baptiste put paid to the Belarusian's ambitions in Spain, before she followed
that up by crashing out of the Italian Open against a resurgent Sorana Cirstea
in the third round, after which she said she felt like "my body was
limiting me from performing on the highest level".
"I guess we never lose; we only learn, so it's
OK," Sabalenka mused after exiting a 1000 tournament at the round-of-32
stage for the first time since February 2025.
With the 28-year-old top seed now looking uncertain on the
clay, the draw again appears to be wide open.
Rybakina, who beat Sabalenka in last season's WTA Finals
decider and then in Melbourne in January to claim her second major title, will
be one of the main contenders despite having never progressed beyond the last
eight at Roland Garros.
The Kazakh world number two is the player who has arguably
enjoyed the best season on the tour this year, barring Sabalenka, and last
month won indoor on the clay in Stuttgart but similarly had disappointing runs
in Madrid and Rome.
Iga Swiatek, the erstwhile 'queen of clay', has of late
shown glimpses of the form that took her to world number one and four Roland Garros
titles in the early 2020s.
Since her last triumph in Paris two years ago, the
24-year-old has struggled to find consistency but will be hoping her new collaboration
with Rafael Nadal's former coach Francisco Roig can help her refind her best
tennis on the surface she had for so long dominated.
Defending champion Gauff will certainly not cede her title
lightly and the world number four enters the fray on the back of a strong run
in Rome, which ultimately ended in defeat at the final hurdle to the in-form
Elina Svitolina.
The 31-year-old Ukrainian has won two titles already this
year, including a first 1000-level crown in eight years at the Italian Open,
and will certainly fancy a deep run in Paris, after reaching the final eight
for the fifth time in her career last year.
"(Winning Rome) gives me a lot of confidence. Gives me
a good look at Roland Garros," Svitolina said.
"But... There are really tough players. You cannot
underestimate (them). You need to be ready for the first-round matches, big
battles. Everybody's there to beat you."
Alongside Svitolina, Madrid Open winner Marta Kostyuk,
rising starlets Mirra Andreeva, Iva Jovic and Victoria Mboko, as well as Amanda
Anisimova will be dark horses for a maiden Grand Slam title.

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