What do you do if you don’t like the noise a crowd is making for your opponent? If you’re Aryna Sabalenka, you tell them to make it for you instead.
In last year’s US Open final, Sabalenka said the roar that the pro-American audience made for her opponent, Coco Gauff, was so loud that it “blocked my ears” and led to her error-filled breakdown. This year, after hearing the same crowd roar the same way for Jessica Pegula for more than an hour, Sabalenka decided to ask—demand, actually—for some of that love for herself. The New York fans, who will never turn down a request to make themselves heard, obliged.
That may not have been the reason that Sabalenka eventually beat Pegula in two tight, entertaining, slam-bang 7-5, 7-5 sets for her third Grand Slam title. But it was another sign, among many, of the 26-year-old’s long-running evolution as a player and person. Instead of hanging her head and letting the crowd shout her down, she stayed loose, had some fun with the situation, and made it feel a little less oppressive.
“I heard a lot of support,” Sabalenka said during the trophy ceremony afterward. “You were cheering me on in those good moments.”