Advertising

“Who’s gonna say now that women’s tennis is boring?” Iga Swiatek asked the Spanish audience at the Caja Magica, minutes after the Mutua Madrid Open final. Certainly no one in attendance, after the top two seeds brought the women’s event to a thrilling conclusion on Saturday evening.

While the men’s draw has fallen apart due to injury, retirements and early exits from home favorites—producing two surprise finalists in Andrey Rublev and Felix Auger-Aliassime—the women’s tournament has unfolded almost exactly as predicted, and the championship match was a tennis fan’s dream match.

For the second year in a row, the WTA’s world No. 1 and world No. 2 faced off in a high-octane title clash—this time, it was No. 1 Swiatek who flipped the script to claim her first victory in the Spanish capital, defeating No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (7) over the course of a tense three hours and 11 minutes.

“This was one of the craziest finals I’ve played in my life,” Swiatek told Tennis Channel’s Prakash Amritraj afterward. “I’ve never won such a tight and intense match at the end of a tournament, so it’s making me super proud that I could just stick to what I wanted to do until the end and I didn’t lose my focus.”

Advertising

With the victory, Swiatek has now won every WTA 1000 title except for Dubai, Canada and Cincinnati at least once. She also completes a clay-court box set with Madrid being the last “big” clay-court title that had eluded her as she’s previously won Stuttgart (WTA 500) and Rome (WTA 1000) twice and had clinched the Roland Garros title three times.

The win also ties her with Elena Rybakina for the most match-wins (30) and titles (3) on the WTA Tour this year.

There were few secrets between these familiar foes in their 10th career meeting; Swiatek came into the contest with a 6-3 lead in their head-to-head record, bolstered by a straight-sets win in their most recent meeting at the WTA Finals Cancun. In Madrid, they faced off in the longest match of their rivalry by more than 30 minutes and went down to the wire, also featuring the first tiebreak this pair has contested in the deciding set.

Both players are set to return to action at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia, a WTA 1000-level event. Main draw kicks off in Rome, Italy on Tuesday, May 7-19.