Aryna Sabalenka spoke haltingly when she addressed the crowd in Rod Laver Arena on Saturday evening after losing the Australian Open final to Elena Rybakina. Conceding that she was “speechless”—a declaration generally made by winners, not runners-up - Sabalenka laughed as she congratulated Rybakina, groped for words, lost her train of thought, directed a half-hearted jibe at her team.
Clearly, the No. 1 player in the world, so accustomed to crushing rivals with her power, was shell-shocked, still feeling the sting of the magnificent ace with which Rybakina punctuated her second victory at a Grand Slam event. Sure, veteran Madison Keys had KO’d Sabalenka on the same court a year earlier, but that was a one-off, a fairy tale. This loss was inflicted by a contemporary, a severe blow as well as a direct challenge to the way Sabalenka has been doing business on the WTA Tour. The score in the two hour and 16-minute clash was a symmetrical 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.
“Sabalenka is used to having every match on her racquet,” broadcast analyst Chris Evert said in the aftermath. “She finally came up against an opponent who plays the same way. She did not have any control over the way Rybakina played. At the end of the day, she was the more solid player.”
The most surprising detail is that, after wresting control of the match late in the second set, and pulling out to a 3-0 lead in the decider, Sabalenka was unable to close it out. She was asked in her post-match pressure if she had any “regrets” about that, and replied.
