Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka will prepare for a blockbuster rematch at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia final in Rome at 4pm on Saturday – live on Sky Sports.
Two weeks ago in the Mutua Madrid Open final, Sabalenka failed to capitalise on three championship points as Swiatek rallied to a gripping 7-4 4-6 7-6 (9-7) victory to seal her first title at the event.
The world No 1 improved to 7-3 in head-to-head match-ups with her Belarusian counterpart.
“I think the level is there, the tennis is there, that I’ve got everything to get this win,” Sabalenka said of facing Swiatek. “I just have to focus on myself, I guess, and not rush things, wait for the right shot to finish the point.”
Swiatek is 3-1 against Sabalenka in finals, also winning at Stuttgart in 2022 and 2023. Sabalenka’s lone title win over Swiatek came in the 2023 Madrid final.
Swiatek can become just the third women’s player to pull off the Madrid-Rome double in the last 15 years.
“I’m not really thinking about the statistics or history, and it’s easier that way because it makes you play more relaxed and freely,” said Swiatek, who is also seeking her third Rome title in four years.
“I’m going to play the best tennis I can in the final and if I take it easy step by step then it’ll be better than thinking about winning.”
Pain-free Sabalenka keeps close eye on back injury
Australian Open champion Sabalenka said she is playing without pain following a lower back injury in Rome but will not hesitate to pull out of Saturday’s final if the issue flares up and threatens her French Open participation.
Sabalenka sustained the injury during her fourth-round clash with Elina Svitolina, where the Belarusian needed a long medical timeout and saved three match points to prevail as the contest spilled into the early hours of Tuesday.
She skipped practice and spent her rest day undergoing treatment before easing past former Roland Garros champion Jelena Ostapenko 6-2 6-4 in the next round and Danielle Collins 7-5 6-2 in the semi-finals.
“I was considering retiring from the tournament. Lucky me, I had an extra day. I was doing a lot of recovery. I’m still doing lots of exercise, treatments, taking care of my lower back. It’s getting better. I guess we’re on the right way,” Sabalenka said.
“I’m doing everything to recover as fast as I can and to be ready for Paris. Right now I’m feeling great. I’m not in pain during matches.
“Of course, if something is going to happen in the match I’m going to pull out, because Paris is around the corner. Hopefully it’s not going to happen. I feel like it’s not going to.”
Sabalenka paid tribute to the physiotherapists in Rome.
“It was a crazy injury. I thought, ‘okay, I’m done in Rome’. But we did a great treatment, great physios,” Sabalenka said.
“I really appreciate the physio that helped me to stay alive and actually fix the problem.”
The French Open begins on May 26.
What’s coming up on Sky Sports Tennis?
In the run-up to the second Grand Slam of 2024 – the French Open at Roland Garros from May 26 – you can watch all of the biggest tennis stars in action live on Sky Sports as they compete across the clay-court season.
- Geneva Open (ATP 250 with Andy Murray in action) – May 20-26
- Lyon Open (ATP 250) – May 20-26
- Internationaux de Strasbourg (WTA 500) – May 20-26
- Morocco Open (WTA 250) – May 20-2
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