World number one
Aryna Sabalenka is eager to have a
rematch against Canada’s
Leylah Fernandez in the third round of the
US Open.
Both players are set to face off in the round of 32 of the fourth and final
Grand Slam of the year on Friday.
Sabalenka defeated Polina Kudermetova in straight sets in
the second round with a score of 7-6, 6-2. On the other hand, Fernandez cemented
her spot in the third round after beating France’s Elsa Jacquemot with a score
of 2-6, 6-3, 6-2. It will be the second meeting between the two players in
professional tennis.
Their only previous meeting took place in the semifinals of the US Open back in 2021, where Fernandez stunned the then-number-two seed with a score of 7-6, 4-6, 6-4. Sabalenka
spoke to the media after the match and was asked how she would be feeling while facing Fernandez, who was also competing in the same tournament and had taken a four-year break. In response, Sabalenka stated that she is looking forward to a rematch and also highlighted the fact that a lot has changed since the two players last faced off in a tennis match.
“Yeah, you know, I think I better don't remember anything
from that match because I think I changed a lot,” said Sabalenka about facing
Fernandez. “I had really tough challenges after that. And I went through, I
found myself, I become a better player and a person. So I think it's going to
be completely different match. So I better just don't even try to remember that
much. But of course, I do remember a couple of things. And I love rematches. So
I'm actually super excited facing her here again.”
Really happy with my performance: Sabalenka
Sabalenka spoke about her performance on the night and
claimed that she was ‘really happy’ with how she managed to get over the line
in straight sets. “I actually think that after that little timeout, I was down
14-15 on my serve, isn't it?,” said Sabalenka. “But then after that, yeah, I
found the rhythm. And I think I played pretty decent tennis after that. So
overall, really happy with my performance and with the win, of course.”
Sabalenka was then asked about her point of view regarding the incident, which involved America’s Taylor Townsend and Latvia’s Jelena Ostapenko. Both players had a heated argument after a handshake following Townsend's victory in the match. Sabalenka stated that she had a word
with Ostapenko and also believes that things off the court might have contributed to her reaction after losing the match.
“I actually spoke to Jelana after the match, but during
our conversation, I didn't know what happened,” said Sabalenka. “And well, I
have to say that she's nice. You know, she just sometimes can lose control and
she has some things in life to face and some struggles. So I was just trying to
help her to, I don't know, maybe, I don't know, just not like face it more in
mature way. But I was just trying to help her to settle down and kind of like,
just was someone she could speak to and just let it go. You know, I think she
just sometimes can just lose control over her emotions, which are pretty tough.
And I really hope that one day she will figure it herself and she will handle
it much better. I think so. Yeah [that off the court things have impacted Jelena’s
reaction]. You know, like sometimes when you struggle with some things in life,
it's of course can reflect your tennis career. And on the court, you're more
unstable and you can lose control and you just don't understand what's going on
in the moment. And then for sure, I'm pretty sure like looking back, she's not
happy with her behavior.”
Sabalenka was later asked an interesting question about
the absence of Gavin MacMillan, her biomechanics coach. MacMillan, who was
credited with fixing Sabalenka’s serving issues in 2022, joined America’s Coco
Gauff’s coaching staff on the eve of the US Open. Sabalenka was asked the
reason behind the separation and how she is going to cope with his absence. In
response to that, Sabalenka refused to reveal the reason behind the separation and showed
complete faith in her current coaching staff.
“I'm not going to talk about [separation] that,” said
Sabalenka. “He's not going to be in my team. Well, I think we'll learn a lot on
the biomechanic side of the game. And if not him, I'm pretty sure there is some
other specialists in this area. And hopefully I won't be serving double faults
that much and I won't need someone like that. But I think I have a really smart
team, really smart people around me, people who understand tennis, very
experienced people, and people who know me and people who went with me through
a lot. So they know about me, everything. And if we're ever going to be looking
into something like that, they're going to be able to fix me.”