Aryna Sabalenka’s Friday night showdown with Leylah Fernandez at Louis Armstrong Stadium had more backstory than a Marvel movie and delivered just as much drama. How did this match unfold in the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center?
The World No. 1 walked onto that court carrying the weight of a 2021 semifinal loss that probably still kept her up at night. You know that feeling when someone beats you, and it just gnaws at you? That was Sabalenka for three long years. But Friday night, she flipped the script with authority, dismantling the 31st-seeded Canadian 6-3, 7-6 (2) in what can only be described as beautiful, methodical revenge.
The Belarusian powerhouse looked like she meant business from the jump. After saving three break points in her opening service game, Sabalenka never trailed in the match. Not once. That is what we call making a statement.
What made this victory even sweeter? Sabalenka didn’t just win; she dominated where it mattered most. She saved all five break points she faced while converting one of her three chances. Meanwhile, Fernandez went a brutal 0-for-5 on break point opportunities. It is the tennis equivalent of going 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position.
The stats tell the story of controlled aggression: Sabalenka hammered 25 winners to Fernandez’s 22, served up 6 aces to her opponent’s 5, and controlled 56 service points compared to Fernandez’s 39. Sure, she had a few more unforced errors (18-12), but when you’re swinging for the fences and connecting, who cares?
This wasn’t just about settling old scores. With this victory, Sabalenka punched her ticket to the fourth round for the fifth consecutive year at Flushing Meadows. That is the kind of consistency that separates the great from the good.
“I wanted this revenge badly,” Sabalenka said after the match, and you could practically feel the satisfaction dripping from her words. After an hour and 39 minutes of high-quality tennis, she had finally erased that painful memory from 2021.
Now she’ll face Moldova’s Cristina Bucsa on Sunday, carrying momentum that feels almost unstoppable. When a champion gets that look in her eyes, the one that says unfinished business has been handled, you better believe the rest of the field is taking notice.
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