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Iga Swiatek bent on winning Miami Open to retain world No.1 ranking

Iga Swiatek Miami Open. Photo/Getty Images
  • Iga Swiatek is by all indications retaining her world No.1 ranking
  • She beat Petra Kvitova to reach the semi-finals of the Miami Open
  • Swiatek won the Indian Wells tournament a fortnight ago thereby becoming the first Polish player to win the tournament

After defeating Petra Kvitova in straight sets to reach the Miami Open semi-finals, Iga Swiatek is a happy player with her unbeaten streak now standing at 15 matches.

Swiatek has had a remarkable fortnight, winning the Qatar Open, becoming the new world No. 1 with the retirement of Ashleigh Barty.

She is now maintaining her chances of winning a third WTA 1000 championship.

A year after winning the Italian Open, Swiatek defeated two-time Grand Slam champion 6-3, 6-3 in one hour and 17 minutes.

The Pole joins Caroline Wozniacki, Victoria Azarenka, and Jelena Ostapenko on the list of players who have reached four or more WTA 1000 semifinals before their 21st birthday.

Swiatek didn’t face a single breakpoint in the first set and broke in games six and nine in the second to cruise into the quarterfinals.

Iga Swiatek

Iga Swiatek. Photo/Getty Images

IGA SWIATEK INDIAN WELLS VICTORY

It was another amazing performance from Iga Swiatek, as she won 6-4 6-1 over Maria Sakkari in the finals of the BNP Paribas Open.

Swiatek is the first Polish woman to win the Indian Wells tournament. She will ascend to No. 2 in the WTA rankings as a result of her stellar start in 2022.

Another windy day in California’s desert contributed to an uneven encounter filled with nine breaks of service.

With two breaks in a lopsided second set, Swiatek clinched her second straight WTA 1000 title with a thunderous forehand winner at the age of 20.

“It’s pretty crazy because I wasn’t expecting to be in that place (final) especially after playing so well in the previous tournament. I didn’t know it was possible for me to play that well for that long,” she said after the victory.

She added that she tried hard to play such a great match under the circumstances. She had to be tactical, and it paid off handsomely.

For now, the Polish say her biggest challenge is maintaining her ranking and great playing skills.

WHO IS IGA SWIATEK?

Her sporting spirit comes from her father Tomasz Świątek, who was a professional rower. He always wanted her daughters to pursue an individual sport other than a group sport because it gave them more control.

It is from her urge to beat Agata that six years later, she is the world No.2.

Swiatek was born on May 31, 2001, in Poland’s capital Warsaw. Her mother works as an orthodontist, which explains her interest in orthodontics, while Agata is a dentistry student at the Medical University of Lublin.

In order to have more control over their prospects of success, Iga’s father preferred that his daughters participate in individual sports rather than team sports.

Agata began her athletic career as a swimmer, but after experiencing difficulty with the sport, she turned to tennis.

The reason Iga joined tennis was both to beat her sister and to become more like her.

At the age of 15, Agata briefly competed on the ITF Junior Circuit before retiring due to injuries.  As a 14-year-old, Iga trained at Mera Warsaw before transferring to Legia Warsaw.

WHEN DID IGA SWIATEK START HER PROFESSIONAL TENNIS CAREER?

As a junior, Iga achieved a career-high rating of No. 5. For her first two ITF Junior Circuit victories, she had to wait until April and May of 2015, when she was just 13 years old.

Having only begun playing in ITF Junior Circuit competitions in 2015, she went on to win Grade 4 titles in April and May of that year at the tender age of 13.

She advanced to Grade 2 competitions before the conclusion of the year and finished runner-up in both singles and doubles at the Czech Junior Open, a tournament in the Czech Republic.

Iga Swiatek. Photo/Sky Sports

At the 2016 French Open, she made her junior Grand Slam debut in both singles and doubles, making it all the way to the quarterfinals in both events.

Next, at the Grade 1 Canadian Open Junior Championships, she won her best junior championship ever by beating Olga Danilovi in the final.

She performed well in the first half of 2017. At the Grade 1 Traralgon Junior International, she was victorious in both the singles and doubles events.

Despite losing her first-round match at the Australian Open, she and compatriot Maja Chwaliska reached their first Grand Slam doubles final.

However, they lost to the American combination of Bianca Andreescu and Carson Branstine.

Her next stop was the Trofeo Bonfiglio final, where she faced off against Elena Rybakina and lost.

After another quarterfinal appearance at the French Open, her season came to an end when she underwent seven months of recovery time due to right ankle surgery.

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