Aryna Sabalenka credited finding her rhythm as the reason she was able to come from a set down to defeat Elise Mertens and reach round four of the Madrid Open. (More Tennis News)
Aryna Sabalenka credited finding her rhythm as the reason she was able to come from a set down to defeat Elise Mertens and reach round four of the Madrid Open. (More Tennis News)
The world number one was given a scare by her former doubles partner and 28th seed before recovering to earn a 3-6 6-2 6-1 victory on the Spanish clay.
Sabalenka entered the contest with eight straight wins over Mertens to hold a 9-2 head-to-head record, while racking up 14 straight sets over the Belgian.
After winning 11 of the first 12 points, it looked like a familiar tale was on the horizon, but Mertens roared back to win six of the next seven games and took a set off Sabalenka for the first time since 2019 in Zhuhai.
However, Sabalenka rediscovered her composure and dominated proceedings to win 12 of the next 15 games and book a spot in the last 16.
Speaking on court after her victory, the three-time grand slam winner conceded she was not in full flow early in the match.
"I was trying to find the rhythm on my serve," Sabalenka said. "The moment I started focusing on the timing, on not rushing the ball, on not overhitting, things really clicked."
Data Debrief: Sabalenka joins Swiatek and Keys club
With her victory here, Sabalenka now joins a club among active WTA players that only Iga Swiatek and Madison Keys belong to.
Sabalenka now has 10 career victories over Mertens, with Swiatek (11-3 v Coco Gauff) and Keys (10-2 v Daria Kasatkina) the only other players on the Tour to have 10-plus wins over active opponents.
Additionally, since the start of the 2024 season, Sabalenka (eight) has surpassed Mirra Andreeva (seven) for the outright most wins from a set down at WTA-1000 events (completed matches).