Iga Swiatek is in Madrid as she looks to get her 2026 season going.
The six-time Grand Slam champion had a strong 2025, including her first Wimbledon title while working with coach Wim Fissette.
But she started this year slowly, which led to a change in her coaching setup. The Pole is now training under Francisco Roig.
Swiatek and Roig have already spent time together at the Rafa Nadal Academy and trained again in Stuttgart. She started well there, beating Laura Siegemund before falling to Mirra Andreeva in the quarter-finals.
Iga Swiatek admits her approach needs a rethink
For years, Iga Swiatek was the most dominant force on the WTA Tour, especially on clay courts.
The Pole picked up four French Open titles in just five years and put together a 37-match winning streak back in 2022.
However, over the past year or so, Swiatekâs hold over the womenâs game has started to loosen. Explaining why she thinks her dominance has dipped, she told the Madrid Open:
âHonestly, I feel itâs the way of practising,â
âAnd I feel like Iâve been doing a lot of closed patterns. And the rallies sometimes on my practices were kind of short.â
âWhere sometimes I needed really to feel solid. And you need to have this feeling in your hand that youâre not going to miss a ball, you know?â
The Polish star, who faces Daria Kasatkina or a qualifier in the Madrid Open second round, also discussed how working with a Spanish coach has helped her focus more on consistency and highlighted where her decision-making could improve.
âBecause Spanish players are usually really solid and fight for every point. Theyâre prepared for long rallies too. Thatâs why Francis and I share similar goals.â
Iga Swiatek looks back on her Madrid Open win
In the 2023 Madrid Open final, Iga ĆwiÄ tek lost to Aryna Sabalenka in three sets. The following year, she came back with a point to prove.
Swiatek started the 2024 tournament strongly, dropping just eight games across her first three matches. She then took down Beatriz Haddad Maia in three sets to reach the semi-finals and followed that up by defeating Madison Keys.
The final was a marathon contest, with Swiatek saving three championship points before finally edging past Sabalenka in a deciding tiebreaker.
After the match, Swiatek spoke about how she managed her mindset during those tense moments when Sabalenka was on the brink of victory.
âBefore the tiebreaker, I was like âokay, she has a match point.â I mean, sometimes it happens that I lose my serve, you know, when itâs 5-4 or something like that. So I was, like, okay, whatever. Itâs not the first time in my life. Iâm just going to go for it.â
âI think I decided to play a fast serve there,â Swiatek said. âSo I wanted to be courageous in that moment.â
As for the match point she had missed earlier when Sabalenka fired an ace past her?
âBut for sure when I had a match point and she served an ace,â Swiatek added with a laugh.
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