Nearly two hours into her second quarter-final in as many Majors back after maternity leave, Elina Svitolina had done everything she could. Faced with the challenge of containing the best player in the world, Svitolina worked Iga Swiatek like the veteran she is, pressuring her in the decisive moments and offering up minimal mistakes. But as she led 4-1 in the second set tie-break, Swiatek pulled off a remarkable escape.
Still, Svitolina never panicked. Over the course of her 13-year career she has won nearly 450 matches and beaten the best players of her era. There is nothing she is more knowledgeable about in this world than how to battle through a tennis match with grit and determination, and she used her vast experience to recover: 41 minutes later, Svitolina pulled off one of the best wins of her entire career by defeating Swiatek, the top seed, 7-5, 6-7 (5), 6-2 to return to the Wimbledon semi-finals.
So soon into this delirious comeback, Svitolina, a wild card, has now equalled her best ever showing at a Grand Slam tournament and this enormous win marks the 28-year-old’s first ever victory over a top eight player at a Grand Slam tournament. She will next face Marketa Vondrousova, who defeated Jessica Pegula, the fourth seed, 6-1, 2-6, 6-4.
“At the beginning of the tournament, if someone would have told me that I was gonna be in the semi-final and beat the world number one, I would say that that they’re crazy,” said Svitolina.
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The pair had reached the quarter-finals after being the main protagonists in one of the most spectacular days of tennis this year. In Swiatek’s fourth-round match against Belinda Bencic, the No 14 seed, Swiatek survived after facing two match points. At that exact same moment, Svitolina was deep in a brutal battle with Victoria Azarenka, eventually fighting back from 4-7 down in the third-set tie-break before sealing the victory with an ace.
While Swiatek led by a break for much of the first set, she never looked comfortable and she struggled to control her leaking forehand. When Swiatek attempted to serve out the first set, Svitolina sensed that her opponent was vulnerable and pounced, moving closer to the baseline and attacking. The No 1 instantly crumbled. From 5-3 up, Swiatek conceded the final four games of the set, largely in a shower of forehand errors. During the set break, the roof was closed as rain began to fall.
After Swiatek barely hung on in the second set to force a tie-break, Svitolina took control, slamming down an ace to lead 4-1 in the tie-break. With her back to the wall, Swiatek responded with a brilliant last stand, demolishing her groundstrokes as she struck five point-ending shots in the last seven points to force a third set.
After such a big missed opportunity, many great players would have fallen away, but Svitolina immediately shrugged off her disappointment. She saved her best tennis for that decisive set, counterpunching brilliantly while also serving well and stepping inside the baseline to play the type of fearless, attacking tennis that had eluded her in her youth. Svitolina broke serve twice in the third set before effortlessly serving out a monumental victory.
“I don’t know what is happening right now in my head,” she said courtside immediately after the victory.
With the victory, one of the most spectacular recent comebacks continues. Since giving birth in October to her daughter, Skaï, she has returned refreshed, playing with a level of freedom that she simply could not draw upon when she was a top three player in the world. Throughout career, Svitolina was known to struggle at the Grand Slam tournaments, even as she reached No 3 and racked up WTA 1000 titles against the very same players all year. She already looks even better than at her peak.
“It’s different right now,” said Svitolina. “Right now I just say to myself I think it’s less years that I have in front than behind me. I have to go for it. I don’t have time to lose any more. I don’t know how many years I will be playing more.”
That shift is evident in her style of play, still a defence-first counterpuncher who patiently waits for her opportunities to attack, but a player who is completely unafraid to attack when those opportunities arise. It is even reflected in the way she marches around the court during these matches, always on a mission.
At the beginning of the tournament, Svitolina noted that she spends every moment off the court monitoring the situation in Ukraine, checking in on the wellbeing of her family, friends and her foundation’s work, that every day is a heavy day for her.
Still, she has been able to channel these difficulties into her tennis, each decision on the court imbued with an eleven greater meaning, and even at a time of war, she keeps on moving forward. – Guardian