“It’s very simple,” Iga Swiatek’s coach, Wim Fissette, told her from the sidelines on Saturday. “Play to win. Put your energy into the ball.”
It does sound simple, doesn’t it? Yet Swiatek, the No. 2 player in the world, couldn’t do it against 35th-ranked Danielle Collins in Rome. This is a tournament that Swiatek has won three times, an opponent she had beaten in seven of eight meetings, and a surface, clay, where she has reigned for half a decade. Her straight-set loss sent her to her earliest exit in Rome since 2020, and—unless she decides to play next week—completed a stunningly subpar lead-up to her title defense at Roland Garros.
Each week since the start of February, we’ve waited for Iga, the old Iga, the steamrolling Iga, the Iga who has owned the spring since 2022, when she won 37 straight matches during this part of the season, to step forward and show herself again. We waited in Doha, where she was the three-time defending champion. We waited in Indian Wells, where she had won twice in the past three years. We waited in Stuttgart, where she had also won twice. We waited in Madrid, where she was the defending champ. And we waited this week in Rome.