tennis

Aryna Sabalenka vs Iga Swiatek: Surface records compared after Indian Wells

Yahoo Sports

Despite Sabalenka’s dominance, Swiatek still leads across all surfaces Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek have emerged as the defining forces on the WTA Tour since 2020, consistently competing at the highest level and collecting major titles. Sabalenka has held the world No.

Photo by ALAIN JOCARD/AFP via Getty Images Despite Sabalenka’s dominance, Swiatek still leads across all surfaces Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek have emerged as the defining forces on the WTA Tour since 2020, consistently competing at the highest level and collecting major titles. Sabalenka has held the world No. 1 ranking since October 2024 and reinforced her status with a title run at Indian Wells, defeating Elena Rybakina in the final, while Swiatek exited earlier after a quarter-final loss to Elina Svitolina.

Swiatek still leads Sabalenka statistically on every surface Photo by Noushad Variyattiyakkal/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Despite Sabalenka’s recent momentum, the underlying numbers show that Swiatek maintains the edge across hard, clay, and grass courts. At just 24, the Pole has already secured six Grand Slam titles — notably completing the rare feat of winning majors on all three surfaces. In contrast, Sabalenka’s four Grand Slam titles have all come on hard courts, at the Australian Open and US Open.

Even on Sabalenka’s strongest surface, hard courts, Swiatek holds a superior win percentage (79% vs 75%), although the Belarusian has claimed more titles (20 compared to 14). The disparity becomes clearer on clay, where Swiatek has built a dominant legacy. She owns a remarkable 86% win rate and 10 titles on the surface — including four French Open crowns — compared to Sabalenka’s 67% win rate and three titles.

On grass, Swiatek has also moved ahead. After initially struggling, she claimed her first Wimbledon title last year and now boasts a 76% win rate. Sabalenka, meanwhile, has yet to win a title on grass and has fallen short in two finals, without reaching a Wimbledon final so far.