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Emma Raducanu: Brit to face world No 2 Iga Swiatek after battling ...

Emma Raducanu Brit to face world No 2 Iga Swiatek after battling
Emma Raducanu overcomes back issues to defeat Amanda Anisimova and set up a tasty third-round meeting with former world No 1 Iga Swiatek at the Australian Open; watch action from the ATP and WTA Tours on Sky Sports Tennis and Sky Sports+, NOW and the Sky

Emma Raducanu will take on five-time Grand Slam champion Iga Swiatek after battling through more injury problems to beat Amanda Anisimova in the second round of the Australian Open.

The former US Open champion had her preparations for the tournament disrupted by a back spasm and she had treatment for what appeared to be a lower back issue during the second set.

There were five more double faults - a significant improvement on the 15 in her first-round win over Ekaterina Alexandrova - but that did not stop her reaching the last 32 for the first time in Melbourne thanks to a 6-3 7-5 victory over big-hitting American Anisimova.

Now she will get a fourth crack at world No 2 Swiatek, who she is yet to win a set against.

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"This is a Slam that I love playing at so to make it past the second round means a lot to me," said Raducanu.

"It's incredibly difficult whenever you play a friend, it adds another dimension to the match and not necessarily a pleasant one. I think I did a good job. I knew I had to not go away in the second set."

She continued: "It was tricky today, it was a little bit windy, there was sun on one side. Both in patches had some moments with our serve. The way I managed to regroup at the end of the first, I was pretty proud of that.

"It's difficult. I haven't played a match in a very long time. The way I play is pretty athletic, I use my body a lot.

"I was feeling it a little bit but I'm glad I have a little bit of time to recover before my next match.

"I'm loving it. It's another opportunity to test my game. I think obviously she's (Swiatek) achieved so much already and I think going into it, I have nothing to lose. I'm just going to swing. I'm going to give it my best and I can't wait to play in front of you guys."

Raducanu's projected draw to Grand Slam glory

R3 - Swiatek

R4 - Bronzetti/Gracheva

QF - Navarro/Jabeur

SF - Rybakina/Collins

F - Sabalenka/Gauff

Tale of the Tape

Familiar feeling?

Emma Raducanu is back in the third round of a hard court Grand Slam for the first time since winning the US Open in 2021!

Raducanu and Anisimova are friends off court and there are similarities in their tennis stories, the American first reaching the fourth round here and the French Open quarter-finals as a 17-year-old.

Anisimova has pulled off some big wins at Grand Slams, especially in Melbourne, and is one of the purest natural ball strikers on tour.

That was evident as the American moved into a 3-1 lead, with the Raducanu serve holding up better but Anisimova drilling returns and seizing on anything short.

Anisimova had two chances to lead 4-1 but could not take either and from there Raducanu dug in well, surviving more pressure to hold serve for the first time and mixing up her game intelligently.

Five games in a row gave her the first set but there had been a few winces from Raducanu during service games and looks towards new fitness trainer Yutaka Nakamura.

In the opening game of the second set, she served three double faults, all from the left side, and then asked umpire Mohamed Lahyani to call the trainer.

By the time she took a medical time-out, she was 3-0 down, but, although the grimaces from Raducanu continued, the break seemed to affect Anisimova more and a succession of errors from the 23-year-old allowed the British player to pull level.

Raducanu had more treatment after dropping serve again to trail 4-3 but she still clearly believed she could win the match and, after yet another break, two big fists pumps greeted a hold to put her within one game of victory.

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Anisimova withstood the pressure that time but, two games later, a forehand winner to end a fine back-and-forth point brought up a first match point, and Raducanu took it, dropping her racket to the court and putting her hands to her head in celebration.

Raducanu relishing underdog status ahead of Swiatek clash

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Highlights of the Stuttgart Open quarter-final between Emma Raducanu and Iga Swiatek.
Swiatek leads Raducanu in head-to-heads at WTA level 3-0 after claiming two wins on clay and one on hard courts. Watch highlights from their last meeting in Stuttgart in 2024...

Raducanu admits she is free of any external pressure and cannot wait for her clash with 2022 US Open champion Swiatek on Saturday.

"She is a top player, she's been really consistent over the last quite a few years", Raducanu said. "So it's going to be a match for me where I feel like I don't really have much expectation externally.

"I think you always have the pressure that you put on yourself to perform to your best ability, which is not really going to change, but that's every match.

"I'm looking forward to going out there and testing my game against the best, because, ultimately, you play tennis and you live for these matches. It's going to be a great buzz of adrenaline."

The 22-year-old stressed she would taking a relaxed approach to preparations for her meeting with the Pole, who wasted little time in beating Slovak Rebecca Sramkova 6-0 6-2 on Thursday.

"I think I'll probably just take it easy tomorrow," she said. "I'll probably have a light hit. Nothing crazy.

"I've played a lot of tennis today and two days ago, so I don't think I need to overdo it on the practice court. Just to keep the body ticking over a little bit and just recover really."

What's coming up on Sky Sports Tennis?

ABN AMRO Open Rotterdam (ATP 500) - 3-9 February

Dallas Open (ATP 500) - 3-9 February

Delray Beach Open (ATP 250) - 10-16 February

IEB+ Argentina Open (ATP 250) - 10-16 February

Open 13 Provence (ATP 250) - 10-16 February

Transylvania Open (WTA 250) - 3-9 February

Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open (WTA 500) - 3-8 February

Qatar TotalEnergies Open (WTA 1000) - 9-15 February

Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships (WTA 1000) - 16-22 February

'Rankings mean nothing when facing Raducanu'

IGA SWIATEK of Poland celebrates her win against REBECCA SRAMKOVA of Slovakia on Rod Laver Arena in a Women's Singles 2nd round match on day 5 of the 2025 Australian Open in Melbourne, Australia. Sydney Low/Cal Sport Media(Credit Image: © Sydney Low/Cal Sport Media) (Cal Sport Media via AP Images)
Image: Swiatek set up a clash with Raducanu, ranked 61st in the world, in the third round scheduled for Saturday

Swiatek, whose best performance so far in Melbourne has been her 2022 semi-final loss to Danielle Collins, said rankings are meaningless when you play Grand Slam champions such as Raducanu - currently ranked 61st in the world.

"There's no point to look at rankings, especially when you have these great players that already have been through great tournaments and won some tournaments," Swiatek said. "You know that they can play well."

Four-time French Open champion Swiatek reigned as world No 1 for most of 2024 but slipped behind Aryna Sabalenka after she failed a doping test in August and served a one-month ban after it was accepted medication she was taking to combat jet lag was contaminated.

Watch the ATP and WTA Tours, as well as the US Open in New York, live on Sky Sports in 2025 or stream with NOW and the Sky Sports app, giving Sky Sports customers access to over 50 per cent more live sport this year at no extra cost. Find out more here.

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