Rybakina Sets Indian Wells Final Rematch with Sabalenka After Svitolina Win

Elena Rybakina defeated Elina Svitolina in straight sets to advance to the Indian Wells final. She will face world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in a rematch of both this year's Australian Open and the 2023 Indian Wells finals. Rybakina holds a dominant 4-1 record over Sabalenka in tournament finals. Sabalenka has expressed frustration over her recent losses in major championship matches.

Key Points: Rybakina vs. Sabalenka Indian Wells Final Rematch Set

  • Rybakina wins 12th straight vs. Top 10
  • Reaches second Indian Wells final
  • Faces Sabalenka in championship rematch
  • Holds 4-1 finals record over Sabalenka
2 min read

Rybakina beats Svitolina to set Indian Wells final rematch with Sabalenka

Elena Rybakina beats Elina Svitolina to reach the Indian Wells final, setting up a championship rematch with world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka.

"I cannot be super happy with my performance today. I definitely need to get better before the final. - Elena Rybakina"

Indian Wells, March 14

Australian Open champion Elena Rybakina added another milestone by reaching her second Indian Wells final with a 7-5, 6-4 win over World No. 9 Elina Svitolina in 1 hour and 46 minutes.

The win marked her 12th straight victory over Top 10 opponents, a streak that began last October in Ningbo, where she also lifted the trophy.

Contesting her seventh career meeting with Svitolina, the world No. 3 was broken in her opening service game but countered with a pair of breaks to claim an opening set in which she won 19 of 21 first-serve points.

Rybakina raced out to a 4-0 double-break lead in the second set and handled a bit of turbulence before closing out the win. The always scrappy Svitolina saved match points in two consecutive games to close within a break, then held to force Rybakina to serve it out, Indian Wells reports.

The third match point was the charm for the 26-year-old, who improved to 16-3 lifetime at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden and 17-3 overall in 2026. "I cannot be super happy with my performance today. I definitely need to get better before the final," said Rybakina.

She'll now faces world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, whom she beat in both the Australian Open final earlier this year and the 2023 Indian Wells championship match.

Rybakina and Sabalenka have met 16 times, with Sabalenka holding a slim 8-7 edge.

Zoom in on their finals, however, and things look completely different. The pair have previously met in five finals, with Rybakina winning four of them - including a four-match winning streak in title matches that began in the 2023 final here in Stadium 1.

"I'm so done losing these big finals," Sabalenka said. "It felt like even though players were playing incredible tennis in those finals, I had so many opportunities that I didn't use."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Interesting to see her being so critical of her own performance after a straight-sets win over a Top 10 player. That's the champion mentality. Sabalenka must be having nightmares about facing her in finals again. The mental edge is clearly with Rybakina now.
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Rohit P
Respect to Svitolina for fighting till the end and saving those match points. But Rybakina's power is just too much to handle on these courts. 19 out of 21 first-serve points won in the first set is just insane dominance. Final should be a cracker!
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Sarah B
While the match was high quality, I do wish the WTA tour had more variety in its top players' playing styles. It often feels like a power-hitting contest. A respectful criticism – where are the crafty counter-punchers and all-court players at the very top?
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Vikram M
That stat about winning 4 out of 5 finals against Sabalenka is the key. In big moments, Rybakina just has her number. Sabalenka's quote says it all – she feels the pressure. Saturday's final is Rybakina's to lose. My money is on her for the title!
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Kavya N
Watching from Mumbai! These two are the best in the world right now. Hope the final goes to three sets. Perfect Sunday morning entertainment for us. ☕️🎾 Makes me miss the days when Sania was dominating doubles. We need a new Indian star in singles, yaar.

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