Aryna Sabalenka irked by two moments in her Wimbledon semi-final defeat


Aryna Sabalenka made a conscious effort to be a gracious loser at Wimbledon, but still took a swipe at new finalist Amanda Anisimova.

World number one and title favourite Sabalenka was beaten 6-4 4-6 6-4 by the 23-year-old American Anisimova in a dramatic Centre Court semi-final.

The top seed from Belarus came in for a lot of criticism for her sour grapes reaction following her defeat by Coco Gauff at last monthโ€™s French Open final.

So she breezed into Wimbledonโ€™s media theatre giggling and said: โ€œYouโ€™re not going to see a Roland Garros press conference, so anyone who was waiting for that, you can leave right now!โ€

She added: โ€œI just donโ€™t want to face that hate again. I mean, weโ€™re all people. We all can lose control over our emotions. Itโ€™s absolutely normal.

โ€œEven right now I took a bit more time before doing my media just so I can be Aryna, not that crazy person that was on that media day at Roland Garros.โ€

Nevertheless, a couple of incidents did irk the 27-year-old. The first was a point at 2-3 in the second set when Anisimova seemed to loudly celebrate a winner before the ball was past Sabalenka, which could have been called hindrance by the umpire.

โ€œI was just trying to chase the ball. Yeah, she was already celebrating it. I was, like, I mean, thatโ€™s a bit too early,โ€ she said.

โ€œThen she kind of p****d me off saying that, โ€˜oh, thatโ€™s what she does all the timeโ€™.โ€

Anisimova, who will face Iga Swiatek in Saturdayโ€™s final, responded: โ€œI donโ€™t really know what was the deal there, to be honest, because I didnโ€™t feel like it was that interfering. But yeah, I tried to not do it again.โ€

Then, with Sabalenka 2-4 down in the third, the 13th seed did not apologise after a groundstroke, which may have been floating wide, clipped the net cord and landed in.

Sabalenka added: โ€œI just looked at her and, I mean, for sure she didnโ€™t hear me. I was like, โ€˜you donโ€™t want to say sorry?โ€™ She just wanted, I guess, badly to win this match.

โ€œItโ€™s on her. If she doesnโ€™t feel like saying sorry, like she barely got that point and she didnโ€™t feel like saying sorry for that tricky situation, thatโ€™s on her.โ€

But it is hard to paint Anisimova, who is a keen artist, as the villain of the piece.

Anisimova, who reached her only other grand slam semi-final six years ago in Paris as a 17-year-old, took an eight-month break from the sport in 2023 to prioritise her mental health.

She said: โ€œI think thatโ€™s a really special message that I think Iโ€™ve been able to show because when I took my break, a lot of people told me that you would never make it to the top again.โ€



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