Aryna Sabalenka, from Belarus, is a professional tennis player currently ranked world No. 1 on the WTA Tour. She plays right-handed. She turned professional in 2013.
Aryna Sabalenka captured four titles in 2025, winning Miami, Madrid, US Open, and Brisbane. The Belarusian also reached finals at Stuttgart, Indian Wells, Roland Garros, and Australian Open and four semifinals, including Wimbledon. On clay: a strong 17-3. On hard: 39-7. Sabalenka defended brilliantly at 65% break points saved, excelled under pressure winning 62% of pressure points on serve, and maintained pressure winning 51% on second serve delivery.
In 2024, Sabalenka triumphed with four titles, winning Wuhan, US Open, Cincinnati, and Australian Open. Aryna Sabalenka also reached finals at Rome, Madrid, and Brisbane and two semifinals. She dominated on hard with a 40-9 record. Sabalenka went 15-4 on clay. She held firm saving 61% of breakpoints faced, stayed composed winning at 61% in pressure situations on serve, and dominated on first serve with 70% points won.
Aryna Sabalenka captured three titles in 2023, winning Madrid, Adelaide 1, and Australian Open. Sabalenka also reached finals at US Open, Stuttgart, and Indian Wells and four semifinals, including Wimbledon and Roland Garros. This marked her climb to the top of the rankings. On clay: a strong 14-3. On hard: 35-9. She maintained pressure winning 49% on second serve delivery, delivered 0.6 free points per game through aces, and defended brilliantly at 62% break points saved.
Aryna Sabalenka reached finals at Stuttgart, s Hertogenbosch, and Finals Fort Worth, reaching semifinals at Rome, US Open, and Cincinnati along with three quarterfinals in 2022. Clay results: 9-5. She went 20-15 on hard. She fired 0.4 aces per service game, dominated second serve returns at 57%, and won a strong 68% behind the first serve.
Sabalenka captured two titles in 2021, winning Madrid and Abu Dhabi. The Belarusian also reached the final at Stuttgart and three semifinals, including US Open and Wimbledon. She reached a new career-high of No. 2. On clay: a strong 13-3. On grass: 7-3. Hard results: 25-12. She defended brilliantly at 61% break points saved, backed the serve up well with 48% on second attempts, and capitalized on 49% of breakpoint opportunities.
In 2020, the Belarusian triumphed with three titles, winning Doha, Linz, and Ostrava. Aryna Sabalenka also reached two semifinals. Hard results: 22-7. She excelled with 68% success on first serve, rarely gave away free points at second serve with 48% success, and capitalized at 57% on second serve returns.
Aryna Sabalenka captured three titles in 2019, winning Wuhan, Zhuhai, and Shenzhen. Sabalenka also reached the final at San Jose and two semifinals. She broke into the top 10 for the first time. On hard: a strong 29-12. On clay: 5-5. She capitalized at 58% on second serve returns, dominated on first serve with 69% points won, and used the ace as a weapon with 0.4 per game.
In 2018, Sabalenka triumphed with two titles, winning Wuhan and New Haven. The Belarusian also reached finals at Lugano and Eastbourne and one semifinal at Cincinnati. She broke into the top 20. She dominated on hard with a 32-12 record. Sabalenka went 7-4 on grass. Sabalenka commanded 68% of points on first serve, backed the serve up well with 48% on second attempts, and showed resilience saving 62% breakpoints when threatened.
The Belarusian advanced to the final at Tianjin, advancing to a semifinal at Tashkent during 2017. A maiden top-100 ranking followed. Competing on hard: 8-4. She excelled with 69% success on first serve, delivered 0.6 free points per game through aces, and defended brilliantly at 60% break points saved. She captured one title at Mumbai. She also reached the final at Shenzhen $60K. Lower-tier record: 16-8. Competing on hard: 11-4. She won 56% on second serve return, won 74% on first serve, and converted 54% of break opportunities.
Aryna Sabalenka built ranking on the Challenger tour in 2016. She entered the top 200 for the first time. She won two titles at Toyota $50K and Tianjin $50K. She also reached the final at Perth $25K. Additional semifinals at Minsk $25K, Ankara $50K, and Saint Petersburg $100K. Season record: 28-13. By surface: clay 5-5, hard 19-8.
Aryna Sabalenka developed through Futures tournaments in 2015. She captured one title at Antalya $10K. Additional semifinals at Minsk $25K and Heraklion $10K. Record: 27-12. Competing on hard: 23-7.
Aryna Sabalenka gained ranking points at Futures level in 2014. She captured one title at Pune $25K. Season record: 4-2.