Amid ongoing commentary about the unpredictability of women’s tennis, Iga Swiatek offered a grounded perspective. The world No. 1 pushed back on claims that consistency is lacking on the WTA Tour, pointing to her own results alongside those of Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff.
“I don’t feel that,” she said confidently. “Me and Aryna and Coco have been winning a lot.”
In recent seasons, Swiatek has been a fixture at the top of the rankings, collecting titles across surfaces while consistently appearing in the later rounds of major events. Sabalenka has reached multiple Slam finals and won the Australian Open, while Gauff captured the US Open and remains a threat on all surfaces.
Swiatek acknowledged that early losses can happen, but she attributed them more to the demanding schedule than any lack of quality. “Sometimes we lose early, because the schedule is pretty crazy. You can’t win everything.”
Her comments reflect a broader reality in elite-level sport: dominance rarely means perfection. The top players continue to rack up wins, even if the occasional upset makes headlines. For Swiatek, the consistency is there—it just may not look the same as it once did. And in a generation defined by depth and variety, that’s part of what makes the WTA so compelling.
This is what she said: “I have no idea what’s gonna happen in the future. And also, I remember you guys asking me questions why there’s no consistency on the WTA. I don’t feel that. Me and Aryna and Coco have been winning a lot. Sometimes we lose early, because the schedule is pretty crazy. You can’t win everything.
I feel like on grass there are many upsets every year. It’s a surface we shouldn’t really.. I don’t know. It doesn’t really matter what happens here when we go to the hard court season I would say.”
Swiatek in Wimbledon, ranking, and results in 2025
Now the world no.4, Swiatek has a 37-11 win-loss record in 2025. Iga is participating in Wimbledon where she managed to beat the world no.64 Polina Kudermetova 7-5 6-1 and the world no.208 Caty McNally 5-7 6-2 6-1.
Iga Swiatek will fight against the world no.54 Danielle Collins in the 3rd round. Their actual record is 7-2 for Swiatek.
The Pole was the runner-up in Australia (United Cup) and in Bad Homburg (Bad Homburg Open).
Iga won 23 titles in her career: 13 on hard courts and 10 on clay courts. (See the list of her titles)