Aryna Sabalenka Beats Victoria Mboko To Advance To Australian Open Quarterfinals
If you blinked during the first set inside Rod Laver Arena on Sunday, you probably missed Aryna Sabalenka putting on a clinic.
For about 45 minutes, the world’s top-ranked player looked like she had a dinner reservation she absolutely refused to miss. She was crushing the ball, painting the lines, and generally making life miserable for Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko. But tennis has a funny way of laughing at your plans. Just when it looked like a routine day at the office, things got complicated.
Sabalenka ultimately punched her ticket to the Australian Open quarterfinals for the fourth straight year, defeating the 17th-seeded Mboko 6-1, 7-6 (1). But the scoreline doesn’t quite capture the sweat equity involved in that second set. It was a match that showcased the terrifying power of the World No. 1, followed immediately by the kind of mid-match wobble that keeps coaches up at night.
Sabalenka Brings the Sledgehammer Early
The first set was less of a tennis match and more of a demolition derby. Sabalenka came out swinging. She wrapped up the opening frame in a breezy 34 minutes, utilizing a serve that felt like it was fired out of a cannon. The Belarusian superstar was playing “first-strike tennis” to perfection, barely letting Mboko get a racket on the ball, let alone construct a point.
When Sabalenka raced out to a 6-1, 4-1 lead, the writing wasn’t just on the wall; it was being carved in stone. Mboko, the 2025 WTA Newcomer of the Year, looked a step slow and overwhelmed by the pace coming from the other side of the net.
The Momentum Shift No One Saw Coming
But here is the thing about sports: desperation is a heck of a drug. Facing a deficit that would make most players start thinking about their flight home, Mboko suddenly woke up. Maybe it was the crowd urging the underdog on, or maybe Sabalenka took her foot off the gas just a fraction. Whatever the catalyst, the Toronto native started finding her range.
Mboko began redirecting Sabalenka’s pace rather than just reacting to it. She clawed her way back from 1-4 down, breaking the World No. 1 twice. The most dramatic moment came with Sabalenka serving for the match at 5-4. The top seed held three match points. She couldn’t convert any of them.
Suddenly, we had a ballgame. Mboko pushed the set to a tiebreak, and the tension in Melbourne was thick enough to cut with a knife. For a brief moment, the ghosts of Sabalenka’s past, the erratic errors, the double faults at crucial times, seemed to be hovering over the court.
The Tiebreak Queen Reigns Supreme
If you are betting against Sabalenka in a Grand Slam tiebreak right now, you are throwing your money away.
When the pressure was at its absolute peak in the tiebreaker, Sabalenka didn’t crumble. She evolved. She flipped a switch. Sabalenka stormed through the tiebreak 7-1, extending an absolutely bonkers statistic: she is now on a 20-set unbeaten streak in tiebreaks at Grand Slam events. That is not just luck; that is mental fortitude. While Mboko fought bravely to get there, Sabalenka simply had an extra gear that the teenager hasn’t discovered yet.
Sabalenka finished the match with 27 winners to 24 unforced errors, along with six aces. Perhaps most importantly, she showed she can take a punch in the second set and still stay standing.
What’s Next For Sabalenka Down Under?
The victory took one hour and 26 minutes. Sabalenka now awaits the winner of the clash between American hopeful Iva Jovic and Kazakhstan’s Yulia Putintseva. If she plays like she did in the first set, she’s unstoppable. If she plays like she did in the middle of the second, things might get interesting.
As for Mboko? There is no shame in losing to the best in the world. She showed grit, heart, and a second-set level that proves she belongs on the big stage. But Sunday belonged to Sabalenka, who proved once again that even when things go sideways, she knows exactly how to right the ship.
