Navratilova's US Open preview: Can Gauff, Swiatek, Sabalenka deliver?

There are so many questions, so much at stake in the season’s fourth and final Grand Slam tournament.
Can Coco Gauff
US Open: Scores | Draw | Order of play
In a larger context, who will solidify their place at the WTA Finals in Riyad, Saudi Arabia? Swiatek is the only player qualified for the November year-end event, with Americans Gauff, Jessica Pegula
There are more than a handful of first-round matches not to be believed.
A few statistical morsels to whet your appetite for the coming matches:
- Bianca Andreescu, at 12-2, (.857) holds the best winning percentage in women’s singles at the US Open in the Open Era among active players with more than 10 matches.
- No one has hit more winners (409) and converted more break points (80) in the three Grand Slam events this year than Jasmine Paolini. Andreescu and Paolini meet in the first round.
- Elena Rybakina is the leader in aces, with 85.
- Three active players have reached multiple US Open finals: Naomi Osaka (2-0), Caroline Wozniacki (0-2), Victoria Azarenka (0-3).
One more tantalizing teaser, your projected quarterfinals:
Top half
No.1 Iga Swiatek
No.4 Elena Rybakina
Bottom half
No.2 Aryna Sabalenka
No.3 Coco Gauff
OK, let’s get to some of the storylines with analysis from 18-time Grand Slam champion Martina Navratilova:
Elena Rybakina
Navratilova: That’s the biggest thing for her -- staying healthy. Normally, players get injured, but she’s been sick. If she can stay healthy, then you can build. But when you’re sick or injured you go back to neutral. And then you finally get above neutral -- and you get another setback. You’re always treading water, so you’re not moving forward and that gets frustrating. Emotionally, that beats you up -- it takes a lot of energy to do that. The positive: Sometimes it takes the pressure off because the expectations go lower.
Iga Swiatek
Navratilova: Of course she can. I mean, for Iga, the only person who can really hit her off the court is Sabalenka. Rybakina, maybe on grass, but not on hard courts. Iga’s forehand on the hard court really pays off, so that levels the playing field against Rybakina. Against Sabalenka, Iga has better tools to deal with her, to neutralize her, than anybody else. She’s been working on her serve, getting more free points on that. I think the Olympics was just way too much pressure because she was such a favorite on the clay, and that can play games with your brain. So I wouldn’t worry about the Olympic result that much.
Leading into the US Open, we heard from some of @iga_swiatek's biggest fans, congratulating her on her recent #WTAFinalsRiyadh qualification! 💜 pic.twitter.com/2ORkSGVPxH
— wta (@WTA) August 23, 2024
Aryna Sabalenka
Navratilova: Yup. For sure. Last year’s final might have been the worst match Sabalenka’s played in any big match, and she will have learned her lesson -- and will be extremely motivated. She still has some confidence from getting to the finals, winning the Australian Open and Cincinnati. She’s fit -- and I think a key factor is that she didn’t play the Olympics. So she’s fresher than everybody else. No scar tissue from Paris. Swiatek expended that energy, and so did Zheng Qinwen. Sabalenka will be chomping at the bit, for sure.
What do you make of gold medalist Zheng Qinwen’s chances?
Navratilova: Zheng will be confident, but she expended a lot of energy playing in Paris. She was so impressive at the Olympics. Her game translates nicely to clay, but it seems like it should be best on hard courts. High balls bouncing shoulder high aren’t a problem for her. And she’s probably the second-biggest hitter after Sabalenka. Watch out.
Qinwen just can't miss this summer 🔥 pic.twitter.com/xjHZU9W5G0
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) August 24, 2024
Jessica Pegula
Navratilova: She has the game to beat anybody. But in the majors, when you need that little bit extra, she hasn’t shown that yet. When you get nervous, it’s nice to have something that you can go to -- a big forehand or a big serve. Jessica’s just such a steady player and so phenomenally consistent. We’ll see if she can find it. She can smoke the ball when she really puts her mind to it. She’s just going to have to red-line it a little bit. [Coach] Mark [Knowles] is such a good tactician that he can develop some more slices, drop shots, give her more variety where she can surprise people. Maybe that can be her weapon.
Who are your dark-horse picks?
Navratilova: Mirra Andreeva
Leylah Fernandez
Danielle Collins
And don’t discount [two-time champion] Naomi Osaka