Ukrainian tennis player Svitolina beats Russian opponent in WTA final.
Ukrainian tennis player Elina Svitolina defeated her Russian opponent Anna Blinkova on May 27 at the final of the Internationaux de Strasbourg tournament in France, claiming her first Women's Tennis Association (WTA) victory since giving birth to a baby girl. Svitolina, who became the first Ukrainian woman to break into the world's top 3 in 2017, won her second Internationaux de Strasbourg title with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over the 24-year-old Russian tennis player. The match lasted about an hour and a half.
Svitolina, a 28-year-old from Odesa, won the 17th career title, and the first since the last victory in Chicago at the WTA 250 in 2021. Svitolina is currently ranked No.
508 in the WTA ranking, according[1] to the Women's Tennis Association. Due to a severe back injury and the toll of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Svitolina announced a break from tennis in March 2022.
Soon, she gave birth to her daughter Skai in October 2022. The Ukrainian tennis player returned to the sport in April at the Credit One Charleston Open in the U.S., where she lost in the Round of 64 match to Kazakh player Yulia Putintseva. Svitolina played five more professional tournaments before taking part in the Internationaux de Strasbourg tournament in France.
Before the May 27 victory, Svitolina's biggest success after the year-long break was reaching the semi-final at the WTA 125K Saint-Malo in France in early May. Outside of the court, Svitolina has been vocal about expelling Russian and Belarussian athletes from international sporting events. In a February interview with the Associated Press in Kyiv, the Olympic bronze medalist called[2] for banning Russian and Belarusian athletes from competing in the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Asami TerajimaReporter
Asami Terajima is a reporter at the Kyiv Independent.
She previously worked as a business reporter for the Kyiv Post focusing on international trade, infrastructure, investment and energy.
Originally from Japan, Terajima moved to Ukraine during childhood and completed her bachelor's degree in Missouri, U.S.A.
She is the winner of the 2023 George Weidenfeld Prize, awarded for "excellent investigative and courageous research activities" as part of Germany's prestigious Axel Springer Prize.