Victoria Mboko walked onto Rod Laver Arena this past January and slammed into world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka. The 19-year-old Canadian phenom arrived at the Australian Open fourth round riding a massive wave of momentum.
However, Sabalenka dispatched Mboko 6-1, 7-6(1) in an 86-minute masterclass. The match served as a harsh welcome to the sport’s elite tier for Mboko. Months later, Mboko is still unpacking the lessons from that Melbourne night.
The Intimidation Factor of Facing Aryna Sabalenka
Mboko admits the sheer scale of the moment caught her off guard. She stepped onto the massive stadium court to face a top-seeded opponent who possesses unprecedented power. The environment alone was enough to scramble a young player’s focus.
“When I played her for the first time in the Australian Open, I was a little bit intimidated because it was my first time on the stadium court, and like just seeing the kind of vibe of everything,” Mboko said during her appearance on “The Changeover Podcast.” “Everything was just so big. There was this camera flying all up in my face.”
The sensory overload translated to the scoreboard immediately. Sabalenka steamrolled through the opening set in just 23 minutes. She hit 15 winners and committed only four unforced errors to take a quick 6-1 lead.
Mboko found herself strictly on defense early in the match. She scrambled across the baseline to counter the Belarusian’s heavy groundstrokes.
“I was just very overstimulated, and I was like, ‘Okay, what am I supposed to do?'” Mboko said. “I didn’t really have a game plan because she does everything exceptionally well.”
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The second set offered a clear glimpse of Mboko’s trademark resilience. Sabalenka jumped out to a 4-1 lead with a double break and looked completely unstoppable. However, Mboko refused to fold.
She dug in, erased the deficit, and eventually forced Sabalenka to serve to stay in the set at 5-6. Mboko even came within two points of forcing a decider. She fought off three match points along the way to even the score at 5-5.
Sabalenka regrouped and forced a tiebreak. Once there, she slammed the door shut, taking the breaker 7-1 with a blistering ace on match point.
Mboko recognized the contrast in their ball striking immediately. The Canadian is a rising talent who just entered the top 10 of the WTA rankings.
She knows how to hit a heavy ball. But Sabalenka simply operates in a completely different stratosphere of power and precision.
“And of course, I mean her ball striking is so clean,” Mboko said. “She hits a pretty decent ball every single shot she hits. So, I think that’s what sets her different.”
Mboko has enjoyed a sensational run so far this year. She has reached multiple finals and established herself as one of the top prospects in women’s tennis.
