Iga Swiatek is stepping back to move forward on her favorite surface, and it seems she is rewriting her clay-court playbook before a single point has been played on the European dirt. The newly minted world No. 4 is currently training at the Rafa Nadal Academy in Mallorca, where one subtle adjustment in her playing style caught the eye of veteran coach and analyst Brad Gilbert.
How Iga Swiatek Is Using Rafael Nadal’s Strategy to Conquer Clay
The former coach of Andre Agassi and Coco Gauff has been sharing his observations on Swiatek’s training at the Rafa Nadal Academy. He spotted the four-time French Open champion practicing significantly deeper behind the baseline than her usual aggressive court position.
Commenting under a video of Swiatek training, Gilbert wrote, “looks 👀 like playing a bit deeper in the court instead of right on the baseline.”
Iga today at @rnadalacademy 💪🏻 Vamos!
🎥 – IG – katie.schoepflin#swiatek pic.twitter.com/mGY1IYfATz
— Lukasinho (@LukasFCB321) April 7, 2026
Swiatek built her resume by standing tight to the line and taking the ball on the rise, challenging her opponents with early timing. Now, she is deliberately stepping back several feet to receive and rally. Unsurprisingly, this deep-court setup is the exact strategy Rafael Nadal used to conquer the surface for two decades.
On a hard court, surrendering the baseline leaves a player vulnerable, but on clay, the math changes entirely. The red clay naturally slows the ball down and heavily rewards spin over pure pace. By retreating, she could buy a crucial fraction of a second to let the incoming ball drop into her optimal hitting pocket. That extra depth acts as a springboard for heavier offensive strikes.
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Swiatek clearly needed a strategic reset after a deeply frustrating run through the 2026 Sunshine Double. Elina Svitolina bounced her from the BNP Paribas Open in a grueling three-set quarterfinal, grinding out a 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 victory.
Her on-court struggles were then compounded at the Miami Open just days later. She had an unexpected round-of-64 exit in Florida, dropping a 1-6, 7-5, 6-3 match to 50th-ranked compatriot Magda Linette even after completely dominating the opening frame.
Meanwhile, world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka is executing a near-flawless 2026 campaign, holding a 23-1 (96%) season record after capturing three titles, including the Sunshine Double at Indian Wells and Miami. Sabalenka also recently broke Novak Djokovic’s all-time record by winning her 20th consecutive Grand Slam tiebreak.
No. 2 Elena Rybakina presents an equally daunting statistical wall with a 21-5 match record this year. Rybakina actively haunted Swiatek during her run to the 2026 Australian Open title, bouncing the Pole 7-5, 6-1 in a lopsided quarterfinal before defeating Sabalenka 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 for the championship. Additionally, 22-year-old world No. 3 and defending French Open champion Coco Gauff continues to crowd the top tier.
Next week, Swiatek officially returns to competitive action as the No. 4 seed at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany. She is a two-time champion in Stuttgart, having won the indoor event in 2022 and 2023. She thrives in those specific conditions where wind and elements cannot disrupt her high ball toss.
If she successfully integrates this Nadal-inspired court depth, her heaviest weapons will become nearly impossible to beat during the lead-up to Roland Garros.
