Unseen footage shows distraught Iga Swiatek in tears after crushing US Open defeat

World number one Iga Swiatek was spotted fighting back tears after being knocked out of the US Open in the quarter-final.

The five-time Grand Slam winner slumped to a 6-1, 6-4 defeat to sixth seed Jessica Pegula in New York.

Having won the French Open back in July, Swiatek was looking to add to her trophy collection this year by winning a second US Open title.

She has already won the tournament once back in 2022 but could not make it past the home favourite this time around.

And the Polish star was clearly devastated by her exit.

The 23-year-old was seen with tears in her eyes as she was treated by a physio following the tough game.PolishPolish

She had suffered a similarly difficult exit in the third round of Wimbledon not long ago when she lost to Yulia Putintseva, in a result which had ended a 21-match winning streak.

And the Paris 2024 Olympics brought similar pain as she was forced to settle for a bronze medal after losing to eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals.

Speaking to the media after her defeat in the US, she was still visibly upset by the result as she was quizzed about what he expectations for the competition had been.

When you go to a tournament, they want to know what my goal is, to win the final, the semifinal and it’s just not that. Those are not my goals when I go to a tournament,” she said.

She added: “I remember how it was last year, and, you know, I’m not going to expect myself to win all the time. I’m focusing more on work.

And it’s more of an answer, because when I talk to you guys, because everybody always talks about results right away when you go into a tournament, they want to know what my goal is, I don’t know, to win the final, the semifinal, and that’s not really the case, you know.

Those are not my goals when I go into a tournament. That’s my answer, because I want to explain that I don’t expect results from myself.

“I expect more that I’m going to work, I’m going to face some problems and work on them, and that’s it. I always try to have lower expectations, because I know that, like, any of us can win this tournament, and it’s not going to be easy, you know.

And then, I feel like when I have high expectations, I never perform well. So I try to lower them.

“It’s not that they’re just low, you know, because it’s hard to have low expectations when everybody’s expecting something from you, and you kind of know that you might have a match to play well.”

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