Swiatek raced to her first major and became Poland’s first grand slam singles winner by topping Sofia Kenin 6-4, 6-1 in Paris.
The Spaniard was also 19 in 2005.
“Every year I was watching how Rafa lifts the trophy so it’s crazy that I am in the same place,” Swiatek said during the trophy presentation.
Another accolade?
At No. 54, no women’s player had ever been ranked as low and cradled the trophy.
But if her junior career is anything to go by, none of this should be a massive surprise.
Swiatek triumphed in the Wimbledon juniors in 2018, a few weeks after capturing the junior doubles title at Roland Garros.
Sports run in her family, as her dad represented Poland in rowing at the Olympics in Seoul in 1988. He was in attendance Saturday, along with Swiatek’s mom and the player’s sports psychologist, whose birthday it was.
The one thing missing was her cat.
“I don’t know what’s going on,” said Swiatek. “I’m so happy. And I’m so glad my family was here finally.
“It’s just overwhelming for me. Two years ago I won a junior grand slam and right now I’m here. It’s been like such a short time.”
Swiatek is good friends with Naomi Osaka, who upped her grand slam tally to three by winning the US Open last month. She is an aggressive player like her pal, seeking to dictate with her powerful, heavily spun forehand.
Fast starts have been a hallmark of her play in Paris and seemingly without any nerves in her first major final, she duly took a 3-0 lead. Maybe her pre-match song, ‘Welcome to the Jungle’ by rock band Guns N’Roses, has helped.
Mostly sunny conditions greeted the players in fall temperatures of around 15 degrees Celsius after the event shifted its date from late May due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Kenin broke to stay in the set for 4-5 with a sizzling backhand return, only to drop serve immediately.
The American broke serve to start the second but once again the response was immediate from Swiatek.
Already sporting tape to her left leg, Kenin took a medical timeout at 1-2 and returned with heavy strapping but it did little to change her fortunes.
During the medical timeout, some fans in attendance — they were capped at 1,000 — gave Swiatek yet more encouragement.
Swiatek sealed the contest with a 25th winner — compared to only 17 unforced errors — and moments later was in the stands hugging her camp.
Even as she made the final, Swiatek didn’t discount focusing on her studies if things didn’t go her way on the tour. Maybe now she will change her mind completely.
It was a rare defeat on the big stage for Kenin, who had been 5-1 in previous finals and toughed out five wins this fortnight.
But perhaps not even she would have envisaged making the final after losing her lone warmup match on clay 6-0 6-0 to the player Osaka beat in New York, Victoria Azarenka, in Rome.
She achieved the first part of the double she was looking for Saturday.