Tennis: Second seed Aryna Sabalenka makes shaky start in quest for second Grand Slam at US Open

An error-prone Aryna Sabalenka overcame her early struggles on serve to overpower unseeded Belgian Maryna Zanevska 6-3 6-2 on Tuesday and move into the second round of the US Open.

The twice New York semi-finalist is bidding to win her second Grand Slam title and leapfrog Iga Swiatek into top spot in the world rankings and was nowhere near her best, but showed composure when it mattered most in a tricky contest.

The Australian Open champion made a shaky start, with five double faults to drop serve twice, but Ukrainian-born Zanevska was unable to capitalise on both occasions to let her second-seeded opponent off the hook.

Aryna Sabalenka dispatches her US Open first round opponent.
Aryna Sabalenka dispatches her US Open first round opponent. Photo credit: Getty Images

"First of all I want to thank you guys for staying, because if I would be you, after the third double fault, I'd leave the stadium," Sabalenka, who made 23 unforced errors, told the crowd. "Thank you for being patient.

"It was a tough start. It was so humid, I couldn't hold my racket.

"I'm glad I was able to get through this situation and get this win. She played an unbelievable match and she fought till the end.

"I'm just super happy with the win."

While Sabalenka continued to struggle for rhythm, there was no shortage of aggression in her groundstrokes, as the Belarusian turned up the heat to claim four straight games for a 5-2 lead, before closing out the opening set in 36 minutes.

Zanevska, 30 - who announced her intention to retire after the tournament, due to a chronic back issue - broke for the early lead in the second set, but Sabalenka clawed her way back to 2-2 and never looked back.

Sabalenka broke again, as Zanevska appeared to fade, and finished off the match with two booming serves to book a meeting with Briton Jodie Burrage in the next round.

"I'm most pleased with my focus," said Sabalenka. "No matter what, I was able to focus on myself and not on the score, and just keep trying to find my rhythm.

"Hopefully, I'll do better with every game."

Reuters