Aryna Sabalenka
As
Professional Tennis Player
Claim Your Story
This profile was created to celebrate the athletes who shaped the game. Claim your profile to personalize your story, verify details, and connect directly with your community.
Essentials
- Full name
- Aryna Sabalenka
- Years active
- 2015–present
- Position
- Tennis — Singles
- Jersey number
- —
- Nationality
- Belarusian
- Hometown
- Minsk, Belarus
- College
- —
- Agent
- —
aryna's story
At her peak, Aryna Sabalenka had a double-fault problem severe enough that it followed her into every major match as the primary storyline. The most powerful server in the women's game was double-faulting at critical moments, and what made it worse was that she has spoken openly about the anxiety that accompanied it: panic setting in before the toss, the mechanics unraveling in real time in front of the largest audiences the sport assembles. She did not withdraw from competition to fix it quietly. She competed through it, lost matches because of it, worked on the technical and psychological dimensions simultaneously over the course of a season, and rebuilt the serve from the inside out while the results were still being tracked and reported. That she addressed both the mechanics and the mental health dimension publicly, at a moment when most players at her level would have said nothing, is its own form of courage. By 2023 she had won the Australian Open and the US Open. In 2024 she won the Australian Open again. Three majors in two years, built on the foundation of a serve she had dismantled and reassembled under pressure.
She is from Minsk, and her career has unfolded against the backdrop of Belarus's geopolitical position in ways she has not been able to set aside. Following the Belarusian government's crackdown after the 2020 elections, Wimbledon banned Belarusian and Russian players in 2022, and Sabalenka was unable to compete there that year. She has faced repeated public questions about her government's actions and about her own position, and she has navigated them with statements that acknowledged the difficulty of her situation without fully resolving it for everyone who asked. That context is part of her record. She has continued competing, continued winning, and continued carrying a set of circumstances that most players on tour do not face.
Off the court she is known as one of the warmer personalities in the locker room, openly expressive in a way that contrasts with the controlled aggression she brings to a match. She has spoken about using music to manage her nerves before competing, a small detail that connects back to the anxiety she addressed so publicly during the serve breakdown years. Ranked number one in the world, she is the standard the women's game is currently measuring itself against, and she got there by fixing the most visible flaw in her game while telling the truth about how hard that was. The sport has been trying to catch up to her ever since.
Q&A with Aryna
Real questions from fans. Real answers from her.
She hasn't joined yet — but when she does, your question will be waiting.
Ask Aryna a question
What do you want to know?
Ask about her career, her mindset, life off the court — anything you've always wanted to know.
Questions are reviewed by our team before they're shared with aryna — we'll let you know if yours makes it through.
Q&A with Aryna
Awards/Honors
Individual Awards
Legacy
Marketplace
Shop athlete-owned brands, exclusive collections, limited-edition drops, books, collectibles, and products inspired by the stories that shaped women's sports.
Every purchase helps support athletes and the future they're building.
Built for fans. Powered by athletes.
Aryna Sabalenka's Collection
160 Items



