Swiatek starts a fresh chapter
You can know the WTA Tour inside out and still get jolted awake by an announcement that lands like a clean winner down the line. The world No. 4 has now made official what was already doing the rounds behind the scenes: sheâs back in business with a new guide, a detail-obsessed builder, a brain used to the very top table. And that man is Francisco Roig.
The confirmation came in an Instagram story, plain, tidy, almost solemn. A photo on the indoor clay at Rafael Nadalâs academy in Manacor. Easy smiles, rackets on the ground, and that line that reads like a promise: âVery excited for this new chapter.â No drama, no fluff. Just a 24-year-old star choosing to keep the standards high while changing the approach.
Rafa Nadal đ€ Iga Swiatek
Premium clay-court prep for Swiatek at the Rafa Nadal Academy, with Francisco Roig… and Rafa himself watching on đđ„
VIP coaching? Could be.
đž IG/visionsports_official pic.twitter.com/cFcCaEiYgN
â DS TennisđŸ (@DieunipherDS) April 2, 2026
A clear break after Wim Fissette
If this move hits hard, itâs because the timing matters. The Pole had only just confirmed the end of her partnership with Wim Fissette, the man who helped guide her to Wimbledon last year. It was a productive duo, but it barely lasted beyond a glorious spell. Modern tennis doesnât sit around waiting for anyone, and Swiatek, obsessive perfectionist that she is, has proved it again.
So in Manacor, she didnât just turn up for a sunny photo op. She went looking for a philosophy, for a kind of old-school discipline. Roig isnât just another coach with a CV longer than a five-set scoreline. He spent almost 20 years in Nadalâs shadow, a trusted hand who knows the hard road to the top and the toll it takes to get there.
The Roig call: know-how, patience, clay-court DNA
Before linking up with the Pole, Roig had a brief spell with Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard, French tennisâs big project. That one was over quickly, wrapping up after Indian Wells and Miami. Perricard is now working with Philippe Dehaes, but Roigâs stop-off still left the same impression: he picks his battles carefully. And Swiatek is, without question, one of the most intriguing ones around.
His job? Tweak a machine that already frightens most of the field without smothering what makes it tick. Swiatek is the kind of player who can suffocate opponents in a way few others can. Intensity, court coverage, sharp changes of pace, quick-fire reading of the game. But over the past few months, the engine wasnât quite roaring as loudly. The desire was there, the results too, but the spark was missing. Roigâs fresh eyes might just be the fuel she needs.
The new partnership will make its competitive debut at the WTA 500 in Stuttgart in mid-April. A perfect test, really: once clay comes into view, Swiatek breathes easier, sees the court more clearly and takes control harder. Four Roland-Garros titles donât come from nowhere. For her, clay isnât just a surface. Itâs home turf.
A bold gamble, a new horizon
In this next chapter, the Pole isnât chasing headlines. Sheâs chasing a direction. Roig, meanwhile, brings his feel for tempo, his reading of emotions, his experience with champions who had no room for slack. If the two click, if the chemistryâs there, this could turn into something special.
Tennis loves a comeback story. This one starts with a simple image: a player, a coach, a red court. And a message thatâs quiet but loaded. Swiatek keeps moving. Again. Always. And if her future ends up written in capital letters once more, this Thursday was the first line of the script.

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