VIDEO SHOWS: WTA FINALS HIGHLIGHTS RESENDING WITH COMPLETE SCRIPT SHOWS: RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA (NOVEMBER 5, 2025) (WTA/DAZN – See restrictions) IGA SWIATEK V AMANDA ANISIMOVA (DARK TOP) FIRST SET 1. SWIATEK WINNER AT NET TO SAVE BREAK POINT 2. BACKHAND WINNER BY SWIATEK SECOND SET 3. ANISIMOVA FOREHAND WINNER 4. FOREHAND WINNER BY ANISIMOVA THIRD SET 5. ANISIMOVA WINS POINT TO LEAD 4-1 6. SERVICE RETURN WINNER BY ANISIMOVA TO TAKE MATCH 7. ANISIMOVA CELEBRATES 8. PLAYERS AT NET ELENA RYBAKINA V EKATERINA ALEXANDROVA (WHITE TOP) FIRST SET 9. FOREHAND WINNER BY RYBAKINA 10. BACKHAND BY RYBAKINA TO SAVE BREAK POINT SECOND SET 11. CROSS COURT FOREHAND WINNER BY RYBAKINA 12. BACKHAND WINNER BY RYBAKINA 13. RYBAKINA WINS MATCH 14. PLAYERS AT NET STORY: Amanda Anisimova fought past Iga Swiatek 6-7(3) 6-4 6-2 in a winner-takes-all match at the WTA Finals on Wednesday (November 5) to join Elena Rybakina in the semi-finals and stay in the hunt for a first crown on her debut in the season-ending championship. The stage was set for the highly-anticipated clash between the pair after Swiatek routed Anisimova 6-0 6-0 to lift her maiden Wimbledon crown in July, before the American gained revenge in the U.S. Open quarter-finals in September. Following a fierce start to their latest meeting and 12 straight holds of serve, Poland's Swiatek raised her level to seize control of the first set in the tiebreak, clinching it when Anisimova struck a forehand long. The war of attrition continued in the second set, before Anisimova ramped up the intensity on her forehand and earned the first break of the match in the 10th game to force a decider at the King Saud University Sports Arena. With confidence flowing, Anisimova carved out another break to surge 3-1 ahead in the third set and shift the pressure onto world number two Swiatek, and the resilient 24-year-old stayed firm from there and completed her comeback victory. Rybakina earlier continued her dominant run with a 6-4 6-4 win over second alternate Ekaterina Alexandrova, after Madison Keys withdrew from their clash with illness and Mirra Andreeva was not fit to play. Rybakina arrived for the clash after victories over Anisimova and Swiatek but the former Wimbledon champion came under pressure against a fresh Alexandrova, before breaking in the ninth game and then claiming the opening set with a hold. The Kazakh, who staved off three breakpoints in the first set, cranked up her huge serve and heavy hitting early in the second to go 3-1 up and applied the squeeze to close in on another win in the Serena Williams group. Another break courtesy of a powerful return of serve left Rybakina one game away and the 26-year-old eventually wrapped up the victory despite some struggles on her own delivery late in the clash. World number one Aryna Sabalenka takes on Coco Gauff on Thursday with both players in contention for a semi-final place from the Steffi Graf group, while Jessica Pegula can boost her own chances when she meets the already-eliminated Jasmine Paolini. (Production: Andy Ragg)
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