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Sabalenka Opens Up on Mental Health Struggle After Former Partner’s Death

Calm Key for Tiger Queen Sabalenka in Maiden Major Quest

By Erik Gudris | @atntennis | Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Aryna Sabalenka opens up for the first time in a new interview about the mental health challenges she faced after the death of her former partner in March.

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The 26-year-old Sabalenka gave a new interview to the UK Guardian where she spoke at length for the first time about the death of her ex-boyfriend, former international ice hockey player and fellow Belarusian Konstantin Koltsov, age 42, that occurred just before the Miami Open.

Sabalenka admits that now, after much reflection, she perhaps should have done things differently to cope with the personal loss.

“Once, I lost my father and tennis helped me to go through that tough loss,” Sabalenka says in the interview. “So at that moment (of Koltsov’s death) I thought I had to just keep going, keep playing, keep doing my thing to separate my personal life from my career life.”


In 2019, Sabalenka endured the sudden loss of her father Sergey by choosing to continue playing and focusing on her career. The two-time reigning Australian Open champion chose a similar plan after Koltsov’s death. Though she made a brief social media statement about his death and thanked her fans for their support, Sabalenka chose to carry on despite what she called an “unthinkable tragedy”.

Koslov’s death was ruled an apparent suicide by local police.

Sabalenka, after news of Koltsov’s passing broke, surprised many by choosing to play in Miami. A few days later, Sabalenka played against her good friend Paula Badosa in an opening round match. Ultimately, Sabalenka made early exits at both Miami and Stuttgart and feels now she should have taken more time to recover mentally.

“But at the end I would say I was struggling a lot healthwise because I didn’t stop. It was really emotional and really stressful, and kind of damaged my mental health at that point. “Probably, looking back right now, I would say that a better decision would have been to step back, reset and recharge, and start everything over again. But I did what I did. At the end I paid for my decision, but I’m really glad that I have tennis in my life and it’s really helped me go through whatever and get stronger.”

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