Iga Swiatek has appointed Francisco Roig, the long-time associate who mentored Rafael Nadal through 22 Grand Slam victories, as her fresh coaching appointment in an effort to restore her French Open dominance. The Polish top-four ranked player, who has won four of her six Grand Slam titles at Roland Garros, made the announcement on Instagram this week after separating from Wim Fissette following poor early-season performances. Swiatek, 24, has already begun training with Roig at Nadal’s academy in Majorca, with the Spanish legend himself providing direct instruction as she gets ready for next month’s clay-court event in Paris. The partnership marks a significant shift in direction for the Wimbledon champion, who struggled through 2026 with quarter-final eliminations at both the Australian Open and Indian Wells.
A tactical shift for the Polish champion
Swiatek’s decision to appoint Roig constitutes a fundamental recalibration of her playing strategy. After going through both tremendous highs and devastating setbacks under Fissette’s tutelage, the 24-year-old is seeking a fresh perspective from someone deeply versed with consistent success on clay. Roig’s 17 years working with Nadal gives him unparalleled insight into the tactical refinements and mental resilience required to dominate at the top tier. Having recently coached Emma Raducanu, Roig has also shown his ability to work effectively with varied approaches and personalities, making him an ideal fit for Swiatek’s present requirements.
The timing of this coaching change is crucial, as Swiatek looks to rediscover the reliability that established her a four-time French Open winner between 2020 and 2024. In recent times, she has acknowledged a propensity for overly aggressive, wild hitting when facing pressure—a departure from the court steadiness and shot precision that previously defined her play. By working at Nadal’s academy with the greatest clay-court player himself providing guidance, Swiatek hopes to recalibrate her mentality and return to being “a rock on the court,” as she described her ideal playing style to Polish media.
- Roig recognised for technical innovations during Nadal’s 22 Grand Slam victories
- Swiatek earlier reached out to Nadal seeking technical guidance following Fissette’s exit
- Emphasis on court positioning instead of aggressive hitting under pressure
- French Open begins next month as main objective for Swiatek’s return
Why Roig represents the optimal choice
The Nadal relationship and technical skill
Francisco Roig’s credentials are rarely equalled in the coaching profession. His 17-year partnership with Rafael Nadal provided him with an thorough comprehension of how to keep performance at its highest across multiple surfaces, but especially on clay courts where the Spanish legend reigned supreme. During Nadal’s remarkable career, which concluded with 22 Grand Slam titles, Roig was pivotal in directing the strategic refinements that kept the King of Clay competitive against evolving competition. His partnership with Nadal’s lead coaches—uncle Toni Nadal and later Carlos Moya—made him the designer of strategic innovations that defined one of sport’s greatest careers.
What marks Roig apart is his demonstrated capacity to translate that high-performance expertise to different athletes with unique on-court methods. His latest five-month stint coaching Emma Raducanu demonstrated his adaptability and skill to partner with competitors working outside the clay-specialist sphere. For Swiatek, this combination of profound clay experience and flexibility with different playing profiles makes him exceptionally positioned to address her existing technical and mental challenges while honouring the foundation she has already built.
Nadal’s active involvement in Swiatek’s shift in coaching highlights the significance of this working relationship. The 24-year-old Polish star has earlier consulted the Majorcan’s advice during pivotal periods, and his endorsement of Roig carries substantial weight. By training at Nadal’s facility with the legend delivering live coaching, Swiatek secures a network of support that connects institutional knowledge with bespoke guidance, fostering an setting favourable for rediscovering the consistency that made her a commanding French Open contender.
Swiatek’s recent difficulties and the way forward
| Tournament | Result |
|---|---|
| Australian Open 2026 | Quarter-final exit |
| Indian Wells 2026 | Quarter-final exit |
| Miami Open 2026 | First-round loss |
| French Open 2025 | Semi-final defeat to Aryna Sabalenka |
Swiatek’s 2026 campaign has been markedly inconsistent, a significant divergence from the commanding form she showed between 2020 and 2024 when she won four titles at Roland Garros. The quarter-final departures at both the Australian Open and Indian Wells exposed core deficiencies in her game, whilst her opening-round exit at Miami in March prompted an swift evaluation of her coaching team. These results have raised concerns about whether her latest Wimbledon victory marks a lasting change in her capabilities or just a passing victory. The arrival of Roig is calculated, with the Roland Garros—traditionally her hunting ground—now imminent.
In latest interviews, Swiatek has articulated her desire to return to being “a rock on the court,” a philosophy that speaks to her recent shortcomings. Rather than depending on wild, aggressive hitting when pressure mounts, she intends to reclaim the court consistency and steadiness that defined her earlier success. This approach involves drawing errors from opponents through sustained rallies rather than pursuing risky shot-making. Roig’s technical expertise in developing durable, pressure-resistant game plans aligns perfectly with Swiatek’s stated objectives, offering a pathway to reclaim the composure and resilience that defined her as a dominant clay player.
Re-establishing baseline stability and precision
Swiatek’s tactical refocus under Roig centres on a core philosophy: mastery of the baseline rather than dependence upon attacking play. This represents a conscious rejection of the risky strategies that have damaged her results in recent months, especially in high-pressure moments. By reasserting herself as a consistent, reliable force from the baseline, Swiatek seeks to exhaust her rivals through sustained rallies and positional control. The strategy echoes the approach that characterised her earlier success, where patience and precision worked together to extract mistakes from opponents. Roig’s technical acumen, developed over almost twenty years coaching Nadal, makes him perfectly suited to enhance this fundamental element of her playing style.
The psychological dimension of this tactical recalibration cannot be understated. Confidence at the baseline produces composure during critical moments, enabling players to rely on core skills rather than pursuing desperate winners. Swiatek’s admission that she wants to become “a rock on the court” reflects an understanding that sustainable success requires stability over spectacular shot-making. Roig’s expertise lies precisely in this domain—constructing game plans that emphasise steadiness whilst maintaining competitive edge. By focusing on depth, angle variation, and court positioning, Swiatek can gradually restore the defensive resilience that previously made her nearly impenetrable on clay surfaces, particularly at Roland Garros.
The advantage on clay courts
Clay courts have consistently enhanced Swiatek’s strengths, and this surface-focused proficiency forms a cornerstone of her collaboration with Roig. The slower pace of clay facilitates lengthy points that benefit baseline specialists, rewarding the accurate movement and resilience that exemplify her peak form. Swiatek’s quartet of French Open victories from 2020 to 2024 demonstrate her outstanding proficiency on this surface, yet her recent semi-final setback to Aryna Sabalenka—where she was whitewashed in one set—indicates her clay-court dominance has grown precarious. Roig’s familiarity with Nadal’s dominance on clay provides essential knowledge into preserving excellence on this taxing terrain whilst responding to evolving competitive pressures.
