Sabalenka boasts an impressive record in Australia, dropping just one set en route to consecutive titles in 2023 and 2024, and has lost just one of her past 22 matches at the tournament – a surprise three-set defeat by American Madison Keys in last year’s final.
Her good form is not restricted to Melbourne’s blue courts either – five of her 22 career singles titles have come on Australian soil, including tuning up for this year’s major with victory at the Brisbane International.
However, Sabalenka did not have it all her own way against world number 118 Rakotomanga Rajaonah.
In an uncharacteristically messy first set, Sabalenka had her serve broken in the opening game of the match and although she immediately broke back, saw 16 winners cancelled out by 13 unforced errors.
After saving a break point for 4-4, the match became increasingly one-sided, with Sabalenka reeling off five games in a row to take control.
“I didn’t start my best. She showed up on fire and she was playing great,” said Sabalenka, who is bidding to reach a fourth consecutive Australian Open final.
Sabalenka will face either Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova or Bai Zhuoxuan in the second round, with Britain’s Emma Raducanu a possible third-round opponent.