You don’t have to look at the TV screen to know when Agnieszka Radwanska is playing. You just have to listen to the commentators. Eventually—and it sometimes takes no more than a minute or two—one of them will say “Wow!” or “Woah!” Or both of them will just break up laughing as they try to describe the shot or the point they’ve just witnessed.
Call it the Aga Effect: After a decade of uncanny, viral-ready shot-making, the 27-year-old has left her stamp on the sport like few other players of her generation. With her victory at the Premier Mandatory event in Beijing last week, that stamp now includes 20 career titles. That’s not too shabby, in this era of the power hitter, for a player who weighs just 123 pounds and struggles to crack 80 m.p.h. on her second serve.
How has Aga survived, and thrived, for so long? As bigger sluggers have come and gone, how has she finished in the Top 10 six years running? How has she played one of the busiest schedules in tennis and remained relatively injury free? While we’ve spent much of 2016 singing the praises of Serena Williams, Karolina Pliskova, Madison Keys, Garbiñe Muguruza and Simona Halep, how has Radwanska quietly won more matches than any of them? And in this age of the fist pump and the primal scream, how has Aga managed to stay competitive while appearing about as intense as someone who is on her way to buy groceries? (When she loses a point, she looks like some of us do when we realize we forgot to get the milk.)