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She steps onto the court and shouts. Shouts so loud it can be heard in the stands. Shouts not from pain — from anger. Hits so hard the ball flies faster than 180 kilometers per hour. And after every winning point — a clenched fist, a roar, a look that can freeze her opponent. This is Arina Sobolenko. A Belarusian tennis player, former world No. 1. But it's not about titles. It's about the creed. The life philosophy she embodies with every game. And this creed sounds simple: no excuses. Never.

A Childhood That Forged Her

Arina was born in Minsk in 1998. Her father, Sergey Sobolenko, a former hockey player, realized early on that his daughter was explosive. He didn't take her to ballet or piano lessons. He brought her to tennis. And he set a condition: either you train like crazy, or you don't play at all. Arina chose the first. She carried two coaches on her back, ran cross-country in the rain, practiced her serve until she had bloody blisters. Her father was strict, even cruel. But he taught her the main thing: no one will do the work for you. If you want to be the best, be the best in training.

In 2019, her father passed away. Arina was 20. She had just broken into the top 10. Grief mixed with anger. Many would have broken, retreated into the shadows. But Arina went to the gym and hit the ball even harder. "I'm playing for him," she says. This is the first part of her creed: turning pain into strength.

Creed Number One: Don't Whine

In an interview, Arina is asked, "How do you cope with pressure?" She shrugs her shoulders: "What pressure? I'm just playing tennis. It's my job. I love this job. That's all." Without pomposity, without complaints. She doesn't talk about fatigue, doesn't complain about the referees, doesn't look for excuses for losses. Lost? That means the opponent was better today. Tomorrow I'll be better. That's her philosophy.

There are many girls in tennis who say things like "I'm not feeling well," "The court is uncomfortable," "It was noisy, I was cheering." Sobolenko never. Even when her shoulder hurt, even when she played with a fever. She went out and did her job. And after losing at the 2022 Australian Open, she said, "I didn't use my chances. That's my fault. Everything." No excuses. For this, even her haters respect her.

Creed Number Two: Play Aggressively, Live Aggressively

Sobolenko's style on the court is like an ice rink. The first serve at 190 km/h. The second — just a bit slower. A forehand shot like a python. She doesn't know how to defend, hang on, wait for an error. She goes forward all the time. Even when she's down 0:40. Even when the opponent has match point. This is nature that cannot be changed. "I'd rather miss than not try," she says. And this is the second creed: don't be afraid to take risks.

In life, she's the same. Direct, explosive, emotional. She has been asked many times about her relationship with the Belarusian federation, about politics, about the neutral status. She answers briefly and without diplomacy. She doesn't delve into the depths, doesn't make insincere statements. She simply says, "I'm an athlete. I play for myself and my family. That's all." Some people think this is rudeness. But for her, it's honesty. And honesty is also part of the creed.

Creed Number Three: Work, Not Talent

Sobolenko doesn't consider herself a genius. She knows she doesn't have the most refined tennis intelligence, the most cunning drop shot, the most elegant technique. But she has explosive strength and demonic work ethic. After every defeat, she doesn't go to the bar to drown her sorrow. She goes to the training ground. The second, third. She is ready to work when others are sleeping. That's how she got out of the terrible crisis with double faults in 2021.

Then she served 15-20 double faults per match. She lost because of nerves. Any other psychologist would have said: take a break, change your coach, work on your head. But Arina took a thousand balls and put them in the backyard. She stood and served until she stopped thinking. Just served. Thousand, two, three. This is not talent. This is sweat. And this is the third creed: problems are solved not by talking, but by actions.

Creed Number Four: Be Yourself, Even If You're a White Crow

It's customary in women's tennis to be nice. To smile, wave, hug the opponent after the match, even if she smeared you. Sobolenko doesn't fit in. She roars, clenches her fists, sometimes curses under her breath. She doesn't wear pink, doesn't do sweet interviews. She's loud, sweaty, angry. And she doesn't care what someone thinks it's ungentlemanly. "I am who I am. If you like it, that's good. If not, I'm not playing for you." This is her fourth creed: authenticity is more valuable than popularity.

And for this, she is loved. Millions of girls around the world say, "She's not afraid to be strong. She's not afraid to be scary on the court. Why should we be sweet princesses?". Arina has shown that women's tennis can be brutal and still beautiful.

Crisis of Faith and Overcoming It

There was a moment when Sobolenko's creed cracked. The end of 2021 — the beginning of 2022. She was losing to everyone. The ranking plummeted. A psychological hole. She stopped roaring and started crying on the court. Everyone thought she was over, burned out. But Arina did what she does best — she got angry. At herself. At her doubts. She changed her coach, changed her training regimen, stopped reading the news. And she came out of the hole with force. Then she won the 2023 Australian Open and said, "The most important thing is I stopped being afraid of losing. As soon as I allowed myself to lose, I started winning." Paradox. But this is also part of the creed: fear is the main enemy. Defeat fear and you will defeat everyone.

Role Model: Who and Why

Sobolenko is a role model for those who are tired of perfect images. She doesn't sit on 500-calorie diets. She doesn't have a model's appearance. She doesn't say memorized phrases. She's a living person with a living face. She can be hated for her loud voice and masculine playing style. She can be loved for her sincerity and will. But no one remains indifferent.

For teenage girls, she is an example that you don't have to fit into other people's frames. You can be muscular, loud, angry, and still be the world No. 1. For boys, an example of male self-improvement. For everyone, an example that excuses are the province of the weak.

What Her Opponents and Coaches Say About Her

Serena Williams said, "She hits the ball as if she wants to kill it. I see myself in my youth." Andy Murray called her "the scariest debutante he has ever seen." Her former coach Dmitry Tursunov said, "She doesn't know how to stop. You tell her to take a step back to catch her breath. And she takes two steps forward." This is the creed in action. Not a step back.

Even critics admit: Sobolenko is one of the most honest tennis players. She doesn't pretend to be injured, doesn't take medical timeouts to change the rhythm, doesn't call the doctor at 0:5 to distract the opponent. She plays to the last ball. And she loses as honorably as she wins.

The Future: What's Next With Her Creed

Arina is 26 years old (as of 2024). She has already won two Grand Slam tournaments, been the world No. 1. What's next? She says, "I want more. I want to win for years like Serena." And in this — her creed without boundaries. No ceiling. No word "enough." Only the next training session, the next shot, the next tournament. Such a philosophy is dangerous for burnout. But as long as Arina is burning, not burning out, we watch in awe.

Someday she will end her career. Stop roaring on the court. Raise children, engage in charity, perhaps become a coach. But the creed will remain. Because it's not about tennis. It's about how to live. Don't whine. Don't make excuses. Don't be afraid. Be yourself. And if necessary, shout at the entire stadium. So that everyone knows: you came not to play, you came to win.


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Arina Sobolenko and her credo // Abuja: Nigeria (ELIB.NG). Updated: 24.05.2026. URL: https://elib.ng/m/articles/view/Arina-Sobolenko-and-her-credo (date of access: 26.05.2026).

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