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When her opponent's final shot sailed out, Serena Williams
wasn't sure whether the match was over or not. It took a few seconds before the
realization sunk in — not only had she won her sixth Wimbledon title, but her
bid for another "Serena Slam" was complete.
Williams overcame a slow
start, eight double-faults and a nervy finish to dispatch Garbine Muguruza 6-4,
6-4 on Saturday for her fourth Grand Slam championship in a row and 21st major
overall.
The win means Williams
holds all four Grand Slam titles at once — completing the second "Serena
Slam" of her career. What's more, she secured the third leg of a
calendar-year Grand Slam and, if she wins the U.S. Open, will become the first
player to sweep all four majors in the same season since Steffi Graf in 1988.
Associated Press report continues:
"I can't believe I'm
standing here at another Grand Slam," Williams said in an on-court
interview after the match. "I'm having so much fun out here. I just never
dreamt I would be out here still and let alone winning."
Williams, who won her
28th straight Grand Slam match, is now just one major title behind Graf on the
Open era list and three behind all-time leader Margaret Court.
At 33, Williams is also
the oldest woman to win a Grand Slam title in the Open era. She has now won
eight major championships in her 30s, including her first Wimbledon title since
2012.
"It feels so
good," Williams said after accepting the winner's trophy — the Venus
Rosewater Dish — on Centre Court from the Duke of Kent. "It's been a
little while and you really appreciate holding it."
Williams was broken in
the opening game by Muguruza, a hard-hitting 21-year-old Spaniard who was
playing in her first Grand Slam final, and fell behind 4-2. But Williams began
playing more aggressively and ran off five straight games to take the set and
go up 1-0 in the second.
Williams pulled out to a
5-1 lead but seemed to get tight and was broken twice serving for the match.
"It was definitely a
little pressure toward the end, but I think Garbine just started playing really
well and started hitting some great shots so that made it even harder,"
Williams said.
Muguruza saved a match
point and converted on her fifth break point to draw within 5-4. But Williams
then broke at love in the next game to close out the match, which finished in
anticlimactic fashion when Muguruza hit a forehand wide.
Neither player seemed to
realize the match was over, and there was an awkward delay before Williams
covered her face with both hands, then smiled and raised her arms in the air.
After the two players hugged at the net, Williams hopped up and down on the
side of the court with her arms above her head.
"I didn't even know
it was over because she was fighting so hard at the end," Williams said.
"I was like, OK, do I have to serve again?"
Muguruza, the first
Spanish woman to reach a Grand Slam final in 15 years, was bidding to become
the first to win Wimbledon since Conchita Martinez in 1994. Despite losing nine
out of 10 games at one stretch Saturday, she dug in and made in tough for
Williams.
"I learned that
she's also nervous, even though she played I don't know how many finals,"
Muguruza said. "And she finds the way, being so nervous, to serve, to hit
winners. She's world No. 1. That's what I saw today."
The Spaniard established
herself as a rising star over the past two weeks and received a standing
ovation Saturday that left her in tears.
"I couldn't stop
crying," Muguruza said.
Williams hasn't lost in a
Grand Slam since falling in the third round to Alize Cornet at Wimbledon last
year. Since then, she won last year's U.S. Open and this year's Australian and
French Opens before completing the set at Wimbledon.
Williams extended her
winning streak in Grand Slam finals to eight and improved her overall record in
major finals to 21-4, including 6-2 at Wimbledon.
Williams was the last
player to win four majors in a row, when she achieved her first "Serena
Slam" by taking the 2002 French Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open and the 2003
Australian Open.
Apart from Graf, only two
women have completed a calendar-year Grand Slam — Maureen Connolly in 1953 and
Court in 1970. Martina Navratilova also won four straight majors in 1983-84.
Williams' sixth Wimbledon
singles title puts her third on the Open era list behind Navratilova with nine
and Graf with seven.
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