Serena Williams put up
both hands after a sending a forehand long and high over the baseline in the
first set.
She wanted nothing to do with yet another unforced error in her Australian Open
final against Angelique Kerber.
It
spelled the end of the road for the American as Kerber held her nerve to win
her first Grand Slam when Williams put another volley long ©Saeed Khan (AFP)
|
AP
report continues:
For
the second time in as many majors, nerves got to Williams as she tried to equal
Steffi Graf's Open-era record of 22 Grand Slam singles titles.
No.
7-seeded Kerber had never played in a Grand Slam final and had lost five of her
six career meetings with Williams, but she responded with a stunning 6-4, 3-6,
6-4 upset win over the six-time Australian Open champion.
Williams
had won the title every previous time she'd reached the final at Melbourne
Park, and was overwhelming favorite to continue that streak against Kerber, who
joked she was "one leg in the plane to Germany" when she faced match
point in her first-round win over Misaki Doi.
"I
mean, every time I walk in this room, everyone expects me to win every single
match, every single day of my life," Williams said in her post-match news
conference. "As much as I would like to be a robot, I'm not. I try
to."
Williams
opened with an impressive service game, without dropping a point, but
left-hander Kerber held her ground and then broke for a 2-1 lead. She broke
again in the seventh game as Williams' unforced error count rose.
The
28-year-old Kerber used acute angles to keep Williams guessing, and continually
passed the 21-time major winner or forced errors at the net.
And
she had five service breaks — two in the first, and three in third set —
against Williams, who hadn't dropped a set in the previous six rounds.
"My
whole life I was working really hard and now I'm here and I can say I'm a Grand
Slam champion," said Kerber, who had only ever reached the semifinals
twice at the majors and hadn't gone beyond the quarterfinals since Wimbledon in
2012. "It sounds really crazy and unbelievable."
She
is the first German woman to win the Australian title since Graf in 1994, and
is projected to rise to No. 2 in the rankings next week.
Williams
admitted previously she became nervous and was stalled for a while trying to
get to 18 major titles, to equal Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova's career
marks in second spot in the Open Era. For three majors, she didn't reach the
quarterfinals, but when she finally won her 18th, it triggered a roll of four
straight major titles.
Now
she's been stuck on 21 since Wimbledon.
Williams
won the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon titles last year before
losing to Roberta Vinci in the U.S. Open semifinals. She was so close to a
calendar-year Grand Slam in 2015, but now has no chance to push for that honor
in 2016 after losing the first major of the year.
Despite
a rash of uncharacteristic unforced errors, Williams made Kerber push all the
way.
She
had a chance to serve for the match at 5-3 in the third but couldn't hold.
Williams, so used to coming back from seemingly losing positions, had a chance
to level the third set but dropped her serve. It finished when she hit a
forehand volley long on championship point, her 46th unforced error of the
match.
Kerber
dropped her racket on the court and lay flat on her back as Williams walked
around the net to embrace her.
"Let
me be the first to congratulate you," Williams said in her on-court
speech. "Enjoy the moment. I'm so happy for you."
Told
later that she appeared to be as happy about the result as Kerber, Williams
said: "Really, I should get into acting!"
But,
she added, "I was really happy for her. She's been around a long time. She
had an attitude that I think a lot of people can learn from — to always stay
positive and never give up."
"If
I couldn't win, she said, "I'm happy she did."
Kerber
had cried as she walked over to her support team, after the match, then back to
the center of the court with one arm raised.
At
the ceremony, she was all smiles again.
"You are really an
inspiration for so many people, so many young tennis players," Kerber said
in tribute to Williams. "You created history, you are a champion, you are
a really an unbelievably great person, so congratulations for everything you
did already."
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