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Back at
top,
Serena
Williams
wins 5th
Wimbledon
By
HOWARD
FENDRICH,
AP
Tennis
Writer
WIMBLEDON,
England
- For
Serena
Williams,
the low
point
came in
early
2011,
when she
spent
hours
laying
around
her
home,
overwhelmed
by a
depressing
series
of
health
scares
that
sent her
to the
hospital
repeatedly
and kept
her away
from
tennis
for 10
months.
The high
point
came
Saturday
on
Centre
Court at
Wimbledon,
when
Williams
dropped
down to
the
grass,
hands
covering
her
face.
She was
all the
way
back, a
Grand
Slam
champion
yet
again.
Her
serve as
good as
there
is, her
grit as
good as
ever,
Williams
was
dominant
at the
start
and
finish,
beating
Agnieszka
Radwanska
of
Poland
6-1,
5-7, 6-2
to win a
fifth
championship
at the
All
England
Club and
14th
major
title
overall,
ending a
two-year
drought.
"I just
remember,
I was on
the
couch
and I
didn't
leave
the
whole
day, for
two
days. I
was just
over it.
I was
praying,
like, 'I
can't
take any
more.
I've
endured
enough.
Let me
be able
to get
through
this,'"
recalled
Williams,
a former
No. 1
whose
ranking
slid to
175th
after a
fourth-round
loss at
the All
England
Club
last
year,
her
second
tournament
back.
"Coming
here and
winning
today is
amazing,"
she
said.
"It's
been an
unbelievable
journey
for me."
Certainly
has.
That's
why
tears
flowed
during
the
on-court
trophy
ceremony.
And why
Williams
squeezed
tight
during
post-victory
hugs
with her
parents
and
older
sister
Venus,
who has
five
Wimbledon
titles
of her
own —
meaning
that one
pair of
siblings
who
learned
to play
tennis
on
public
courts
in
Compton,
Calif.,
now
accounts
for 10
of the
past 13
singles
trophies.
They
added
their
fifth
Wimbledon
doubles
championship
Saturday
night,
teaming
to beat
Andrea
Hlavackova
and
Lucie
Hradecka
of the
Czech
Republic
7-5,
6-4.
"She
hasn't
had an
easy
road.
Things
have
happened
in her
life
that you
can't
predict
or
control,
so it's
hard to
be in
that
situation.
Things
happen
that you
didn't
deserve,"
said
Venus,
who is
dealing
with an
autoimmune
disease
that can
cause
fatigue.
"For her
to fight
through
that and
come
back and
be a
champion.
... It
was
definitely
emotional."
A few
days
after
winning
Wimbledon
in 2010,
Serena
Williams
cut both
feet on
broken
glass
while
leaving
a
restaurant
in
Germany.
She
needed
two
operations
on her
right
foot.
Then she
got
blood
clots in
her
lungs,
for
which
she
needed
to
inject
herself
with a
blood
thinner.
Those
shots
led to a
pool of
blood
gathering
under
her
stomach's
skin,
requiring
another
procedure.
"That
made her
realize
where
her life
was,
really,
and
where
she
really
belonged
and that
she
really
loved
the
game,"
said
Williams'
mother,
Oracene
Price.
"You
never
appreciate
anything
until
you
almost
lose
it."
Against
Radwanska,
who was
trying
to be
the
first
Polish
Grand
Slam
singles
champion,
Williams
was
streaky
at
times,
but also
superb.
She won
the
first
five
games
and the
last
five.
She
compiled
a 58-13
landslide
of
winners.
She
swatted
17 aces,
including
four at
114 mph,
107 mph,
115 mph,
111 mph
in one
marvelous
game to
pull
even at
2-all in
the
third
set.
That was
part of
a
momentum-swinging
run when
Williams
claimed
15 of 18
points,
and that
quartet
of aces
raised
her
total
for the
fortnight
to a
tournament-record
102,
surpassing
her own
mark of
89 in
2010;
it's
also
more
than the
top
number
for any
man this
year at
Wimbledon.
"So many
aces,"
said
Radwanska,
whose
two-week
total
was 16,
"and I
couldn't
do much
about
it."
There
had been
a
moment,
ever so
brief,
when it
appeared
Williams
might
let
Saturday's
match
slip
away.
After
she
breezed
through
the
first
set on a
day when
the wind
whipped
and the
temperature
was in
the
mid-50s,
rain
arrived,
causing
a delay
of about
20
minutes
between
sets.
Radwanska,
who has
been
fighting
a
respiratory
illness
and blew
her nose
at a
changeover,
quickly
fell
behind
3-1 in
the
second
set.
Right
there is
where
she made
a stand.
Williams
was
playing
in her
18th
major
final;
Radwanska
in her
first.
Actually,
she'd
never
won a
match
beyond
the
fourth
round at
a Grand
Slam
tournament
until
this
week. So
she
acknowledged
being "a
little
bit
nervous
in the
beginning."
But the
interruption
let her
"cool
down a
little
bit,"
explained
Radwanska,
who
would
have
risen to
No. 1 in
the
rankings
by
beating
Williams
but
instead
will be
No. 2,
behind
Victoria
Azarenka.
"When I
was
going on
the
court
the
second
time, I
just
felt
like a
normal
match.
Didn't
seem
like a
final
anymore,
so there
was not
that
much
pressure."
Radwanska
played
her
usual
steady
game,
and
Williams
began
making
more and
more
errors.
A string
of
mistakes
—
swinging
volley
into the
net,
double-fault,
backhand
long,
backhand
into the
net —
let
Radwanska
break to
even the
match at
one set
apiece.
What
appeared
to be a
rather
drab
final,
bereft
of any
drama,
suddenly
became
interesting.
"She got
a little
nervous
out
there,
in my
opinion.
In the
second
set, I
think
she
might
have
thought,
'Well, I
got this
here,'"
said
Williams'
father,
Richard.
He also
suspected
his
daughter
might
have
been
feeling
a twinge
of
self-doubt
connected
to her
quick
exit in
late May
at the
French
Open
against
a woman
ranked
111th,
Williams'
only
first-round
loss in
48
career
major
tournaments.
Williams'
explanation
for her
dip
against
Radwanska?
"I just
got too
anxious,"
she
said,
"and I
shouldn't
have
been so
anxious."
Probably
not.
Making
her
Paris
performance
really
seem
like an
aberration,
Williams
regained
control
down the
stretch.
She won
a
16-stroke
point
with a
forehand
putaway
to get
to break
point,
then
went up
3-2 by
smacking
a big
return
that
left
Radwanska
flailing
at a
running
backhand.
If
Williams
is
mainly
known
for her
powerful
serves
and
groundstrokes
— she
produced
23
baseline
winners
to her
opponent's
five —
she also
showed
off a
deft
touch,
the sort
of thing
Radwanska
specializes
in.
Ahead
4-2,
Williams
earned a
second
break
with a
well-disguised
forehand
drop
shot,
then
raised
both
arms
aloft.
"After
that, it
was: 'I
can
definitely
do
this,'"
Williams
said.
While
Monday's
rankings
will
have her
listed
at No.
4,
there's
no doubt
who is
at the
top of
the game
right
now.
Seeded
sixth at
the All
England
Club,
she beat
the
women
who were
No. 2 (Azarenka),
No. 3 (Radwanska)
and No.
4
(defending
champion
Petra
Kvitova).
At age
30,
Williams
is the
oldest
women's
singles
champion
at any
major
tournament
since
Martina
Navratilova
was 33
when she
won
Wimbledon
in 1990.
And
Williams
sees no
end in
sight.
Asked
Saturday
evening
what
more she
could
possibly
want,
she
replied:
"Are you
kidding?
The U.S.
Open.
The
Australian
Open.
The
French
Open.
Wimbledon,
2013."
Seconds
later,
she
declared:
"I have
never
felt
better." |