Serena Williams won her 16th Grand Slam title and her first French
Open championship since 2002 when she beat familiar foil Maria Sharapova
6-4, 6-4 Saturday.
The victory completed the No. 1-ranked Williams' rebound from a
shocking loss to 111th-ranked Virginie Razzano in the first round at
Roland Garros a year ago. Since that defeat she's 74-3, including titles
at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, the London Olympics and the season-ending
WTA Championships.
Williams whacked 10 aces, including three in the final game to extend
her career-best winning streak to 31 matches. She improved to 14-2
against Sharapova, including victories in their past 13 meetings, with
four of the wins this year.
At 31, Williams became the oldest woman to win a major title since
Martina Navratilova won Wimbledon in 1990 at age 33. Her 11-year gap
between Roland Garros titles is the longest for any woman.
Sharapova completed a career Grand Slam by winning Roland Garros last year.
In an all-Spanish final Sunday, Rafael Nadal will try to become the
first man to win eight titles at the same Grand Slam event when he plays
first-time major finalist David Ferrer.
The women's final was the first between No. 1 and No. 2 at a Grand Slam
since 2004, but wasn't as close as their rankings. It has been 12 years
since the most recent three-set women's final at Roland Garros.
Both players swung with their typical aggressiveness from the baseline,
and Williams' superior serve and defence proved the difference. She
silently ran side to side whipping groundstrokes with little apparent
strain, while Sharapova often found herself lunging after the ball to
stay in the point, with each shot accompanied by her familiar shriek.
When Williams once summoned a grunt herself to match Sharapova's volume and pound a winner, the crowd responded with a laugh.
Playing in hazy, warm weather, the finalists took ferocious swings from
the start. With fans perhaps fearful that Williams would win quickly,
they began shouting encouragement toward Sharapova after she lost the
first two points.
She overcame four break points to hold in the opening game, and led
2-love before Williams began to assert herself. It took Williams 17
minutes to win a game, but then she swept four in a row.
After Sharapova took the next two for 4-all, Williams surged at the end
of the set, taking the lead for good by winning eight of the final 10
points.
Sharapova had to dig in again to hold at the start of set two, fending
off five break points, and it was all downhill for her from there.
Williams easily held serve all the way to the finish.
She improved to 16-4 in Grand Slam finals. She leads all active women
with her 16 major titles and is sixth on the all-time list. Margaret
Court holds the record with 24.
Williams improved to 43-2 this year, including 23-0 on clay. Now comes
the switch to grass, and she'll be a heavy favourite to win Wimbledon
for the sixth time.
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