Serena the one - Serena Williams reaches 10th Wimbledon final, lose in finals, talk about being GOAT

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Serena Williams reaches 10th Wimbledon final with straight-sets win
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By HOWARD FENDRICHLONDON (AP) — It’s almost as if Serena Williams never left.Even after more than a year away from the tour, even after a health scare while having a baby a little more than 10 months ago, Williams is still capable of dominance. Especially at Wimbledon, where she’s one victory from an eighth championship.A relatively routine 6-2, 6-4 semifinal victory over 13th-seeded Julia Goerges of Germany on Thursday put Williams into her 10th final at the All England Club and moved her closer to a 24th Grand Slam title, which would equal Margaret Court’srecord.


“It’s crazy. I don’t even know how to feel, you know, because literally, I didn’t expect to do this well in my fourth tournament back,” Williams said. “I just feel like when I don’t have anything to lose, I just can play so free, and that’s kind of what I’m doing.”

After hitting five aces with a serve that reached 119 mph, delivering 16 winners to only seven unforced errors, and covering the court so well with speed and effort against Goerges, Williams will face another German, 11th-seeded Angelique Kerber, on Saturday.


“Whatever happens, honestly it’s an incredible effort from me,” the 36-year-old Williams said, “and good motivation to keep going for the rest of my career.”


The left-handed Kerber, a former No. 1 and two-time major champion, used a seven-game run to beat 12th-seeded Jelena Ostapenko 6-3, 6-3. Kerber did not dictate much, content to let 2017 French Open champion Ostapenko determine the outcome of nearly every point.


By the end, Ostapenko had far more winners, 30-10, but also far more unforced errors, 36-7.


Williams vs. Kerber will be a rematch of the 2016 final at Wimbledon. Williams won that for a second consecutive title at the All England Club, then sat out the grass-court tournament last year while pregnant, part of a 16-month gap between majors.

“Seeing her back, it’s great,” said Kerber, who has lost six of eight previous matches against Williams. “I know that she is always pushing you to the limits to play your best tennis. This is the only chance to beat her.”


After giving birth to daughter Olympia last September, Williams dealt with issues including blood clots, and she’s been wearing compression leggings this fortnight as a precaution. Her first Grand Slam tournament back was the French Open, where she won three matches before withdrawing last month because of an injured chest muscle.


All of the time away pushed someone who’s spent more than 300 weeks ranked No. 1 down the rankings — she began Wimbledon at 181st, but was seeded 25th on account of her past success — and no one could quite be sure how the American would fare over these two weeks.


Not even Williams knew.


“This is not inevitable for me. I had a really tough delivery, and I had to have multiple surgeries and almost didn’t make it, to be honest,” Williams said. “I remember I couldn’t even walk to my mail box, so it’s definitely not normal for me to be in a Wimbledon final. So I’m taking everything as it is and just enjoying every moment.”


The victory over Goerges extended Williams’ winning streak at Wimbledon to 20 matches, dating to the start of the 2015 edition. She’s also won her past 15 Grand Slam matches, going to the start of the 2017 Australian Open, which she won while pregnant.


That title pushed her past Steffi Graf’s record of 22 majors in the half-century professional era; Court won some of her Slams during the amateur era.


Williams’ match against Goerges featured two of the best servers around, and began quite evenly, until 2-all, 30-all. Goerges, the first seeded player Williams faced these two weeks, showed she was capable of trading power from the baseline with Williams.


There were moments when watching Goerges made it easy to wonder how it could be possible she never had been past a major’s fourth round until now. Or, more to the point on this afternoon, how such a stinging serve and big groundstrokes didn’t help her avoid first-round exits each of the past five years at Wimbledon.

But she couldn’t keep up with Williams, who grabbed 18 of 22 points and five consecutive games to close the first set and begin the next. Williams broke for a 4-2 lead in the second when Goerges tried a rare drop shot that caught the top of the net tape and fell on her side. There was one brief blip to come: Williams got broken for the only time while serving for the match at 5-3.


Immediately, though, Williams broke back at love to end it, smiling widely and placing her left fist on her chest when Goerges’ last shot landed long.
 

Pworld297

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Kerber played great but Serena didn't have her A game. Serena's serve was completely off. The only way you beat her is when her game is off and it was today.
 

TheBigOne

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Kerber came out firing on all cylinders from the git go and Serena never quite caught up. There’s more tennis to be played still. Btw, the two men’s semifinals were extraordinary examples of atheleticism. Those guys are not really ready for the NBA, but they’re very good.
 

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Even in defeat, Serena Williams is the American Dream
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Jay Busbee
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Yahoo Sports•July 14, 2018
Ten months ago, she gave birth to her first child. Nine months ago, she was undergoing four separate surgeries, facing life-threatening blood clots. Five months ago, she returned to the courts. And on Saturday, Serena Williams met Angelique Kerber in the Wimbledon finals.

You’d say it was unbelievable, but this is Serena Williams we’re talking about. What’s unbelievable for anyone else is every day for her.

For Williams, this would make a better story had she won. But she fell to a younger and sharper Kerber in straight sets, 6-3, 6-3. Still, that doesn’t dim Williams’ excellence one bit.

Williams isn’t just one of the best athletes in American history, male or female. Let’s call it what it is: Serena Williams is the American Dream.

From Compton to the mountaintop
In this country, the theory goes, anyone can rise from the humblest of origins to the mountaintop with enough dedication and hard work. It’s a simplistic idea, sure, but if you boil success in America down to that primary-colors formula, it’s tough to argue that anyone has a better claim on the American Dream than Serena Williams.

She began playing tennis on a wire-net court in Compton, a cracked slab of asphalt that she’d sweep clean of crack vials before every practice. Her father Richard wheeled a grocery cart full of balls from their home every day. And when gunshots rang out—as they often did—Serena and her sister Venus would drop to the court and lie face-down until the shots faded. That’s about as humble as origins get.

Check her now: the absolute pinnacle not just of her profession, not just of her gender, but of all sports. Worth nine figures. Winner of 23 grand slam singles titles, the most in the post-1968 “open” era and one behind Margaret Court’s all-time record of 24. Thirty-nine grand slam titles overall. Four Olympic medals. A friend to both American and British royalty and an inspiration to a planet.

“I came up through Switzerland with the federation, she did it with her dad and her sister,” Roger Federer said last month. “It’s an amazing story unto itself — and then she became one of the greatest, if not the greatest tennis player of all time.”

And even at the mountaintop, the challenges don’t stop. Williams gave birth to her daughter Alexis Olympia just ten months ago. Motherhood’s a phenomenal trial even in the best circumstances. But Serena suffered severe medical setbacks; clots dotted her lungs, and she had to undergo four different surgeries. Even walking was a challenge. Here’s her husband Alex Ohanian on the reality of it all:





And here Serena was, back in the Wimbledon final after just three tune-up matches. “Miraculous” might not be a strong enough word.

First Set: Kerber stays steady as Williams stumbles
With every bit of the pre-match hype focused on Williams, Kerber flew in low and virtually unnoticed, even though she’s one of the few players to have beaten Williams in a grand slam final. Kerber, six years younger than Williams, took the Australian Open from a heavily-favored Serena in three sets back in 2016. Later that year, Williams took down Kerber in straight sets at Wimbledon, so the stakes, and risks, were apparent.

Kerber won the pre-match coin toss and opted to receive; that proved a wise choice, as she broke Williams’ serve in the first game by taking four straight points after going down 30-love. Williams looked sloppy and unfocused in the first two games, but got her feet under her with a victory in her second service game and broke Kerber to even the match at 2-2.

Three games later, Kerber again broke Williams to take a 4-3 lead. Williams piled up the unforced errors, finding the net and sailing returns long, and Kerber took advantage. Williams totaled 14 unforced errors to Kerber’s three, and the result was as expected: a 6-3 first-set victory for Kerber.

“What makes me great”
It’s worth noting that Williams isn’t sneaking up on anyone. She’s been winning majors since 1999. No player ever looks past her in the draw, no player ever assumes, “Well, if I can get past Serena—” Like the New England Patriots and Golden State Warriors, Williams is the perpetual target, the one everyone wants to beat.

Williams addressed that topic – the idea that everyone raises their game when they see her across the net – a week ago. “Every single match I play, whether coming back from a baby or surgery, it doesn’t matter – these young ladies bring a game I’ve never seen before,” she said. “It’s what makes me great. I always play everyone at their greatest, so I have to be greater.”
It’s Serena’s return game on a grand scale: anything you send her way, she’ll fire back at you at twice the velocity. “Everyone comes out and plays me so hard,” she said. “Now my level is higher because of it because of so many years of being played like that.”

You don’t scare Serena when you bring heat. You just make her mad.

Second set: Kerber controls the match, 6-3
Even by Wimbledon standards, Saturday brought out white-hot star power. Everyone from Tiger Woods to Martina Navratilova and Billie Jean King to Duchesses Meghan and Kate showed up for Serena, and by the second set, each one of them was sweating in the English sun for a match delayed more than two hours by the men’s semifinals.

Williams came into this Wimbledon with a 23-6 record in grand slam finals, with only her sister Venus having defeated her more than once. She began the crucial second set by trading service games with Kerber, but seemed to have difficulty finding her footing and sustaining rallies. Kerber, meanwhile, seemed to cover the entire court, and wasn’t cowed by Williams’ monstrous service game.

Kerber broke Williams to take a 4-2 lead, and suddenly, Williams was running out of time. Kerber won her service game to go up 5-2, just four points from the championship. Williams won her service game in four straight points, and that set up the most crucial game of the match: Kerber serving for the championship, up 5 games to 3.

Kerber won the first point, and following a long rally, Williams overpowered a net shot, a would-be winner, ever so slightly, pushing it long and leaving Kerber two points from the championship. At the end of the match’s longest rally, 20 shots, a brilliant drop shot from Williams cut Kerber’s lead to 30-15. Two points later, up 40-30, Kerber had the match on her racket, and finished it with a sleek serve that Williams couldn’t handle.

“It was such an amazing tournament for me,” Williams said afterward. “I was really happy to get this far. It’s obviously disappointing, but I can’t be disappointed. I have so much to look forward to. I’m just getting started.”

Off the court, Serena remains a champion





It’s all pretty heady stuff for anyone, much less someone who’s got a day job. But it’s all completely in character for Serena Williams. You can agree with her, or you can disagree with her. You can defeat her one match, but she’ll come back harder the next. She’s not going away.
 

ronmch20

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Can't ever remember Serena losing in straight sets to anybody. CAC juice she's ingesting these days must be taking a toll. :rolleyes:
 
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