World number one Serena Williams joined an elite club Saturday,
winning her eighth Miami WTA title with a comprehensive 6-2, 6-0 win
over Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro.
The 33-year-old US superstar,
who won her 19th Grand Slam title in Australia this year, lifted the
trophy in the elite premier level tournament for the third straight
year.
She also won three straight Miami titles from 2002-04 and back-to-back titles in 2007-08.
Williams had already surpassed Steffi Graf for most Miami triumphs with her win last year.
On
Saturday she joined Graf, Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert as the
only Open Era players to win the same event at least eight times.
Graf
won nine titles in Berlin, Evert won eight in Hilton Head, and
Navratilova achieved the feat in seven tournaments — including her nine
Wimbledon titles.
“It feels really good to have eight under my belt,” Williams said.
“Can’t
say I thought I would win eight, especially in the beginning of the
week,” added the champion, who had struggled with her serve and unforced
errors in previous matches.
“I had a couple matches where I had
nearly 60 unforced errors in both, so I just needed to kind of get my
mind back there and say, ‘Serena, you normally don’t play like this, so
just go to how you normally play,” she said of how she tried to regroup
after clawing past world number three Simona Halep in the semi-finals.
In Suarez Navarro, Williams faced an opponent she had beaten in four prior encounters without dropping a set.
– Serena’s the best –
World
number 12 Suarez Navarro, playing in the biggest final of her career,
wasn’t surprised to find the winners zinging past her from every part of
the court.
“When I play with Serena I know that she’s the best,” Suarez Navarro said. “She has the game to make me play bad.
“But
this time I believed in me, in how I’m playing the other matches. I
tried. I tried until the last point, but it was tough and difficult for
me.”
Suarez Navarro held her nerve and her serve through the first five games.
But
Williams converted her third break chance of the sixth game to grab a
4-2 lead in the opening set, consolidating the break with an easy hold.
Suarez
Navarro saved two set points against her serve in the next game, but
Williams gave herself another chance with a forehand winner and Suarez
Navarro handed her the set with an error.
Suarez Navarro had a
chance to break in the first game of the second set, but Williams held
on then broke at love in the next game.
She polished off the triumph in just 56 minutes.
It
was a satisfying win for Williams, coming after a troublesome knee
prompted her to forfeit her scheduled semi-final at the premier level
tournament in Indian Wells a fortnight earlier.
Williams hasn’t
lost a competitive match since October, when she fell to Halep in the
round robin phase of the WTA Finals — which Williams went on to win.
Suarez
Navarro lost her seventh WTA final in eight appearances. But her fine
week in Florida, where her victims included Venus Williams, will see her
break into the top 10 in the world rankings on Monday.
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