PARIS — What started out as a stroll became quite a struggle for Serena Williams.
After
going up by a set and two breaks in the French Open final, she
double-faulted away that lead. Then, suddenly, she trailed in the third
set.
As the tension thickened, Williams was warned by the chair
umpire for an audible obscenity. She even felt the need to hit one shot
left-handed.
But when Williams plays her best, no one is better.
Putting aside a lingering illness, a mid-match lull and a feisty
opponent, Williams staved off Lucie Safarova’s upset bid to prevail 6-3,
6-7 (2), 6-2 and win the French Open for the 20th Grand Slam title of
her career.
“When I was a little girl, in California, my father
and my mother wanted me to play tennis. And now I’m here, with 20 Grand
Slam titles,” Williams said in French. “This is very special for me. I
haven’t always played very well here, but I’m really happy to win the
20th here.”
She now has three French Open trophies to go alongside
six each from the U.S. Open and Australian Open, and five from
Wimbledon. She also became the first woman to win consecutive U.S. Open,
Australian Open, and French Open titles since Monica Seles in 1991-92.
“This
is by far the most dramatic [major title I’ve won],” Williams told
NBC’s Mary Carillo afterward. “I didn’t even train yesterday, I’ve had
the flu … it’s just been a nightmare.”
Williams led 4-1 in the
second set, then began to falter. Coughing between points, she
double-faulted twice in a row to get broken for the first time, then
double-faulted again to make it 4-all. When Safarova, now more confident
in her strokes, held moments later, she led 5-4.
“I choked,
simple as that,” Williams said. “I hit a lot of double-faults, and my
first serve just went off. … I got really nervous, it was a big moment
to win 20.”
With the score 5-5, Williams broke Safarova and served
for the match. But the 13th-seeded Czech player broke straight back to
force a tiebreaker, which Safarova dominated with powerful
groundstrokes.
Safarova her momentum going and led 2-0 in the
final set before Williams began her comeback. Williams received an
obscenity warning from the chair umpire after holding serve for a 3-2
lead in the third set. After sealing the game with an ace, Williams
yelled on center court and received the warning moments later.
The
top-ranked Williams took the last six games and added to her
championships on the red clay of Roland Garros in 2002 and 2013.
She
stretched her Grand Slam winning streak to 21 matches, following titles
at the U.S. Open last September and Australian Open in January.
Only
two women in the century-plus history of Grand Slam tennis have won
more than the 33-year-old American: Margaret Smith Court with 24 titles,
and Steffi Graf with 22.
She is the first woman since Jennifer
Capriati in 2001 to win the Australian Open and French Open back-to-back
and will head to the grass courts of Wimbledon this month with a chance
to extend a bid to do just about the only thing she hasn’t
accomplished: win a calendar-year Grand Slam.
When Saturday’s
match, which went from a stroll to a struggle, was over, Williams
dropped her racket, threw her head back and lifted her arms into a “V.”
In the stands, her coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, stood and raised his
hands. He held aloft two fingers on his right and made a fist with his
left, to symbolize “20.”
And to think: Four times in her first six
matches over the past two weeks, Williams dropped the opening set
before coming back to win, including in Thursday’s semifinals, when
Williams was lethargic and, Mouratoglou would say afterward, bothered by
the flu, a fever and difficulty breathing.
So the most meaningful
question leading into the final against Safarova, a 28-year-old lefty
with a whip-like forehand who was making her Slam final debut in her
40th major appearance, was this: How healthy would Williams be?
She began providing answers from the get-go on a sunny afternoon.
Williams
closed the first game with an untouchable groundstroke winner, followed
by a 120 mph ace. As if to prove her timing on returns was just fine,
too, she pounded a 104 mph serve with a cross-court forehand so powerful
and precise that Safarova didn’t bother to step toward the ball,
watching the winner sail by for a break that made it 3-1 after 13
minutes.
Williams received a kiss from 18-time Grand Slam champion
Martina Navratilova as she collected the French Open trophy, raising it
triumphantly over her head as she milked the applause from the Court
Chatrier crowd.
Williams, speaking in French, paid tribute to beaten finalist Safarova.
“Lucie played very well, she was a magnificent opponent,” Williams said. “It was a dream for me to win.”
Safarova returned the compliment — in English:
“Serena, you were amazing today, you a great fighter. Congratulations,” she said.
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