Waterloo Region Record

Muguruza beats Venus,

Spain’s star tops Venus Williams for Wimbledon crown

- Sam Farmer

LONDON — The comeback took years. The farewell took minutes.

After a hard-fought opening set Saturday, a listless Venus Williams saw her bid for Wimbledon tennis history end with a whimper.

She lost to Spain’s Garbine Muguruza, 7-5, 6-0, under the closed roof at Centre Court.

The second set lasted just 26 minutes, and the crowd grew quiet as Williams, 37, offered less and less resistance, and the loss looked increasing­ly inevitable.

Across the net was a fresh and steady Muguruza, who wore down her legendary opponent with relentless groundstro­kes and precious few mistakes.

“I was just very composed,” said the smiling and charismati­c winner of last year’s French Open.

It was the second Wimbledon final for Muguruza, who lost here in 2015 to Serena Williams, Venus’ younger sister.

“I let my racket do the talking.”

Williams had a chance to become the oldest woman to win a Wimbledon title in the Open Era, which began in 1968. Serena set that record by winning Wimbledon a year ago at 34 years, 287 days.

“Yeah, definitely would have loved to have converted some of those points, but she competed really well,” Williams said. “So credit to her. She dug in there and managed to play better.”

Williams was gracious in defeat and said all the right things but looked exhausted in the interview room, speaking softly and propping her hand under her chin.

She didn’t look devastated — she has the perspectiv­e of riding the Wimbledon roller-coaster for 20 years — but she appeared to be running on fumes.

Asked whether she was feeling the effects of age or her Sjogren’s syndrome — she was diagnosed six years ago with an auto-immune disease causing chronic fatigue and muscle soreness — she batted away the question at the net.

“She played really well,” Williams said, answering a question that wasn’t asked. “I mean, she played top tennis, so I have to give her credit for just playing a better match.”

A pivotal point came late in the first set, with Williams leading 5-4 and Muguruza serving. The Spaniard was down 40-15, one point away from losing the set. A long rally followed, ending with Williams’ hitting a forehand into the net. Muguruza got to deuce when Williams was long on a forehand, then won the next two points to dig her way out of the hole.

Williams wouldn’t win another game.

“When I had those set points against me, I’m like, ‘Hey, it’s normal. I’m playing Venus here,’” Muguruza said. “So I just keep fighting. And I knew if I was playing like I was playing during the two weeks, I was going to have eventually an opportunit­y. So I was calm. If I lose the first set, I still have two more. Let’s not make a drama.”

The match ended in lessthan-dramatic fashion — with a replay review. On the final point, a deep forehand by Williams that initially was called in was overturned on a challenge.

When the reality of the moment sunk in, Muguruza dropped to her knees and buried her face in her hands. She emerged with damp eyes and a wide smile.

“Once you step on the court, you see the crowd, you see the final, you see I’m here playing another Wimbledon final,” Muguruza said. “So very satisfying the way I handled it.”

Likewise, this will be remembered as a remarkable tournament for Williams. That she was playing in her 20th Wimbledon is mind-boggling.

In the aftermath of Saturday’s loss, Williams wasn’t ready to commit to anything.

A British reporter asked: “Presumably, you’re coming back next year, right?”

“Presumably, yes,” she said.

 ?? STEVEN PASTON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Garbine Muguruza jokes with her trophy as she leaves the court after defeating Venus Williams in the women’s singles final at Wimbledon on Saturday. Muguruza won the match 7-5, 6-0.
STEVEN PASTON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Garbine Muguruza jokes with her trophy as she leaves the court after defeating Venus Williams in the women’s singles final at Wimbledon on Saturday. Muguruza won the match 7-5, 6-0.

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