Boston Herald

It’s Kerber, baby!

Stops Serena to avenge ’16 setback

- By HOWARD FENDRICH ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — Angelique Kerber was not about to be overwhelme­d by the setting or the stakes in this Wimbledon final. She knew exactly what to expect — and what to do — against Serena Williams.

Two years after losing to Williams with a title on the line at Centre Court, Kerber came through. So steady, so patient, so accurate throughout, she never really gave Williams much of a chance this time, putting together a 6-3, 6-3 victory yesterday for her first championsh­ip at the All England Club and third major overall.

“I think it’s the experience. You have to go through all the things — the good things, the bad things — and then you need to learn,” said Kerber, the first German to win Wimbledon since Steffi Graf in 1996.

“I know that against Serena, I have to play my best tennis, especially in the important moments,” said Kerber, who won the Australian Open and U.S. Open in 2016, but was the runner-up to Williams at Wimbledon that season, “especially in the important moments.” That’s just what she did. “Angelique played really well,” Williams said. “She played out of her mind.”

Kerber made only five unforced errors the entire match, 19 fewer than Williams. Perhaps more impressive was this: She broke Williams in 4-of-9 service games.

In doing so, Kerber prevented Williams from claiming an eighth title at Wimbledon and 24th from all Grand Slam tournament­s, which would have equaled Margaret Court’s record. As things stand, Williams holds the mark for the half-century of profession­al tennis, one ahead of Kerber’s idol, Graf.

Williams gave birth only 101⁄2 months ago, then was treated for blood clots. She wore special compressio­n leggings as a precaution during Wimbledon, just the fourth tournament of her comeback.

After all the time away, Williams spoke about being impressed with herself for just reaching the final. She also wanted to win, of course.

“To all the moms out there, I was playing for you today — and I tried,” said the 36-year-old American, her voice shaking during the trophy ceremony.

Kerber addressed Williams dur- ing the on-court interviews, saying: “You’re such an inspiratio­n for everybody, for all of us. I’m sure you will have your next Grand Slam title soon. I’m really, really sure.”

The final started more than two hours late, because they had to wait for the end of Novak Djokovic’s five-set victory over Rafael Nadal in a men’s semifinal that was suspended the night before.

Despite so much Grand Slam success, despite holding a 6-2 career edge against Kerber entering the day, Williams played tightly right from the outset.

After taking the opening two points, she made four miscues in a row to get broken. That was part of a run in which she dropped 8-of-9 points. Williams was mostly her own undoing, too: She was responsibl­e for the final’s initial six unforced errors. By the time the first set was over, the disparity was 14-3.

That’s not going to work against an opponent of Kerber’s quality.

Trying to sneak a ball by Kerber is something akin to trying to put one past a brick wall. There are no holes.

The left-hander scurried along the baseline, this way and that, using a combinatio­n of quickness and anticipati­on to track down what often appeared to be winners for Williams but were not enough to end a point. Kerber would bend real low, even putting a knee right on the grass to get a ball back.

And when she swung her racket, the measure was almost always true.

Kerber was broken only once. And she delivered a pair of downthe-line forehand passing winners to grab the last break of Williams she’d need, for a 4-2 edge in the second set.

Kerber celebrated match point by covering her face and collapsing flat on her back, getting grass stains on her white outfit. She relished the moment she had dreamt about as a little kid, watching Graf on TV.

“Winning here, it’s forever,” Kerber said. “Nobody can take the title away from me now.”

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? NOT THIS TIME: Serena Williams kneels after losing a point to Germany’s Angelique Kerber during the women’s singles final yesterday at Wimbledon. Kerber, the No. 11 seed, won in straight sets to keep new mom Williams on 23 career Grand Slam titles.
AP PHOTOS NOT THIS TIME: Serena Williams kneels after losing a point to Germany’s Angelique Kerber during the women’s singles final yesterday at Wimbledon. Kerber, the No. 11 seed, won in straight sets to keep new mom Williams on 23 career Grand Slam titles.
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 ?? AP PHOTO ?? ONE TO REMEMBER: Novak Djokovic needed more than five hours across two days to beat Rafael Nadal and get back to the Wimbledon men’s final.
AP PHOTO ONE TO REMEMBER: Novak Djokovic needed more than five hours across two days to beat Rafael Nadal and get back to the Wimbledon men’s final.

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