Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Serena finds Muguruza fearless, oddly peerless

Spaniard denies Williams in French final

- By HOWARD FENDRICH

PARIS — The day before the French Open final, Serena Williams’ coach, Patrick Mouratoglo­u, was discussing whether his player would need to lift her level to beat Garbine Muguruza and collect a record-equaling 22nd Grand Slam title.

“I don’t know why everybody’s so impressed with Garbine,” Mouratoglo­u said. “Did she win a Slam ever?”

His comment, accompanie­d by a chuckle, was intended in a lightheart­ed way. About 24 hours later, his question required a new answer.

Muguruza won her first major trophy and prevented Williams yet again from collecting No. 22, outplaying the defending champion in a 7-5, 6-4 victory at Roland Garros on Saturday.

“She has a bright future, obviously,” said Williams, who at 34 is 12 years older than her Spanish opponent. “She knows how to play on the big stage and … clearly, she knows how to win Grand Slams.”

The fourth-seeded Muguruza used her big groundstro­kes to keep No. 1 Williams off-balance and overcame signs of nerves in the form of nine double-faults. Most impressive­ly, Muguruza broke Williams four times, including three in a row.

“I can’t explain with words what this day means to me,” Muguruza said.

This was her second major final; she lost to Williams at Wimbledon last year. But Muguruza has won her past two matches against Williams on the clay of Roland Garros, including in the second round in 2014. So dating to the start of the 2013 French Open, Williams is 0-2 in Paris against Muguruza, 21-0 against everyone else.

“The key? I just have a very aggressive game,” said Muguruza, whose three career tournament titles are 67 fewer than Williams’ total. “I go for my shots with no regrets.”

For Williams, whose timing was not exactly right much of the afternoon, Saturday’s loss postponed her pursuit of Steffi Graf’s Open-era mark of 22 major singles championsh­ips. Margaret Court holds the alltime record of 24.

Williams got No. 21 at Wimbledon in 2015, her fourth major in a row. Since, she was beaten in the U.S. Open semifinals by Roberta Vinci, in the Australian Open final by Angelique Kerber, and now by Muguruza. It’s the first time in Williams’ career she lost back-to-back Slam finals.

Mouratoglo­u said Saturday that chasing a 22nd major “isn’t an obsession” for Williams.

“She doesn’t wake up every morning thinking about it. That’s for sure,” he said, then added: “The pressure of leaving an indelible mark on history is incomparab­le.”

Williams credited Muguruza with playing “unbelievab­le,” adding: “The only thing I can do is just keep trying.”

This year’s visit to Paris hardly could have started off more inauspicio­usly for Muguruza: She lost the first set she played, against 38thranked Anna Karolina Schmiedlov­a.

But, oh, how Muguruza turned things around. She won her next 14 sets with take-the-ball-early fearlessne­ss.

The final began under a slate ceiling of clouds, but at least there was none of the rain that flooded Paris temporaril­y shut down the Louvre museum. The showers jumbled the tournament schedule, and Williams was in action a fourth straight day in the final.

She did not blame that or a problem with a leg muscle.

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