South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Kenin loses to Swiatek in finals

Pembroke Pines resident loses last 6 games

- By Howard Fendrich

PARIS — With the poise of a veteran and the shots of a champion, 19-year-old Iga Swiatek picked the perfect place for her first tour-level title: the French Open.

Unseeded and ranked merely 54th, Swiatek grabbed the last six games to beat Sofia Kenin 6-4, 6-1 in the final at Roland Garros on Saturday, becoming the first Polish tennis player to win a Grand Slam singles trophy.

When she smacked one last forehand winner to the corner to end things, Swiatek placed her right hand over her mouth then crouched, shaking her head.

“It’s crazy. Two years ago, I won a junior Grand Slam, and right now I’m here. It feels like such a short time,” Swiatek said, her voice cracking. “I’m just overwhelme­d.”

Hard to believe? Maybe. This was, after all, only her seventh major tournament; she’d never been past the fourth round.

But the way she played these two weeks made this outcome less of a surprise.

Swiatek is the first woman to triumph in Paris without ceding a set since Justine Henin in 2007. She lost only 28 games across seven matches, too.

She is the first teen to win the women’s title at the French Open since Iva Majoli in 1997.

And Swiatek did it with victories over

such opponents as 2018 champion Simona Halep and 2019 runner-up Marketa Vondrousov­a, both by scores of 6-1, 6-2.

So it made sense that Swiatek would be able to get pastKenin, a 21-year-old American who was trying to claim her second major title of 2020 after winning the Australian Open in February.

“A great tournament. A great match,” Kenin told Swiatek during the trophy ceremony.

Kenin was 16-1 in Grand Slam matches until Saturday. But she dealt with a leg issue in the second set and showed frustratio­n by kicking her red-white-and-blue racket after lost points.

Andthen therewas this: She ran into the composed Swiatek, who only recently completed her high school studies, listens to “Welcome to the Jungle” by Guns N’ Roses beforewalk­ing on court, travels with a sports psychologi­st and meditates during changeover­s, breathing slowly with her eyes closed.

“Iwas just mentally consistent,” Swiatek said. “I felt like [Saturday] was really stressful for me, so itwas kind of hard.”

This weekend is the culminatio­n of an unusual two weeks, to say the least. The tournament was postponed form MayJune to September-October because of the

coronaviru­s pandemic; the recently rising number of COVID-19 cases in France led the government to limit the number of spectators allowed on the grounds to 1,000 each day.

Some topwomen, including 2019 champion Ash Barty and three-time major champNaomi­Osakadidn’t enter the event; 23-time Slam winner Serena Williams withdrewbe­fore the second roundwith an injury.

The temperatur­e was in the mid-50s (low teens Celsius), with a slight breeze, andthehund­reds of fans scatteredi­n Court Philippe Chatrier were mostly subdued — other than a group that would shout out Swiatek’s first name, stretching it out over several seconds each time to sound like “Eeeeeeeeee­e-gah.”

At the changeover after the third game of the second set, Kenin was visited by a trainer andwent off the court for a medical timeout, then returned with her left thigh wrapped.

Kenin said after her fourth-roundmatch Monday that she had slipped and maybe pulled something during practice the day before.

While Kenin was gone, Swiatek tried to staywarm by pulling on a white jacket and hitting some serves, earning applause from spectators.

When play resumed, Swiatek needed only 12 more minutes to wrap up the victory, finishing with a 25-10 edge in winners.

 ?? MARTIN BUREAU/AFP ?? Pembroke Pines’ Sofia Kenin couldn’t keep up with Poland’s Iga Swiatek in the French Open women’s final, losing in straight sets.
MARTIN BUREAU/AFP Pembroke Pines’ Sofia Kenin couldn’t keep up with Poland’s Iga Swiatek in the French Open women’s final, losing in straight sets.

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