The Day

Serena loses third consecutiv­e Grand Slam final

- By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

Wimbledon, England — The Centre Court crowd kept roaring whenever Serena Williams would win a point in the Wimbledon final, seemingly trying to will her to make things interestin­g against Simona Halep. Never happened. Instead of earning an eighth title at Wimbledon and record-equaling 24th overall at Grand Slam tournament­s, Williams fell one victory short yet again, beaten with surprising ease by Halep 6-2, 6-2 Saturday.

Williams has now lost her past three appearance­s in major finals — and five of her last seven. There's no shame in repeatedly making it to championsh­ip matches, of course, but it used to be rather unusual to see her come up just short like this: Williams won 21 of the first 25 Slam finals of her career.

"I'm always expected to win," Williams said. That is true. Still, it was the seventh-seeded Halep who grabbed ahold of this match and never let go, finishing with three unforced errors to Williams' 26. Halep created problems by repeatedly tracking down Williams' shots and forcing the 37-year-old American to hit another one and another one and another one to win a point.

"I definitely knew that she was just playing her heart out. I felt like, 'OK, what do I need to do to get to that level?'" Williams said. "I don't know if there's anything I could have done differentl­y."

After entering the final with a tournament-high 45 aces, Williams only managed two on Saturday.

She was broken in half of her eight service games. Halep had a lot to do with that. "I feel like I'm still incredibly competitiv­e or else I wouldn't really be out here, per se," Williams said. "For the most part, I feel like I'm on the right track. I'm just going in the right direction in terms of getting back to where I need to be."

She hasn't won a title of any sort since the 2017 Australian Open, when she was pregnant. That was Slam trophy No. 23, breaking a tie with Steffi Graf for the most in the profession­al era.

It also moved Williams within one of Margaret Court's total, although Court won 13 of her 24 major titles before profession­als were admitted to Grand Slam tournament­s, while all 23 of Williams' major titles have come in the Open era, which began in 1968.

Since returning to the tour last season after her daughter was born on Sept. 1, 2017, Williams has reached the finals at three of six major tournament­s she entered, defeated in straight sets each time.

A year ago, she was the runner-up at Wimbledon to Angelique Kerber, and then the runner-up at the U.S. Open to Naomi Osaka in a final that descended into chaos when Williams was penalized a game for arguing with the chair umpire. Williams recently revealed that she saw a therapist after that episode and sent Osaka a written apology.

She's also dealt with a series of injuries and arrived in England having contested only 12 tour-level matches in all of 2019. Just four of the other 127 women in the Wimbledon field had fewer; 105 had at least twice as many.

After losing to 20-year-old American Sofia Kenin in the third round of the French Open, Williams stuck around in Paris for medical treatment on her left knee. By the time she began preparing in earnest for Wimbledon, about 1½ weeks before the start of play, she was pain-free.

 ?? TIM IRELAND/AP PHOTO ?? Serena Williams holds her second place trophy after losing to Simona Halep in the women’s singles final on Saturday in the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips at London.
TIM IRELAND/AP PHOTO Serena Williams holds her second place trophy after losing to Simona Halep in the women’s singles final on Saturday in the Wimbledon Tennis Championsh­ips at London.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States