Sports

Serena sails to 4th Wimbledon crown

Serena Williams overpowered 21st-seeded Vera Zvonareva 6-3, 6-2 in a one-sided final Saturday to claim her fourth Wimbledon title and 13th Grand Slam championship.

King, Shvedova win women's doubles crown

For the ninth time in 11 years, the name "Williams" was etched on the green board inside the All England Club that lists the champions of the world's most famous tennis tournament.

Serena Williams pointed gleefully as her name was unveiled Saturday next to the year 2010 — her fourth title at Wimbledon and 13th Grand Slam championship.

She counted the names: Serena, four times; sister Venus, five.

Serena extended the family dominance by overpowering 21st-seeded Russian Vera Zvonareva 6-3, 6-2 in a one-sided final that lasted just 67 minutes and showed why Williams is considered one of the greatest players of all time.

Williams, who improved her record to 13-3 in Grand Slam finals, added to the Wimbledon titles she won in 2002, 2003 and 2009. However, this was the first time she defeated someone other than Venus in the final.

Venus, who beat Serena in 2008, was upset in the quarter-finals this week, preventing a fifth all-sister final.

Wimbledon trophies piling up

"I'm just glad that I was able to win, especially [after] Venus lost," Serena said. "I really wanted a Williams sister to go ahead and win it."

That's something the sisters won't be able to ignore back home in Florida.

"Now everywhere we look there's another Wimbledon trophy," Williams said. Then she rolled her eyes and added with a smile, "Not another one of those again."

It was a different story in the women's doubles final. Vania King of the United States and Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan never had set foot inside Centre Court, let alone played there, before the final, later Saturday.

The entire experience was a thrill, topped by becoming the fifth unseeded team to win the championship. King and Shvedova beat singles runner-up Vera Zvonareva and Elena Vesnina of Russia 7-6 (6), 6-2.

"I'm sure for both of us, it really hasn't gotten in our heads that we just won Wimbledon," said King, who is from California and now lives in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "But maybe tomorrow or maybe next week. So, yeah, I think, I mean, right now, I don't know what to say."

Williams was dominant en route to her fourth title. She served nine aces, broke three times and never faced a break point in nine service games. She finished the tournament without dropping a set.

Williams, who has won five of the last eight major tournaments, moved ahead of Billie Jean King into sole possession of sixth place on the all-time list of women's Grand Slam champions with 13, the most of any active woman player. Williams also has five Australian Open titles, three U.S. Open wins and one at the French Open.

After accepting the Venus Rosewater Dish from the Duke of Kent with a curtsy, Williams turned to King, who was sitting in the Royal Box.

"Hey, Billie — I got you," she said. "This is No. 13 for me now. It's just amazing to able to be among such great people."

King grinned and applauded.

'I'm just trying to be Serena, that's all I can be'

Margaret Smith Court leads the Grand Slam list with 24 titles, followed by Steffi Graf with 22, Helen Wills Moody with 19 and Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert with 18 each.

Williams said she wasn't thinking about catching the greats ahead of her or establishing her place in history.

"I'm happy to win 13," she said. "You never know what tomorrow brings. I'm happy to have gotten this far. Who would have thought? It just takes a dream and a little work effort. … I'm just trying to be Serena, that's all that I can be."

But King has no doubt how far Williams can go.

"She can be the greatest ever if she keeps going," King said.

Williams graciously congratulated Zvonareva, who played in her first Grand Slam final and was the second-lowest ranked women's finalist ever at Wimbledon.

"Everyone should give her a big round of applause," Williams said. "She defines what being a champion and never giving up means."

Zvonareva didn't look intimidated and kept close early in the match, but the contest swung in Williams' favour when she broke for a 5-3 lead in the first set.

Williams is beatable: Zvonareva

Williams squandered her first break point with a return error, but then hit a perfect backhand lob at deuce to set up another. This time, she ripped a running forehand passing shot down the line, and celebrated by dropping onto her right knee and pumping her left fist.

Williams broke again to open the second set and went ahead 4-1 when Zvonareva double-faulted on the third break point of the game.

"I think I'm a little bit disappointed at the moment," Zvonareva said. "Maybe I was not able to show my best today, but I think Serena just didn't allow me to show my best."

Despite the score, Zvonareva claimed Williams was beatable.

"She's a human being. She's not a machine," the Russian said. "It's very difficult to beat her. You have to play your best. But if you do, you can do it."

As has been the case throughout the two-week tournament, Williams' big serve was the dominant factor on Saturday.

Williams won 31 of 33 points when her first serve was good. She hit her fastest serve — 122 m.p.h. — for an ace in the final game. She finished the tournament with a record 89 aces.

"I honestly never served like this," Williams said. "At Wimbledon, whenever I come on this grass and play on this amazing court I start serving well."