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'I just want to win' – Serena on Grand Slam ambitions

  • Posted: Jan 28, 2017

Serena Williams was thrilled to win a record 23rd Grand Slam title at the Australian Open but would not speculate on how many more she could secure.

The American, 35, beat sister Venus 6-4 6-4 to overtake Steffi Graf in the list of Open-era major champions.

She is now just one behind Australia’s Margaret Court in terms of all-time Grand Slam singles victories.

“I never had a number. That’s the beauty of it,” said Williams, who won her first major at the 1999 US Open.

“When I started this journey, I just wanted to win a Grand Slam.

“Then I just wanted to win. Every time I step on the court, I want to win. It’s just really remarkable.”

  • Read more: Is Serena the greatest? Pick your favourite…

Williams drew level with Germany’s Graf on 22 major singles titles at last year’s Wimbledon, but then lost in the semi-finals of the US Open.

She won her seventh Australian Open title without dropping a set in Melbourne.

“It’s such a great feeling to have 23,” she said. “It really feels great.

“I’ve been chasing it for a really long time. When it got on my radar, I knew I had an opportunity to get there, and I’m here.

“It’s a great feeling. No better place to do it than Melbourne.”

The experience was all the more special because it was shared with Venus, who at 36 was making her first Grand Slam final appearance since 2009.

The sisters became the oldest women to appear in a major final since the Grand Slams accepted professional players in 1968.

“We’re both, like I say, 30-fun,” Serena joked. “Now I just feel like I’m satisfied with where I am, although I always want to win.”

As well as the title, Serena regained the world number one ranking from Germany’s Angelique Kerber – but she did not know that was on the line as her coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, kept it from her.

“That was a bonus. I didn’t know actually. It feels good. I like being on top, so I really like that feeling,” she said.

“In the beginning of the tournament, I was like, ‘If I win, will I be number one?’ Patrick said, ‘No, no, no.’

“Today on the court when they were like, ‘And number one’, I was like, ‘Whoa, really?'”

All-time Grand Slam singles titles leaders
24 (1960-1973) – Margaret Court (Aus) 19 (1923-1938) – Helen Wills Moody (US)
23 (1999-present) – Serena Williams (US) 18 (1974-1986) – Chris Evert (US)
22 (1987-1999) – Steffi Graf (Ger) 18 (1978-1990) – Martina Navratilova (US)

Venus ‘ready to kill it’ in 2017

After reaching her first Grand Slam final since 2009, Venus Williams will head into the rest of the season in confident mood.

She will rise from 17th to 11th in the world rankings after her run to the final in Melbourne.

“Ready to kill it this year,” she said. “That’s my goal. It’s a great start to the year. I’m looking forward to the rest of year.

“This is like tournament number two and it’s already a lot of work. I’m looking forward to tournament number three and four. It’s going to be awesome.”

Venus, who has had to cope with auto-immune disease Sjogren’s syndrome in recent years, played down the suggestion she and Serena are the greatest sporting siblings of all time.

“I don’t think we’re going for the greatest story in sports,” she said.

“We’re just going for some dreams. In the case that we are, what an honour, what an honour.”

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Is Serena the greatest? Pick your favourite…

  • Posted: Jan 28, 2017

Who is the greatest female tennis player of the Open era?

It is a question fans love to debate.

Of course, it is difficult to compare across eras, with technology and professionalism evolving since the Open era – which allowed professionals to compete alongside amateurs – began in 1968.

Is the number of Grand Slam wins what really matters? Serena Williams has won the most in the Open era – her victory in the Australian Open taking her to 23.

“Serena is the greatest of all-time because this era is so much more competitive than previous eras,” says BBC Sport presenter Sue Barker, herself a former French Open champion.

Do you agree? From our shortlist, pick your 1-7 using our interactive tool – and if you still can’t decide, Sue’s analysis below might help.

We will announce your greatest on Monday, 30 January.

My greatest female champion

Pick your greatest champion by ranking the seven women who have won the most Open Era major titles.

First

1

Second

2

Third

3

Fourth

4

Fifth

5

Sixth

6

Seventh

7

Billie Jean King8 Grand Slam titles, 1968-1975

Chris Evert18 Grand Slam titles, 1974-1986

Margaret Court11 Grand Slam titles, 1969-1973

Martina Navratilova18 Grand Slam titles, 1978-1990

Monica Seles9 Grand Slam titles, 1990-1996

Serena Williams23 Grand Slam titles, 1999-

Steffi Graf22 Grand Slam titles, 1987-1999

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Serena Williams – 23 titles in the Open era

Barker: “Serena has won 23 in an era which is so much more competitive than previous eras. The first, second and third-round matches at Grand Slams are more competitive than they used to be.

“The pace she generates, her serve is without question the greatest ever, and put that with her movement and her power, she pushes her opponents constantly on the back foot.”

Steffi Graf – 22

Barker: “She is the greatest athlete that has ever played the game. Steffi made everything look effortless and incredibly graceful. The big forehand was her trademark.

“She was great for the game and we needed someone like her to take the game forward. However, I do feel she was in an era where she was not well challenged because Gabriela Sabatini went away and then so did Monica Seles after her stabbing. We never saw a great rivalry develop.”

Martina Navratilova – 18

Barker: “Martina was the first person who changed the physical side of the women’s game. While we all just went for a three-mile run, she started doing training off court – she did specific gym exercises and built up muscles which we hadn’t seen before. She dominated, and the other players had to change.

“Her serve-volley was exceptional. I don’t think there has been a better serve-volleyer in the women’s game at the top level.”

Chris Evert – 18

Barker: “She was mentally so incredibly hard. To try to get past Chrissie you knew you were going to suffer – you were going to run and run and run. She never broke down, she didn’t make an error and played the big points so well.

“She didn’t miss and never got nervous – that’s why they called her ‘The Ice Princess’. She never look flustered. Mentally she was incredibly strong and solid in every department.”

Margaret Court – 11 (plus 13 before the Open era)

Barker: “Margaret was from a very different era. It is difficult to compare because it was a different game then – it wasn’t a hard-hitting game. She was tall and had an incredible wingspan, she could almost touch either sideline! She had great reach so just trying to pass her was very difficult.

“However, most of her Grand Slams were won in Australia – and I sound a little bit disrespectful here – when it was only Australians playing it because no-one went there. I think the records that came later from the others were greater.”

Monica Seles – 9

Barker: “Monica could have been one of the greatest ever if the stabbing had not happened. She was just beginning to get the better of Steffi.

“I feel tennis was robbed of that incredible rivalry because she was never the same player when she came back – which was totally understandable.”

Billie Jean King – 8 (plus four before the Open era)

Barker: “Billie Jean is the greatest in terms of the whole sport, combining her Slam wins with everything else she has done off the court in terms of promoting the sport.

“Tennis is probably the best known women’s sport because of everything she has done for the game. She was a great champion and moved the game forward.”

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'It's very special' – Federer & Nadal renew 13-year rivalry

  • Posted: Jan 28, 2017
Australian Open 2017
Venue: Melbourne Park, Melbourne Dates: 16-29 Jan Start: 08:30 GMT
Coverage: Live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online.

Roger Federer says he will not let his long-standing rivalry with Rafael Nadal affect his performance in the Australian Open final on Sunday.

The 35-year-old Swiss has met Nadal, 30, in eight Grand Slam finals, most recently at the French Open in 2011.

Federer, attempting to secure his 18th Grand Slam title, has not beaten 14-time major winner Nadal in the final of a Slam since Wimbledon in 2007.

“I’ve got to have a sort of a nothing-to-lose mentality,” said Federer.

“I know this court allows me to play a certain game against Rafa that I cannot do on centre court at the French Open.”

  • Live scores, results and order of play
  • Serena beats Venus to win record 23rd Grand Slam
  • BBC coverage of the Australian Open

Spain’s Nadal has won six of the duo’s Grand Slam final meetings, including beating Federer in five sets to win the Australian Open in 2009.

The two will meet on court for the 35th time in Melbourne from 08:30 GMT.

“He’s an incredible tennis player,” said Federer, who described himself as Nadal’s number one. “He’s got shots that no other one has. When you have that, you are unique and special.”

Should Nadal win on Sunday, he will be the first man in the Open era – and third overall – to win all four Grand Slam titles twice. Federer, meanwhile, is trying to become the first man to win three of the major titles five times.

“It’s exciting for both of us that we are still there and fighting for important events,” said Nadal. “It’s very special.”

‘I didn’t think about being where I am now’

The rivalry began at the Miami Masters in 2004, when a 17-year-old Nadal beat Federer, then the world number one, 6-3 6-3.

Nadal has won 23 of their 34 meetings, but Federer triumphed in their last – in Basel in 2015.

Three of their Grand Slam finals have gone to five sets, as did both of their semi-finals earlier this week.

Nadal took four hours 56 minutes to beat Grigor Dimitrov on Friday, a day after Federer was taken to five sets by compatriot Stan Wawrinka.

Both players had injury-affected seasons in 2016, with Federer sidelined for six months with a knee problem, and a wrist injury forcing Nadal to withdraw from the French Open.

“When you have to go from Roland Garros without going on court, I remember myself crying in the car. That was a tough moment,” Nadal said.

“I didn’t think about being where I am today. It is special to play with Roger again in a final of a Grand Slam.”

Federer looks to roll back the years

Sunday’s match will be Federer’s 100th at the Australian Open.

He is the oldest man to reach a Grand Slam final since Ken Rosewall, a US Open finalist in 1975 aged 39 years and 310 days.

And victory would make him the second oldest man to win a Grand Slam title in the Open era – Rosewall having won three major titles after his 35th birthday.

“Rosewall wrote me a letter this week to wish me well again,” said Federer. “He does it every year at the Australian Open.

“To be in the same breath like these guys, it’s a great feeling. I love these guys. It means a lot to me to have equalled something like this.”

Nadal v Federer – previous Grand Slam finals

2006: French Open – Nadal won 1-6 6-1 6-4 7-6 (7-4)

2006: Wimbledon – Federer won 6-0 7-6 (7-5) 6-7 (2-7) 6-3

2007: French Open – Nadal won 6-3 4-6 6-3 6-4

2007: Wimbledon – Federer won 7-6 (9-7) 4-6 7-6 (7-3) 2-6 6-2

2008: French Open – Nadal won 6-1 6-3 6-0

2008: Wimbledon – Nadal won 6-4 6-4 6-7 (5-7) 6-7 (8-10) 9-7

2009: Australian Open – Nadal won 7-5 3-6 7-6 (7-3) 3-6 6-2

2011: French Open – Nadal won 7-5 7-6 (7-3) 5-7 6-1

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Serena beats Venus to win record 23rd Slam

  • Posted: Jan 28, 2017
Australian Open women’s final
Venue: Melbourne Park Date: Saturday, 28 January
Coverage: TV highlights on BBC Two and online at 13:15

Serena Williams beat sister Venus in straight sets to win her seventh Australian Open and an Open-era record 23rd Grand Slam singles title.

Serena, 35, won 6-4 6-4 to pass Steffi Graf in the all-time list of major winners since the Grand Slams accepted professional players in 1968.

The American regains the number one ranking from German Angelique Kerber.

Australia’s Margaret Court, with 24, is the only player still ahead of Serena in terms of Grand Slam singles titles.

“Congratulations Serena on number 23,” said Venus, who at 36 was the oldest Australian Open finalist in the Open era.

“I have been right there with you, some of them I lost right there against you. It’s been an awesome win.

“I’m enormously proud of you, you mean the world to me. I, God willing, would love to come back. Thank you for all the love.”

Serena paid tribute to her sister, who was playing her first major final for eight years, saying: “There’s no way I would be at 23 without her. There’s no way I’d be at one without her. She’s my inspiration.

“She’s the only reason I’m standing here today. She’s the only reason the Williams sisters exist. Thank you for inspiring me. Every time you won this week, I felt like I got a win too.”

Favourite Serena too strong for Venus

Serena went into the match as a strong favourite, but the tension was apparent as early as the third game when she smashed a racquet in frustration, receiving a code violation.

She had broken serve in the first and third games only to hand the advantage straight back each time, three double faults inexplicably littering a desperate game for 2-2.

All-time Grand Slam singles titles leaders
24 (1960-1973) – Margaret Court (Aus) 19 (1923-1938) – Helen Wills Moody (US)
23 (1999-present) – Serena Williams (US) 18 (1974-1986) – Chris Evert (US)
22 (1987-1999) – Steffi Graf (Ger) 18 (1978-1990) – Martina Navratilova (US)

It was clear the six-time champion was struggling to settle, with 13 unforced errors in the opening five games, while elder sister Venus kept her under pressure with some deep hitting.

The decisive move of the set came with a superb drop volley followed by a thumping forehand winner from Serena to break for 4-3, and this time she managed to consolidate on serve.

In contrast to the opening stages, the following nine games went with serve – Venus recovering superbly from 0-40 early in the second set – but it was Serena who was creating the chances.

She finally capitalised on her sixth break point of the set with a brilliant return to lead 4-3 and followed it up with her best service game of the match for 5-3.

The crowd on Rod Laver Arena had been backing Venus from the beginning as she tried to win a first major title for eight years, and all the more so as defeat loomed and she appeared to struggle physically.

There was a huge cheer when she held serve to force her sister to serve out the match, but Serena recovered from 15-30 to earn match point and fell back on the court in celebration as her sister sent the ball floating wide.

Reaction

Russell Fuller, BBC tennis correspondent: When you think where this story began, in the Californian neighbourhood of Compton, their dad begging clubs to donate their old tennis balls so they could practise. Their story is a remarkable one. Given the way she is playing, you have to say Serena is odds on to go past Margaret Court.

Billie Jean King on Twitter: Congrats @serenawilliams on your 23rd major title and return to the top of the @WTA rankings. You are a history maker and a trailblazer.

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Australian Alcott beats GB's Lapthorne in final

  • Posted: Jan 28, 2017

Australia’s Paralympic champion Dylan Alcott beat Britain’s Andy Lapthorne to win the quad wheelchair singles final at the Australian Open.

Alcott came through 6-2 6-2 on the Rod Laver Arena to win his third consecutive Australian title.

“It feels amazing,” said the 26-year-old from Melbourne.

“To go three in a row is what I wanted, but to play in the first ever wheelchair match on the Centre Court of a Grand Slam feels unbelievable.”

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Lapthorne, 26, had already won the quad doubles title on Thursday alongside American David Wagner.

“Congrats Dylan, you’re by far the best player in the world right now,” said Lapthorne.

“You deserved the victory. Sorry for today’s performance, it wasn’t one of my best but maybe the moment got to me a bit.

“We’ll work hard and go again. Thank you the Australian Open for having this wheelchair final on the Centre Court. I may have lost this match but I’ll remember this for the rest of my life.”

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