Wimbledon Women’s Singles Final Preview: Serena Williams vs. Angelique Kerber

July 8, 2016 | By New York Tennis Magazine Staff

Angelique Kerber and Serena Williams during the trophy presentation of this year's Australian Open. (Ben Solomon/Tennis Australia)

In a rematch of this year’s Australian Open final, Serena Williams and Angelique Kerber will square off in the Wimbledon final on Saturday. It is the third straight major final appearance for Serena as she continues her quest to tie Steffi Graf’s Open Era record of 22 Grand Slam titles.

Kerber broke through for her first Grand Slam title in Melbourne earlier this year, defeating Serena 6-4, 3-6, 6-4.

“I felt like she played great. She came out swinging, ready to win. She was fearless. That’s something I learned,” Serena said of that final. “When I go into a final, I, too, need to be fearless like she was. It was inspiring afterwards to realize there [are] a lot of things that I need to improve on.”

Based on that, you have to think Serena will enter this final with a different mindset and game plan than she had in Australia.

Kerber has played some of her best tennis over the last two weeks in London. Her aggressive play and big lefty forehand has given her opponents fits. She forced Venus Williams to move a lot around the court in their semifinal and found a lot of success doing so.

But the German knows she will have to enter Saturday’s final with a whole different mindset.

“It’s a completely new tournament,” said Kerber. “I will just try to go out there with a lot of confidence, trying to play my best tennis and trying to give everything I can in the final.”

The Serena we have seen at this year’s Wimbledon has looked like an unstoppable force. Since losing a first set tiebreaker against Christina McHale in the second round, Serena has lost just 24 games in five matches, including the final two sets against McHale. Since she was tied at 5-5 in the first set of her fourth round match with Svetlana Kuznetsova, Serena has won 32 of 42 games played, capped by a 6-2, 6-0 demolishing of Elena Vesnina in the semifinals.

Despite her dominance, Serena knows it will be all for not if she fails to beat Kerber on Saturday.

“For anyone else [on] this whole planet, it would be a wonderful accomplishment. For me, it’s about holding the trophy and winning,” said Serena. “For me, it’s not enough [to reach the final]. That’s what makes me different. That’s what makes Serena.”

She is one win away from matching Graf’s all-time Grand Slam titles record. It is her fourth attempt at reaching that mark, and Kerber has an opportunity to once again stand in the way of history.

Serena is 5-2 all-time versus Kerber, but you can throw the stats out the window. The two have never played one another on grass, and both players’ games have evolved since that meeting in Melbourne. Either way, Saturday will play host to a career changing victory for the winner. 


New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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