Saturday, July 27, 2024
HometennisMarketa Vondrousova becomes first unseeded woman to win Wimbledon

Marketa Vondrousova becomes first unseeded woman to win Wimbledon

LONDON – Marketa Vondrousova left Ons Jabeur heartbroken once again as she claimed a surprise 6-4, 6-4 victory on Saturday to become the first unseeded player to win the Wimbledon women’s singles title.

The 24-year-old left-hander, who a year ago needed wrist surgery, proved too steady for the error-strewn Jabeur, a runner-up for the second straight year.

The unassuming Vondrousova had managed to win only one match in her previous four visits to Wimbledon. In 2022 she came with her wrist in a plaster cast to support her best friend Miriam Kolodziejova and go shopping.

But she beat four seeds during the past fortnight, including world No. 4 Jessica Pegula in the quarter-finals and Ukraine’s crowd darling Elina Svitolina in the semis.

She is just the ninth unseeded champion at a Grand Slam tournament.

“I don’t know what’s happening right now,” Vondrousova, whose husband Stepan Simek was present for the final after spending the past two weeks looking after their pet cat Frankie back in Prague, said on court after receiving the Venus Rosewater Dish from Britain’s Princess of Wales.

“This time last year I had a cast on, so it’s amazing that I can now stand here and hold this, it’s crazy. I don’t know how I’ve done it. I’m going to have some beer maybe. It was an exhausting two weeks.”

Jabeur, beaten by Elena Rybakina last year and by Iga Swiatek in the 2022 US Open final, was bidding to become the first Arab player to win a Grand Slam title and the first African woman to lift one of the four Major trophies.

But she was well below her best with 31 unforced errors killing her chances of a victory that would have been a milestone moment for women’s sport.

“This is the most painful loss of my career,” the crowd favourite said as she fought back tears. “Today is going to be a tough day for me but I’m not going to give up and I am going to come back stronger.

“It’s been a tough journey but I promise I will come back and one day win this tournament.”

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With the Centre Court roof shut because of high winds and the threat of rain, the 28-year-old Jabeur initially looked comfortable as she won the opening two games of the showpiece.

But world No. 42 Vondrousova, playing a canny game full of slow slices and clever angles, settled down and began to draw errors from her opponent.

Jabeur responded again to lead 4-2 but then seemed consumed by nerves as mistakes flowed from her racket; she dropped four successive games to lose the opening set.

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Vondrousova, sporting tattoos on her arms one of which says “No Rain No Flowers”, led 1-0 and 40-0 in the second set and appeared to be marching to victory as Jabeur fell apart.

But suddenly the wily Tunisian loosened her shoulders and found her range to seize back control.

It looked as though Jabeur was getting on top as she won three games in a row, but Vondrousova never panicked.

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Showing great court craft and subtle changes of pace, she got back to 3-3 and, as Jabeur’s errors returned with a vengeance, she broke serve at 4-4 to stand one game away from the title.

Reaching 40-0, she squandered her first match point with a double fault but put away a volley to claim the title, appearing in disbelief.

Vondrousova, the first player to reach two Grand Slam finals unseeded – having contested the 2019 French Open decider – became the fourth Czech-born player to win the title in the professional era, after Martina Navratilova, Jana Novotna and Petra Kvitova.

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She is the second-lowest ranked player to reach the Wimbledon final – only Serena Williams in 2018 was lower at 181.

The Czech is also the sixth successive first-time winner of the women’s crown.
 REUTERS, AFP

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