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Wimby to toast eighth straight first-time women’s champ
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Wimby to toast eighth straight first-time women’s champ

Associated Press

LONDON—Either Amanda Anisimova or Iga Swiatek will leave the All England Club’s grass courts as Wimbledon’s eighth consecutive first-time women’s champion.

And with no completely dominant figure since Serena Williams retired after the 2022 US Open, there is more room for new faces such as the 13th-seeded Anisimova, a 23-year-old American who will be participating in her first major final against Swiatek, a former world No. 1 who won four trophies at Roland-Garros and one at the US Open but hadn’t been past the quarterfinals at Wimbledon until now.

“I never even dreamt that it’s going to be possible for me to play in the final,” said Swiatek, a 24-year-old from Poland who hadn’t been in a title match as a professional at any grass-court tournament until three weeks ago, when she was the runner-up at Bad Homburg, Germany.

“I thought I experienced everything on the court, ” Swiatek said. “But I didn’t experience playing well on grass.”

Sure did Thursday during her 6-2, 6-0 win against Belinda Bencic in the semifinals.

Like Swiatek, Anisimova also was a recent runner-up on the surface, reaching the final at Queen’s Club last month.

Her powerful, flat strokes are a natural fit for the turf, and she showed just how good she can be on the stuff in a 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 victory against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka on Thursday.

“I have to say,” Sabalenka said, “that she was more brave.”

A sign of Anisimova’s skill on grass came three years ago, when she reached the quarterfinals at Wimbledon.

But she hadn’t played at the event again until now, because she sat out the tournament during a mental health break to deal with burnout in 2023, then was ranked too low to get in automatically a year ago and lost during the qualifying rounds.

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“A lot of people told me that you would never make it to the top again if you take so much time away from the game. That was a little hard to digest, because I did want to come back and still achieve a lot and win a Grand Slam one day,” Anisimova said, adding that she is pleased to be “able to prove that you can get back to the top if you prioritize yourself.”

Since Williams won her seventh and last Wimbledon championship in 2016—a repeat performance from a year prior—every woman to hold the trophy was doing so for the first time.

There was Garbiñe Muguruza in 2017, Angelique Kerber in 2018, Simona Halep in 2019 and Ash Barty in 2021—all of whom are now retired—followed by Elena Rybakina in 2022, Marketa Vondrousova in 2023 and Barbora Krejcikova in 2024 (the tournament was canceled in 2020 because of COVID-19).

Contrast that sort of variety to the much smaller circle of men to win Wimbledon lately: Since 2003, just five have done it – Roger Federer with eight, Novak Djokovic with seven and Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray and Carlos Alcaraz with a pair apiece.

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