US player Serena Williams poses with the winner’s trophy, the Venus 
Rosewater Dish, after her women’s singles final victory over Germany’s 
Angelique Kerber on the thirteenth day of the 2016 Wimbledon 
Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis Club in Wimbledon, 
southwest London, on July 9, 2016.
The simple forehand volley caromed into the open court and the 
champion tumbled gently backward into the grass; the coup de grâce as 
elementary as the three service winners that preceded it. Serena 
Williams was the Wimbledon champion for a seventh time with a 
straight-sets win over Angelique Kerber – a record-tying 22nd major 
championship all but ending the argument over whether she is the best 
there has ever been.
The greatest American sports tale of our time remains a work in 
progress: a black female Jehovah’s Witness from Compton, who entered an 
arena populated almost exclusively by white women from more advantaged 
backgrounds and persevered in the face of racism, family tragedy, 
injuries and illness to dominate three separate eras of challengers and 
rewrite the history books of a sport not desperately keen to be revised.
 And at a moment in America where the basic value of black lives has 
been violently called into question, Serena’s latest showcase of 
unapologetic Black Excellence could not have come at a more vital time.
Winter is the most compelling season of a top athlete’s journey, when
 the hero must compensate with wits and dogged determination where 
physical gifts were once enough. Ali suspended on the ropes in Zaire 
when he could no longer depend on his legs to pirouette from harm’s way.
 Michael Jordan becoming one of the NBA’s finest post players in his 
thirties, when the explosive vertical game of his twenties was no longer
 at his command. The greatest champions win titles when they’re young 
and find a way to keep them until they’re old, even and especially when 
their bodies don’t comply.
For Serena, the third act started four years ago when she suffered a shock opening-round defeat at Roland Garros to a French wild card ranked 111th named Virginie Razzano. Having only just recovered from a pair of health crises – a hematoma and pulmonary embolism that required emergency treatment and surgery for a foot injury that sidelined her for half a season – the American’s only first-round defeat in 64 majors was the nadir of a career with no shortage of peaks and troughs; one that shook her self-belief its very foundation.
That setback prompted Serena to look outside her family circle and 
form a partnership with the French coach Patrick Mouratoglou, under 
whose counsel her career has enjoyed a resurgence that defies a 
credulity encoded by our understanding of time. Her ledger before 
Mouratoglou already rated among the finest ever: a singles mark of 523 
wins and 107 losses (.830), 41 titles, including 13 grand slams in 47 
entered (.277). But the results over their four years together are a 
different class altogether: a singles record of 245-20 (.925), 30 titles
 including nine majors in 17 played (.529). Even more stark is her 
improvement against opponents in the top 10 from before (111-59, .653) 
to after (57-7, .891).
But since winning Wimbledon last year to hold all four grand slam titles simultaneously for the second time in her career, Serena suffered a stunning defeat to Roberta Vinci in the US Open semi-finals and rare grand slam final losses to Kerber in Melbourne and Garbiñe Muguruza at Roland Garros.
Suddenly questions over her physical decline were compounded with doubts over her nerve.
“There was something missing for a few months and the thing that was 
missing was just Serena. The tennis player was there but Serena as a 
person wasn’t really herself, so she was much more beatable,” 
Mouratoglou said. “She got that back over time. I think we didn’t 
realize how much time she needed to recover from the loss at the US 
Open.”
While Serena’s quickness on the court is not what it was, the world No1 is still stronger and smarter than anyone on the circuit. Her devastating serve – a harmonic blend of mechanics, leg strength, accuracy and confidence famously modeled after Pete Sampras’s – remains the greatest single stroke in the history of the sport. Her 74 aces at this year’s Championships accounted for more than 10 per cent of the 738 struck overall in the women’s singles. Time and again it has bailed her out, never more than during the only break point she faced in Saturday’s final. Her response? A 117mph ace out wide followed by a 124mph thunderbolt down the middle. When she capped a lengthy rally on the next point by forcing an error with a backhand down the line to earn the hold, the result seemed all but a handshake away.
Afterward Serena remembered a phone call with Mouratoglou shortly 
after her French Open loss, when the worried coach finally sensed an 
upturn in his player’s demeanour.
“He just said, ‘You’re back’,” recalled Williams, who earned a $2.59m
 payout with Saturday’s win to become the first woman to surpass $80m in
 career earnings – more than twice the next highest earner. “I guess he 
was right.”
Williams (34 years, 287 days) becomes the oldest player to win a 
grand slam singles title in the Open era, breaking a record she herself 
set last year. She’s now won grand slam titles in her teens (one), 
twenties (12) and thirties (nine, a record).
And she will return to a homeland where the burden of race that she’s
 carried with grace through a 21-year professional career has reached a 
boiling point. She admitted on Saturday to closely following the events 
in Dallas, where on Thursday five police officers were killed and seven 
others wounded at the end of a peaceful Black Lives Matter protest over 
the recent police shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.
“I feel anyone in my colour in particular is of concern. I do have 
nephews that I’m thinking, ‘Do I have to call them and tell them, Don’t 
go outside. If you get in your car, it might be the last time I see 
you.’
 
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