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| American sisters Venus and Serena Williams display their Wimbledon 2012 Doubles Championship trophies. |
Serena Williams may have defeated Agnieszka Radwanska 6-1, 5-7, 6-2
earlier in the day to lift her fifth Wimbledon Crown and 14th Grand Slam
singles title but she was forced to delay any plans for celebration.
There
was the small matter of the Ladies' Doubles finals to contest with
older sister Venus. By the time the siblings strolled on court to do
battle with Czech duo- Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka the clock
was showing 9.30pm – the hold-up caused by a particular men’s doubles
final involving a chap called Jonathan Marray.
However, it was
worth the wait. Exactly one hour and 18 minutes later Venus fired down
an ace to secure a 7-5, 6-4 victory earning the sisters their fifth
Wimbledon ladies doubles title and 13th Grand Slam ladies doubles win
together.
Of course the pair are no strangers when it comes to
accruing Grand Slam titles but this particular victory was made all the
more special given the health scares they have both experienced over the
past two years.
“For me it's been definitely a journey,” Venus
said after the match. “ I'm sure it still will be. But I'm definitely
very inspired by her [Serena] and everything that she's done. Like I said, we're not into the whole getting defeated thing; we're into the conquering thing."
The
Americans faced tricky opponents in the form of the Czech duo, who last
year won Roland Garros together. Until the 11th game the match proved
to be close, hard hitting affair with both pairs producing sparkling
grass court tennis involving thunderous serving and impeccable net play.
But a break in the 11th game of the first and the fifth game of the
second proved to be the sixth seeds' undoing.
The Williamses have
never lost a Grand Slam doubles final together. Venus believes this
stems from the fact they get on so well. “I think we just stay really
relaxed when we play with each other because we believe in each other so
much it helps the other one to stay relaxed.”
Their formidable
style of play also helps. “Serena and I both put so much pressure on our
opponents with our serves, and our returns are also, you know, very
good,” she added.
However, Venus’s greatest inspiration is her
younger sister, who suffererd a life-threatening condition last year in
the form of a pulmonary embolism.
“I wouldn't be doing this
without her. I mean, I feel like Serena was my role model. I couldn't
have done any of this without her because she showed me how to win. I
think it was a match made in heaven basically. We couldn't have done
this without each other,” Venus said.
The sisters both came into the tournament unranked and unseeded and now leave with a doubles ranking between No.40 and 45, Serena a fifth
Wimbledon crown and a singles ranking of world No.4. Now at least the
party can begin.
Source: wimbledon.org
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