PARIS -- Serena Williams knew, of course, that 11 years had passed since her only French Open championship.
She also knew, of course, what happened a year ago in Paris: the only
first-round Grand Slam loss of her career, to a woman ranked outside
the top 100, no less.
Eager to repeat the elation of 2002, and motivated by
the
disappointment of 2012, Williams used terrific defense and her usual
powerful hitting in Saturday's final, closing with a crescendo of aces
-- three in the last game -- for a 6-4, 6-4 victory over defending
champion Maria Sharapova to collect a second Roland Garros title and 16th major trophy overall.
"I'm still a little bit upset about that loss last year," the No.
1-ranked Williams said with a chuckle, her shiny new hardware an arm's
length away.
"But it's all about, for me, how you recover," she continued. "I
think I've always said a champion isn't about how much they win, but
it's about how they recover from their downs, whether it's an injury or
whether it's a loss."
As she spoke those last few words, her voice choked and her eyes
welled with tears. There have been low moments for the 31-year-old
American -- none worse, perhaps, than a 10-month stretch ending in 2011
that included two foot operations and treatment for blood clots in her
lungs -- but she's enjoying a high point right now.
Saturday's victory was her 31st in a row, the longest single-season
streak in 13 years. Williams is 43-2 with six titles this season.
"She is playing extremely well," Sharapova said. "She's a competitor."
Sharapova is known for her grit on a court, too. She entered Saturday
ranked No. 2, the winner of her last 13 French Open matches, and the
only active woman other than the Williams sisters with more than two
Grand Slam titles. But she doesn't seem to stand a chance against
Serena, who has won their last 13 encounters.
This was the first major final between women ranked 1-2 in more than
nine years -- the first at Roland Garros in 18 -- and yet it really was
not all that close. Particularly at crunch time.
Under a cloudy sky, and amid a breeze that blew dust in both players'
eyes, Sharapova began well enough, saving four break points in the
first game, then breaking in the second, prompting plenty of murmuring
in the stands.
The next game went to 40-15 on Sharapova's serve, one point from a
3-0 lead. That's when Williams got going. A 13-stroke exchange
culminated with a forehand that forced Sharapova's backhand error and
started a four-point, break-earning run for Williams. She got to 2-1
with an overhead smash she punctuated with a staredown, a raised left
fist and a loud "Come on!"
That fist was aloft again a half-hour later, when Williams'
cross-court forehand winner helped her break to lead 5-4, and she served
out the set.
Sharapova saved five break points in the second set's opening game,
but that merely delayed what everyone expected. Williams got the last
break she would need two games later, and it was made possible by the
sort of baseline scrambling she did all day. Sharapova struck a forehand
down the line that would have ended the point against most opponents,
but Williams got the ball back, and with an extra shot necessary, the
Russian slapped a forehand into the net.
On break point, Sharapova smacked a 109 mph serve, but Williams'
strong return forced another mistake. Now Williams merely needed to hold
serve the rest of the way, and half of her 10 aces came in her last two
service games.
Sharapova observed that Williams serves "harder than David Ferrer," referring to the man who will face seven-time champion Rafael Nadal in the men's final Sunday.
Serving at 5-4, Williams recalled, "I was just so nervous. I thought,
'I'm not going to be able to hit groundstrokes.' No joke. The one
groundstroke I did hit went, like, 100 feet out. I thought to myself,
'Look, Serena, you've just got to hit aces. That's your only choice.'"
Simple as that, huh? Well, with her, yes.
She started with an ace at 118 mph. After a wild backhand miss -- not
100 feet out, but maybe 10 -- she hit an ace at 121 mph. She got to
40-15 with a backhand winner and crouched down, hand to her face, aware
she was one point away.
One more strong swing delivered the fastest ace yet, 123 mph. Williams flung her racket and dropped to her knees.
A few minutes later, Williams was addressing an appreciative crowd in
French, telling them about her "incroyable" victory and noting she
considers herself a Parisian. She owns an apartment in the city and has
been working with French coach Patrick Mouratoglou.
"She feels a bit at home here," Mouratoglou said.
Williams hadn't been back to the final in Paris since beating her
sister for the 2002 title. From 2003-11, she lost in the semifinals
once, the quarterfinals four times, the third round once, and missed the
tournament three times because of injury. Then came last year: Williams
was 17-0 on clay when she arrived in France, then quickly 17-1.

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