Serena regains trophy, ranking
Serena regains trophy, ranking
Published: 12:00 am Jan 31, 2009
Melbourne, January 31:
Serena Williams thrashed Dinara Safina 6-0, 6-3 to win her fourth Australian Open title today, bringing up her 10th Grand Slam tally and reclaiming the world No 1 ranking.
In one of the most one-sided deciders ever, the American utterly dominated third seed Russian, allowing her opponent to win only eight points in the first set on her way to claiming the championship in 59 minutes.
The win means Williams, 27, who said before the tournament that she was the best player in the world but entered the tournament as second seed, will take the world No 1 ranking off Serb Jelena Jankovic. She also became the highest ever prizemoney winner in women’s sport during the tournament and won the women’s doubles title with her sister Venus on Friday.
Safina, whose brother Marat Safin won the men’s title in 2005, had aimed to enter the history books as the part of the only brother-sister combination to hold Grand Slam titles. Instead, she narrowly avoided entering the record books as being on the wrong end of the worst drubbing in a final in the tournament’s history. Only Steffi Graf in 1994 and Margaret Smith in 1962 have posted more comprehensive victories in the decider, both winning 6-0, 6-2.
Williams continued a sequence of winning the Australian Open title in odd-numbered years, with her previous wins coming in 2003, 2005 and 2007. Safina also lost her only previous Grand Slam final at the French Open last year.
Williams received an early confidence booster, comfortably holding to take the first game. The American’s venomous ground strokes immediately found their mark and she attacked Safina’s serve from the outset, with the rattled Russian coughing up three double faults to gift Williams her first break. She then held Safina to love in the next, taking the score to 3-0. Safina then went down another break as Williams relentlessly piled on the pressure to go up 6-0 against an opponent once noted for her emotional meltdowns.
Safina broke Williams in the first game of the second set but could not stop the American and conceded the match when she hit a drop shot wide.