
Tearful Amanda Anisimova thanks mom who travelled for Wimbledon final: ‘Most selfless person I know'
Then, turning to address her mother, Anisimova continued as her eyes welled with tears: 'So thank you for being here and breaking the superstition of flying in.' And then in a tongue-in-cheek reference to her 57-minute defeat, Anisimova said with a laugh, 'It's definitely not why I lost today.'
'I'm so happy that I get to share this moment and for you to be here and witness this in person. I know you don't get to see me live, playing, that much anymore, because you do so much for my sister and I, and you always have,' Anisimova said. 'I love you so much.' Just participating in a Grand Slam final — after eliminating No. 1-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinals, to boot — represented quite a success for Anisimova, a 23-year-old who was born in New Jersey and grew up in Florida from age 3.
She was a top player in her teens, beating Coco Gauff in the 2017 U.S. Open junior final, and quickly made a mark as a professional by reaching the French Open quarterfinals two years later. In May 2023, she announced she was taking a mental health break from the tour because of burnout.
Anisimova returned to action in 2024, but her ranking of 189th just 12 months ago was too low to get into the field automatically at an event like Wimbledon, so she unsuccessfully attempted to qualify for the tournament.'No matter what happened today,' Swiatek told her, 'you should be proud of the work you're doing.'On Saturday, she became just the second woman in the Open era, which began in 1968, to get to a Grand Slam final a year after losing in qualifying. And now she will break into the top 10 for the first time. After the match, she told her team she appreciates them for 'just taking care of me' during 'the whole journey it's been, this whole past year.'
'I know I didn't have enough today, but I'm going to keep putting in the work,' Anisimova said. 'And I always believe in myself, so I hope to be back here one day.'
Eighth seeds Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens fought back from a set down to win their first Grand Slam as a pair, beating Hsieh Su-Wei and Jelena Ostapenko 3-6 6-2 6-4 in the Wimbledon women's doubles final on Sunday.
It was the first major title for Russia's Kudermetova, who was on the losing side in the 2021 final against Mertens and Hsieh. The second Wimbledon crown for Belgian Mertens took her to five Grand Slam doubles titles. 'It's been incredible,' a tearful Mertens said as she summed up a memorable Wimbledon campaign, having also reached the fourth round in the singles.
In the first set, Kudermetova held to go 3-1 up but the fourth seeds then won five straight games. The 28-year-old Russian led the charge in the second set, holding twice as the pair got three breaks in a row to force a third set. Hsieh, who has won seven majors in women's doubles including four Wimbledon titles, won a prolonged exchange with Kudermetova from the baseline to get the first break of the third set, before Ostapenko held without losing a point to take 4-2 lead.
But erroneous returns from Hsieh hit the net as the eighth seeds broke back, and Kudermetova held to go 5-4 up before Ostapenko went long to lose a 26-shot rally and bring up match point. Kudermetova's backhand from close range cut across the court to secure the match, finally fulfilling her dream of lifting the trophy at the All England Club. 'A few years ago I was playing in the final here against Elise… I lost that final and it was so painful. Today I said to myself, I really want this,' Kudermetova said.
(With AP and Reuters inputs)

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