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Wimbledon final: Iga Swiatek routs Amanda Anisimova to win first Wimbledon title

Wimbledon final: Iga Swiatek routs Amanda Anisimova to win first Wimbledon title

New York Times12-07-2025
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THE ALL ENGLAND CLUB, LONDON — Iga Świątek beat Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 in the Wimbledon final at The All England Club Saturday.
The No. 8 seed prevailed over the No. 13 seed in a one-sided clinic, ultimately decided by Anisimova's nerves, Świątek's clear-headed tactics, and the relentlessness that makes her one of the best players in the world.
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It is Świątek's first Wimbledon title, and her sixth Grand Slam singles title. She is the only active WTA Tour player to hold Grand Slam titles on all three surfaces, alongside the returning Venus Williams, and she is now 6-0 in major finals.
It is the second double bagel in a Grand Slam final in the Open Era, and the first since 1988, when Steffi Graf won the French Open against Natasha Zvereva by a 6-0, 6-0 scoreline.
The Athletic's writers, Charlie Eccleshare and Matt Futterman, analyze the final and what it means for tennis.
This was always a danger for a first-time Grand Slam finalist. Świątek had played five and never lost one; Anisimova had never been here before.
The American could tell herself for two days that it was just tennis, the sport she had played her whole life. The court was the same dimensions. Just another match.
And then she walked onto Centre Court. There's Princess Catherine of Wales, in the Royal Box with a cadre of luminaries. That's fine. Wimbledon is a major. Famous people come to watch every day.
And then, unlike her other six matches this fortnight, Anisimova stepped up to the line and her serve just wouldn't go in. Then her fearsome, peerless backhand wouldn't go in. On the other side of the net, Świątek was returning everything and missing nothing.
Everything looked ready to crumble from there, and that was the story of the first set for Anisimova, a portrait of nerves in action.
She won just nine points to 27 for Świątek. She made 14 unforced errors. Her backhand kept tumbling into the net.
The worst of it was the serve, the shot where each player controls their own destiny. She kept catching her toss. She made just 33 percent of her first serves. She hit three double faults. It was as though her arms were not attached to the rest of her body.
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There's no other explanation. A Grand Slam final. A Wimbledon final. The Princess of Wales. As Carlos Alcaraz said after his first match, 'Wimbledon is different.'
Especially the final.
Matt Futterman
Anisimova's biggest strength is her backhand, and so it might have seemed counter-intuitive for Świątek to target it in the first set.
But in so doing, she opened up a world of possibilities for herself, while telling Anisimova that her best shot wasn't going to trouble her.
She was constantly moving Anisimova off balance and out of the court by breaking the sideline with her backhands, creating space to exploit on the other side. It was a particularly effective play because Świątek possesses probably the best inside-out backhand in the sport, and that's where the space was to hit into once the players had traded backhands.
When Anisimova got to the ball on the deuce side, her forehand was wayward. She started going for too much, aware of how well Świątek was retrieving, which contributed to the 14 unforced errors she hit in the first set alone, compared to just three winners.
Attacking her backhand also sent out a message that Świątek didn't fear her opponent's biggest strength. She's been criticized for not being as tactically astute as previously over the last year, but this was a brutally clear-headed performance.
Charlie Eccleshare
For Świątek, winning Wimbledon may be the most stunning yet predictable moment of what was already a Hall of Fame career.
A month ago, she seemed rattled. Losses had been piling up and she had failed to defend three clay-court titles, including her favorite French Open. Her ranking tumbled to No. 8.
But Świątek had also made the semifinals in both majors in 2025, and had been showing signs of embedding the controlled aggression that she and her coach Wim Fissette wanted to be the bread and butter of her game.
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That has certainly happened. In a matter of weeks, she has flipped the script and solved the puzzle, on the grass of Wimbledon, the surface on which she was wrongly and too quickly written off.
In part, the loss of those three titles may have been a help. The weight of expectation went away. But most of all, Świątek has done what all the great players have done at this tournament. She has thrived where greatness thrives, playing tennis and thinking her way through her shots and her matches.
And in less than an hour Saturday she became the Wimbledon champion, giving her six Grand slam titles and one on every tennis surface, just as Ash Barty achieved before she dropped the mic with her retirement at the top of the sport in 2022.
That made Świątek the world No. 1. This title makes her the greatest since Serena Williams.
Matt Futterman
We'll bring you their on-court quotes and press conference reflections as they come in.
We'll bring you their on-court quotes and press conference reflections as they come in.
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