
But in her 12th three-set contest of the electrifying run, Serena finally met her match in doubles expert Roberta Vinci of Italy, who ended the American’s bid for a share of tennis history with a shocking upset in the US Open semi-finals.
Serena, dominating the sport at the ripe old tennis age of 33, had repeated over and over that she felt no pressure in trying to add her name to a Calendar Grand Slam list comprised of Maureen Connolly (1953), Margaret Court (1970) and Steffi Graf (1988).
She did the same after the stunning semi-finals ouster at Arthur Ashe Stadium. “I don’t want to talk about how disappointing it is for me,” said Serena after her 2-6, 6-4, 6-4, two-hour loss.
Serena looked to be feeling the weight of expectations against 32-year-old Vinci, over-hitting groundstrokes and second serve returns in an effort to overwhelm and discourage the Italian, who refused to shy away from the daunting challenge.
Yet the defending champion sounded the same refrain, that mounting pressure was not a factor. “I told you guys I don’t feel pressure,” she said. “I never felt that pressure to win here. I said that from the beginning.”
Serena has nothing to be ashamed of after an extraordinary season produced triumphs at the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon to take her career grand slam total to 21, third on the all-time list behind Court (24) and Graf (22).
Her Wimbledon win enabled her to hold all four Grand Slam titles at the same time for the second “Serena Slam” of her career after also accomplishing the feat after winning the 2003 Australian Open.
Yet Serena had to fight through lapses along the way.
The world number one was extended to three sets twice at the Australian Open, five times at the French Open and twice more at Wimbledon.
The Vinci match was her third three-setter at the US Open and the one that ended an amazing streak of 33 consecutive Grand Slam match wins.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 13th, 2015.
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