Considering she won her maiden Grand Slam title on the surface that suits her game the least, Garbine Muguruza is being tipped as the player who will end up ruling women’s tennis.
The 22-year-old Spaniard claimed the French Open by defeating Serena Williams in straight sets on Saturday, 11 months after losing the Wimbledon final to the world number one. Muguruza, whose hard-hitting game is at its devastating best on fast courts, will jump to second in the WTA rankings going into the grass season when the list is updated today.
“My dream is to continue and win more tournaments, similar tournaments, and to dominate,” the Venezuela-born Muguruza told reporters after her 7-5, 6-4 victory on Court Philippe Chatrier.
“When I am on the court I want to dictate my game and bring more of these cups back home... This win is like a new pulse given to women’s tennis,” added the Spaniard, who became the second player after Australian Open champion Angelique Kerber to beat Williams in a Grand Slam final this year.
Muguruza, who had never won a title on clay before Saturday, proved that she had very few weak points as she kept Williams on the run throughout the final. Her powerful first serve allows her to dictate play from the baseline and she spanks winners with her forehand or backhand with equal ease.
Muguruza also learnt to control her emotions, which overwhelmed her in last year’s Wimbledon final. “I’m convinced she was panicking a bit in the inside, but she managed these moments very well,” said her coach, Frenchman Sam Sumyk, who also guided Belarussian Victoria Azarenka to her first major title at the 2012 Australian Open, and to the top of the world rankings.
She had four match-points on Williams’s serve, which the American saved, but Muguruza ended the contest on her fifth attempt with a lob that landed on the baseline.
“She’s number two after this, only one more step to be number one and I am sure she’s going to win many more Grand Slams,” former Spanish player Conchita Martinez, the 1994 Wimbledon champion and 2000 Roland Garros runner-up, told reporters. “She’s a great player on any surface, she is a complete player. Spain is very lucky to have this unbelievable tennis player.”
Williams, who was aiming to equal Steffi Graf’s professional-era record of 22 majors, was the favourite to win her third Paris title in four years but she fell one win short of the target—just as she had done at the Australian Open in January.
Her coach, however, warned that the 34-year-old Williams would stay on Muguruza’s radar for quite some time. “It shows how hard it is to win a Grand Slam, to equal records. It will take the time it will take, it was tough to win the 17th, the 18th, it will be hard to win the 22nd and the 23rd but we will do it,” Patrick Mouratoglou told reporters. “It’s a matter of time.”
Muguruza said fixing her mindset and getting rid of all the unnecessary emotions were key to her winning her first Grand Slam title. On the face of it, her match-up with defending champion Serena was an experience mismatch. The 34-year-old American had played 26 Grand Slam finals and won 21 of them. The Spaniard, 12 years her junior, was playing in just her second having lost last year’s Wimbledon final to Williams.
Plenty of reasons then for Muguruza, who has suffered from nerves in the past to get stressed out. But Sumyk has been working on her mental approach and that was what she kept firmly in the back of her mind in Paris.
“I have been saying during the whole week to be less emotional. To believe more that I’m here because I deserve my place here. I earned it,” she said. “You know, I played well. I earned to be here in the final. I think just to don’t think about other stuff. Just give it all in the court and doesn’t matter who’s in front, which round it is. Just to control the emotions I think is the key sometimes, especially in a Grand Slam where you’re very nervous and excited.”
Other factors were at work in the Muguruza brain cells as she prepared to face up to a player many consider to be the greatest of all time.
Firstly, despite losing in straight sets to the American at Wimbledon she was far from disgraced, putting up a strong showing behind her big serve.
And then there were the upset wins over Williams by Roberta Vinci in the US Open semi-finals and Angelique Kerber in the Australian Open final.
“Yeah, I thought about it. I thought about it yesterday. I’m like, ‘Come on. You can do it’,” she said. “When you see people that are winning and there’s new faces, makes you think like, I can be one of those faces. Hey, if Kerber can I can, or whoever is there. Yeah, for sure, it helps to see new faces.”
It is just a matter of trying to get more consistency into her game and avoid form slumps like the one she underwent earlier this year. “I think I’m ambitious. I think I have a strong character and I like competition. I like to compete. I like to play against the best players,” she said.
“This is a source of motivation for me. I’m very happy, because today I proved to myself that I can play really well, that I can manage my stress and win against one of the best players in the world.”