Serena Williams won her 22nd Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon

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Serena Williams won her 22nd Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon Saturday. (Getty)Serena Williams won her 22nd Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon Saturday. (Getty)

Serena Williams’ chase for Grand Slam singles title No. 22 is finally over.

After coming up short in three consecutive majors, Williams tied Steffi Graf’s mark with a 7-5, 6-3 win over Angelique Kerber in Saturday’s Wimbledon final.

“It makes the victory even sweeter to know how hard I worked for it,” Williams said on the court after the match. “I don’t know what else to say. I’m so excited.”

In a tight, high-quality match, the best server in the history of women’s tennis ultimately prevailed over one of the game’s top returners.

Kerber won the opening coin toss and elected to receive, as she had broken Williams five times to win the Australian Open final earlier this year. She would have no such luck Saturday. Williams dominated on serve, firing 13 aces, winning 88 percent of her first-serve points and only allowing one break point throughout the entire match.

“I knew that I needed to hold serve because I really wasn’t feeling her serve that well the way I had earlier times we’ve played before,” Williams told ESPN after the match. “The conditions were really windy so I was like OK, I absolutely have to hold serve out here.”

Kerber held her own, though, staying dedicated to her game plan. After saving three break points in her opening service game, Kerber got into a rhythm. She drew Williams into rallies, which she dominated by making Williams chase the ball from side-to-side.

But needing to hold to stay in the opening set with Williams up 6-5, Kerber finally blinked and Williams moved one set closer to the title.

The quality continued into the second set, with Kerber trying her best to push Williams off her game. Kerber earned her first break point of the match at 3-3, but Williams closed any opening she had with an emphatic ace.

Williams would not be denied in her quest for history, breaking Kerber at 4-3. After holding strong to win her seventh Wimbledon title, Williams fell to the ground in celebration, and perhaps, a bit of relief.

Source and Photo credit: Yahoo News, Getty

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