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It's Williams vs. Williams for Wimbledon title


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Williams sisters' head-to-head matchups
YearEventWinnerRoundScoreSurface
2009MiamiSerenaS6-4, 3-6, 6-3Hard
2009DubaiVenusS6-1, 2-6, 7-6 (3)Hard
2008WimbledonVenusF7-5, 6-4Grass
2008BangaloreSerenaS6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (4)Hard
2008Tour ChampionshipsVenusR15-7, 6-1, 6-0Hard
2008U.S. OpenSerenaQ7-6 (6), 7-6 (7)Hard
2005U.S. OpenVenusR167-6 (5), 6-2Hard
2005MiamiVenusQ6-1, 7-6 (8)Hard
2003WimbledonSerenaF4-6, 6-4, 6-2Grass
2003Australian OpenSerenaF7-6 (4), 3-6, 6-4Hard
2002WimbledonSerenaF7-6 (4), 6-3Grass
2002U.S. OpenSerenaF6-4, 6-3Hard
2002MiamiSerenaS6-2, 6-2Hard
2002French OpenSerenaF7-5, 6-3Grass
2001U.S. OpenVenusF6-2, 6-4Hard
2001Indian WellsSerenaSwalkoverHard
2000WimbledonVenusS6-2, 7-6 (3)Grass
1999MiamiVenusF6-1, 4-6, 6-4Hard
1999Grand Slam CupSerenaF6-1, 3-6, 6-3Hard
1998Italian OpenVenusQ6-4, 6-2Grass
1998Australian OpenVenusR647-6 (4), 6-1Hard
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The Championships - Wimbledon 2009 Day Ten
Venus routs Safina
Watch highlights of Venus Williams' dominant 6-1, 6-0 victory over No. 1 Dinara Safina in the semifinals.
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The match might very well have hinged on a key point, when Dementieva led 4-3 in the second set and Serena double-faulted to 30-40. One more point, and Dementieva would serve for the match. But Serena hit a forehand winner that barely — we’re talking less than a quarter-inch — landed on the chalk on a sideline. It was one of only seven forehand winners for Serena.

“My forehand didn’t show up today. I think he went to Hawaii,” she would say later, finally able to smile about it. “It’s always good to win when one of your strokes is on vacation.”

Her serve was most decidedly on the scene. Wimbledon’s official statistics for aces date only to 2000 on all courts, and to 1995 on the show courts, and they show no woman hitting more than 19 in a match until Thursday.

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“I wasn’t sure if it’s Serena or Andy Roddick on the other side,” Dementieva said.

Serving for the second set at 6-5, Serena erased four break points — Dementieva blew one with a bad backhand — and had four aces in the game, including at 122 mph and 114 mph on the last two points.

There was still nearly an hour left to play, and at the end, Serena barely was better.

“That was intense. I mean, Dementieva was there mentally, physically,” said the sisters’ mother, Oracene Price, who helps Richard coach their daughters. “Serena was fortunate to get out of that one.”

Coming off the court afterward, Serena said, “I’m going to come out and watch Venus and cheer her on and hope for the best.”

Alas, she never made it to the Centre Court stands to support big sis. Venus was too dominant, and finished too quickly.

Here is all you need to know: Venus compiled 16 winners, one unforced error.

“She’s just too good on grass,” Safina said. “She gave me a pretty good lesson today.”

Now two sisters who were taught the game by their parents will meet on tennis’ most famous lawn one more time to settle a Wimbledon championship.

“We both play such a similar game,” said the 29-year-old Venus, who is 15 months older than Serena. “I mean, we had the same teacher.”

Serena beat Venus in the 2002-03 all-in-the-family finals at the All England Club; Venus won last year.

“Let’s just say,” Mom noted, “they take home all the money.”

 

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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