
Iga Swiatek could sense Amanda Anisimova's tension in one-sided Wimbledon final
It was a nightmare scenario for 23-year-old American Anisimova, who was playing in her first slam final.
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'At the beginning I saw that she was tense,' said the Pole. 'I wanted to focus on myself and not let that get into my head because it can be distracting, you can start taking things for granted.
'I can only imagine what she felt. Playing a grand slam final, it's a lot of pressure and she also must have felt a bit more fatigued after the semi-final. It's not easy and I was a bit worried but I wanted this win so bad that I just did my job.
'Do you really want to win Wimbledon? If you do, then you're not going to give any point for free.'
After landing a final backhand just inside the line, Swiatek collapsed to the court and then climbed up into the stands to celebrate with her supporters, who included Friends star Courteney Cox.
The pair first met at a sponsor's event in Paris last year and have stayed in touch.
'They know I love Friends,' said Swiatek. 'She loves tennis, she always posts about it and she plays pretty well so it was kind of funny. I didn't know she was going to come here. We're in touch but I'm glad she didn't text me because when I know someone famous is going to watch me I get stressed.'
Swiatek took her tally of grand slam titles to six, but that is still one behind her coach, Belgian Wim Fissette, who has now won major trophies with four different players.
He previously coached Angelique Kerber to the Wimbledon crown while he has also won US Open and Australian Open titles with Kim Clijsters and Naomi Osaka.
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Asked if he could have expected the scoreline, Fissette said: 'Of course not. You never do. But I knew that Iga was playing well. I was not there when she played her first five grand slam finals, but she won all of them, so it also means a lot.'
The pair linked up at a difficult moment late last season when Swiatek had just split from previous coach Tomasz Wiktorowski and was privately fighting an anti-doping case, for which she eventually served a one-month suspension.
There were question marks around whether it was the right fit, with Swiatek failing to win a title in the first six months of the year and struggling with pressure and expectation on her favoured clay.
Those doubts now appear to be firmly in the past, with Fissette having helped persuade Swiatek she could thrive on grass.
'When I started, she was like, 'Wim, faster surfaces is just difficult for me',' he said.
'I had a feeling this could work out. Because just look at the champions the last 10 years. It's not always the big servers and the super big ground stroke players.
'Also good movers, smart players, that won, so, if Simona Halep can win, or (Marketa) Vondrousova can win, why not not Iga?'
Fissette's key change was a footwork adjustment that helped the 24-year-old cope better with faster balls on her forehand – although she took some convincing.
'Let's say it was a battle to get that,' he said with a smile. 'When we started the clay-court season, Iga had so much success on the clay that it was difficult to find the moment, or impossible to say, 'We're going to do things a little different'.
'On the grass, there was an opening, because she never had success. So I came with some ideas. It was not easy to convince her. But, once she was convinced, she got better every day and and she texted me, actually, from the locker room, like, 'Maybe it was not a bad idea that point'.'
Swiatek will return to the world's top three on Monday behind Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff, with the story of her season now flipped on its head.
'Semi final 6-2 6-0 and the final 6-0, 6-0, it's just incredible,' added Fissette. 'It's a beautiful story from struggling in Madrid and Rome. We still call it a successful Paris to go to the semis. That was the comeback and then peaking on the grass and winning our first trophy together.'

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24 minutes ago
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Sinner rises above adversity to make Italian history
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South Wales Argus
32 minutes ago
- South Wales Argus
Jannik Sinner puts memories of Paris to bed with scintillating Wimbledon win
Only five weeks have passed since Alcaraz stunningly saved three match points in a French Open final fightback for the ages but his hopes of a third straight victory in SW19 were dashed by his great rival. This time it was world number one Sinner, the first Italian to win a Wimbledon singles title, that came from behind, claiming a 4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 victory in three hours and four minutes – nearly two-and-a-half hours quicker than their Roland Garros epic. 'I think this is the part I'm the proudest of because it really has not been easy,' said Sinner, who only returned to the tour in May after serving a three-month doping ban. 'I always tried to be honest with me and had the self-talk too, what if, what if? I always tried to accept it. Things can happen. 'I believe if you lose a grand slam final that way, it's much better like this than someone kills you. Then after you keep going, keep pushing. 'I did a lot of intensity in every practice because I felt like I could play very good. That's why I also said after Roland Garros that it's not the time to put me down, because another grand slam is coming up, and I did great here.' Jannik Sinner celebrates his moment of victory (Adam Davy/PA) The victory puts their rivalry back on a knife edge, with the 23-year-old now trailing Alcaraz only by five slam titles to four and putting an end to a five-match losing streak against the Spaniard. It is also Sinner's first slam title away from his favoured hard courts, while Alcaraz suffered a first major final defeat, unable to find the same magic that had brought him back from the brink on the clay. A penny for the thoughts, meanwhile, of Grigor Dimitrov, who led Sinner by two sets to love in the fourth round only for his body to fail him. Australian Darren Cahill, who has coached Sinner for the last three years, explained: 'We didn't speak about Roland Garros within 24 hours after the match, because the way he played, the attitude that he had on court, the effort that he gave, it was faultless, and he was just beaten by a better player in the end. What a winner from Carlos Alcaraz for the first set! 🔥👉👂 Incredible entertainment here at SW19 💫#Wimbledon — BBC Sport (@BBCSport) July 13, 2025 'I think you could see that from the first match that he played that he wasn't carrying any baggage from Roland Garros. 'That's not easy to do. It's easy for us to say that in words, to put it to one side, but for the player to wipe it away and be able to come here with the mentality that he had is 100 per cent credit to him.' Alcaraz expected Sinner to reset quickly and come at him again, with the Spaniard saying: 'He didn't surprise me at all. Champions learn from the losses. 'I knew at the beginning that he was going to learn from that final, not going to make the same mistakes. The way he played today, it was really, really high.' Congratulations @janniksin for your first Wimbledon 🏆! Very well deserved! 🤝🏻 Thank you everyone for your support! 💚 I feel at home and it's really special to play here! 🫶🏻 See you all next year! — Carlos Alcaraz (@carlosalcaraz) July 13, 2025 There was an audible buzz around Centre Court as the pair warmed up, the sound of 15,000 people who could not believe their luck at having secured one of the hottest tickets in sport. Alcaraz fought back from 4-2 down to win the opening set, finishing it with a classic point where he turned defence into attack and somehow scrambled a backhand winner. But most of the champagne moments came from Sinner, who at one point was nearly struck by an errant cork. After breaking in the opening game, Sinner finished the second set with three outstanding winners, while in the third he played a tweener drop volley. Jannik Sinner plays a tweener volley (Jordan Pettitt/PA) Alcaraz was left on the floor as Sinner broke through in the third to lead 5-4, and he had one hand on the trophy when he moved further ahead early in the fourth. The crowd willed Alcaraz to conjure a Paris-style recovery, and the 22-year-old had two chances at 4-3, but this time it was Sinner's day. 'Today was important not just because it was a grand slam final, not just because it was Wimbledon, and not just because Carlos had won the last five matches against him,' said Cahill. Jannik Sinner celebrates his victory (John Walton/PA) 'He needed that win today. Today's match I think was a match of moments, of just who was going to step up in the big moment and make something happen. At Roland Garros it was Carlos, and today it was Jannik. So we could not be more proud of him.' Like Sinner five weeks ago, Alcaraz was able to find the positives, saying: 'It's always a bad feeling losing matches. I think it's a little bit even worse when you lose in a final. 'Overall I'm just really proud about everything I've done the last four weeks on grass here in London. I left the court with the head really, really, really high because I did everything that I could today.'