“Everybody starts from zero,” a grim but relieved Garbiñe Muguruza said after her first-round, razor-thin 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 win over Camila Giorgi at Wimbledon on Monday. “It’s a special surface.”
Did we detect just a little bit of sarcasm behind that word, “special”? If so, it was easy to understand why Muguruza would have her reservations about the grass at the All England Club. Following two weeks of very successful tennis on clay in Paris, where she won her first major title, Muguruza was thrown to the wolves, or at least the blades, of Centre Court in her opener. She was playing the second match of the fortnight there, which meant the unscarred turf was still lush and slippery. And in Giorgi, she was playing an opponent whose arrythmic, go-big-or-go-home game is tailor-made for a speedy surface like that.
“Wimbledon is a tricky tournament, the grass can give you a surprise sometimes,” Muguruza said—that hint of sarcasm still hadn’t left her voice. “The matches are more equal.”
For Muguruza, this one was a little too equal for comfort. Over the course of 20 minutes or so at the end of the second set and the start of the third, it appeared to be turning into the match of the No. 2 seed’s nightmares. Giorgi was finding the corners with her ultra-flat, ultra-hard ground strokes; one of the Italian’s forehands was clocked at 89 M.P.H.., not bad for someone listed at 119 pounds.