As Wimbledon comes to a close, we're counting down the 10 most memorable matches at the All England Club over the last 50 years.
“Women’s tennis, maligned and belittled for two weeks at Wimbledon, reared up and struck back on Saturday, at its most opportune moment.”
Those words may sound familiar to WTA fans today, but they were written 23 years ago, in the Los Angeles Times’ recap of the classic, but somehow largely forgotten, 1995 final between Graf and Sanchez Vicario at the All England Club.
During that fortnight, the London press had pilloried the WTA’s players for being overweight and unfit, and for playing a “boring” brand of tennis. Graf and Sanchez Vicario closed the tournament with the perfect response: a two hour, two minute test of wills, skills, nerves, and, yes, fitness that was never dull. It was the 14th straight final between the German and the Spaniard, and they capped it with what many have called the greatest game ever played.
Graf and Sanchez Vicario were the No. 1 and 2 seeds, and they had already traded the top ranking back and forth six times that year. The previous fall, Sanchez Vicario had upset Graf for the US Open title, while Graf had avenged herself at the French Open that spring. As always, those finals brought out the brilliant contrasts between these two: The long-limbed German leaped and launched her bolo-punch forehand, then bent and buzzed her slice backhand. The scrappy, scrambling, grunting Spaniard did whatever it took—slice, stab, loop, drop shot, lob—to force Steffi to launch one more ground stroke.
This time, though, Sanchez Vicario was the one who came out firing. She was the one who moved forward, pounded her forehand into the corners, showed off her underrated touch at net, and lost just four points on serve in taking the first set, 6-4, in a crisp 30 minutes. Graf, as always, answered in the second set. In the third, both women rose to the occasion, as they pushed and pulled each other across the fast-browning grass.
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