As Serena said, Watson was up a double break and had a point on her own serve to make it 4-0. Things were so dire that Serena’s mother, the famously unflappable and occasionally sleepy Oracene, was on the edge of her seat. This appeared to be the match that she had been waiting for the last 15 years to watch.
If it hadn’t been for a stray particle of chalk dust, Oracene may have had to watch her daughter lose. That’s about as much of the sideline that Serena’s smash caught when Watson had game point for 4-0. It should have been the easiest of putaways, but Serena, who was reeling at that stage, nearly managed to miss it.
Those are the shots that turning points are made of, and this match soon turned Serena’s way. She broke for 1-3, held for 2-3, and played one of the great games of her career to break again for 3-3. Watson began by going up 40-0; Serena hit two forehand winners to make it 40-30. On the third break point, you could see Serena’s confidence and her nerves dueling with every swing. Finally, confidence, as it usually does with her, won out. She pushed forward and terminated the rally with a backhand winner. Two points later, Serena broke with a swing volley winner and raised her first to her player’s box.
Yet it wasn't enough to bury Watson. The Brit recovered to hold for 4-4, break for 5-4, and then, serving for the match, save two break points to reach deuce. She was two points from the match. The ball was in her hand, the crowd was on its feet...but Serena was on the other side of the net. Watson never reached match point. Instead, a few minutes later, she found herself facing three of them. On the last, her short-hop backhand from the baseline flew long. It was one of the few loose shots Watson had hit in the last hour.
Watson betrayed little emotion on court, and claimed no moral victories afterward.
“I was two points away from winning that match, so I’m pretty disappointed,” she said. “The atmosphere was fantastic and pushed me on, but I just wished I could have closed it out.”
Asked if this had been the best she had ever played, Watson said, “I wouldn’t call losing the greatest day of my career.”
Before the tournament, I wrote that, at some point, a sluggish start, a mid-match lull, or an attack of nerves would cost Serena. Today she was a chalk-dust particle away, but sometimes that's all you need in tennis.