Wondering what the Tournament of Champions is, and how we got here? Read more about our 50th Anniversary Celebration and get caught up on all the matches so far.
Our women’s final pits the two most accomplished Grand Slam champions of the Open era against each other. Graf’s 22 majors, the most by any woman since 1968, once looked like an unassailable number; that is, until Williams began to assail it. As of this writing, Serena was three behind.
As with our men’s final, between Roger Federer and Pete Sampras, Graf vs. Williams pits the last great player of the 20th century against the first great player of the 21st. And as with Pete and Roger, their careers overlapped just long enough for the torch to be passed from an aging legend to a future one.
Graf and Williams split their only two meetings, in 1999. At the start of the year in Sydney, a 29-year-old Graf beat a 17-year-old Williams; that spring, Williams reversed the result over three sets in Indian Wells. Up to that point, Serena had been the second best player in her family; when the match was over, she was officially out of her sister Venus’ shadow, and on her to way to stardom. Two months later, Graf won the French Open, the last of her 22 Slams; three months after that, Williams won the U.S. Open, the first of her 19.
Unlike so many of the other match-ups in this tournament, Graf and Williams in their primes would not have offered a distinct contrast in styles. This would have been power vs. power, speed vs. speed, killer forehand vs. killer forehand, big serve vs. big serve, iron will vs. iron will. Even the key to their success of these two women was essentially the same: It’s hard to think of anyone who detested losing more than Serena or Steffi. “Steffi’s game matches up well with Serena’s,” former No. 1 Chris Evert says. “She was also extremely mentally tough and could cover the court as well as, if not better than, Serena.”