Getty Images
For this finale, Halep and Rybakina tested each other’s stamina and dynamism by packing in continuous twists and bends: Halep, after losing the first set and trailing by an early break in the decider, saw her shot to serve out the match at 6-5 denied by the 20-year-old Kazakh. Rybakina opened a 4-3 mini-break lead in the final-set tiebreaker, but Halep’s remarkable resolve once again allowed her to complete the final turn of an enthralling presentation between two counterpoints and celebrate her 20th tour-level title.
“I always had in my mind that I have to be consistent. I didn't like the way that you win a tournament and then you don't do anything for a few months,” said Halep, who was spending her 317th week inside the Top 10. “I liked to build my power, to build my consistency every week. Since I met Darren (Cahill), I thought that we just have to look at the big picture, not just at that week.
“I think this makes me more proud than winning titles because if you are able to be there means that you have everything like power, strong mental, physical also, very strong.”
The coronavirus pandemic would halt Halep’s opportunity to see where her consistency-first approach would take her next, though it offered the 29-year-old the chance to nurse a right foot injury on her own timeline. Her Wimbledon title defense was pushed back a year, as the AELTC canceled the grass-court major for the first time since 1945. When the WTA was set to reopen in Palermo, Halep withdrew citing travel concerns and rising COVID-19 cases in Romania. She traveled to Prague the following week and officially resumed on August 11 against Polona Hercog.
In a symmetric continuation of Dubai, Halep navigated her way through a final-set tiebreaker to win her season debut on clay after needing seven match points to close out Hercog. She next found her way past Barbora Krejcikova, rallying from a set and a break down in an effort she admitted, “wasn’t a very good level from me.”
But after two rounds, Halep shook off the rust. Rhythm took over for the next six sets, with the reward of adding to her trophy cabinet. Elise Mertens, who ultimately would go on to win more matches than any other WTA player in 2020, finished runner-up.
“This is a definitely a smaller tournament than the previous ones. But it meant more because we are coming after a six-month break, and I didn’t know what to expect,” Halep told us after her victory.
Halep would skip the US Open, joining seven other Top 10 women who opted out of making the trip to Flushing Meadows. She stayed in Europe, continuing to train on clay in hopes of claiming a crown that had evaded her in the past: Rome. In her road to achieving that dream, thwarting the last woman who upstaged her, Muguruza, became reality.