On this day: Born June 14, 1969:
Steffi Graf, German tennis player
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[June 13, 2020]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - The pursuit of
perfection in tennis has proved beyond all but one player in the
modern era, Germany's Steffi Graf.
During her 17-year career Graf collected 22 Grand Slam singles
titles and spent a record 377 weeks as world number one.
Yet when reviewing Graf's impact on her sport, there is only one
place to start -- 1988.
It was the year a 19-year-old Graf won the Australian Open, French
Open, Wimbledon, U.S. Open and Olympics. The Golden Slam.
American Serena Williams now owns a modern-era record 23 Grand Slam
singles titles and Roger Federer is, for many, the greatest player,
man or woman, to wield a tennis racket.
Neither have managed a year quite like that.
Women's tennis for much of the 1980s was dominated by the iconic
rivalry between Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert.
A frizzy-haired girl from Mannheim had already begun turning heads
in 1982 -- the year Graf debuted on the WTA Tour aged 13.
By 1985 she was in the world's top 10 and in 1987 beat Navratilova
to win the French Open.
While so many teen upstarts at the time suffered burnout, Graf's
all-round game, perfect tennis physique and mental stability ensured
she would withstand the rigours of the sport.
Her preference for a classic, underspin backhand was a nod to former
greats, but a whiplash forehand and heavy serving, were tailor-made
for the emerging power game.
Graf began 1988 by winning the Australian Open without the loss of a
set, beating Evert in the final. In the French Open final she
thrashed unfortunate Russian teenager Natasha Zvereva 6-0 6-0 in 32
minutes -- the shortest Grand Slam final.
Weeks later at Wimbledon "Fraulein Forehand", the moniker bestowed
on her by tennis writer Bud Collins, dethroned Wimbledon queen
Navratilova, reversing her 1987 final loss, before clinching the
women's doubles title to boot.
"This is the end of a chapter, passing the torch if you want to call
it that," Navratilova remarked at the time.
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Germany's Steffi Graf and
her husband Andre Agassi of the U.S. are pictured during their mixed
doubles exhibition tennis match against Czech Republic's Jiri Novak
and Jana Novotna in Prague June 7, 2011. Picture taken June 7.
REUTERS/David W Cerny
At the U.S. Open, Graf scythed through to the final where she beat
elegant Argentine Gabriela Sabatini to become only the fifth player
to complete the fabled 'calendar year' Grand Slam and the only
player to do it on hard, clay and grass.
Gordon Jorgensen, then president of the USTA, gave Graf a bracelet
with four diamonds to mark her feat and a few weeks later in Seoul
it was gold after beating Sabatini again in the Olympic singles
final.
With Evert retiring and Navratilova waning, Graf was totally
dominant and would have won back-to-back Grand Slams had it not been
for gritty Spaniard Arantxa Sanchez Vicario who beat her in the 1989
French Open final.
Graf needed a natural rivalry and in the emergence of Yugoslav
teenager Monica Seles she found one, and some.
Seles, only 16, snapped Graf's 66-match winning streak by beating
her in her own backyard at the 1990 German Open, and a few weeks
later beat her again in the French Open final.
In 1991-1992 Seles claimed six Grand Slam titles to Graf's two and
also beat her in the 1993 Australian Open final. Sadly the rivalry
came to an almost tragic end months later when a deranged fan
stabbed Seles at a tournament in Hamburg.
Graf won the remaining Slams in 1993 and also won three of the four
in 1995 and 1996 before Martina Hingis emerged.
Even when the inevitable slide began there was still one last
flourish as Graf beat Hingis in a stormy 1999 French Open final,
months before she retired, aged 30, to begin a new life with
American great Andre Agassi whom she married in 2001.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Toby Davis)
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