The result in the final says it all: Sfiontek without losing a game to the Wimbledon title

Amanda Anisimova falls short of the cup match at the unofficial world championship - 6:0, 6:0

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Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

Amanda Anisimova caused a sensation in the semifinals by defeating Arina Sabalenko, and in the Wimbledon final she was just a good sparring opponent for the player who was deciding the title on the London grass for the first time.

Iga Sfjontek won the first title of her career at the unofficial world championship in a historic duel in which her opponent offered almost no resistance - who could have expected such a thing considering the form the Pole was in in the first part of 2025...

It is also surprising that she won the trophy on a surface that is not her strong point, but also the way she did it - by not giving up a single game to the American, a debutant in a Grand Slam final.

"This is all a bit surreal - my first Wimbledon final, then my first trophy. I've won a lot of trophies, I'm already an experienced player, but I never believed I would win a title at this tournament," said Sfjontek.

Iga is the first Polish woman to win at Wimbledon, but also the second player in the Open era to reach a Grand Slam title without losing a game in the final.

Before her, Steffi Graf did it at Roland Garros in 1988.

The spectators barely took their seats in the stands of the Center Court when Iga made the difference to solve the first set, and as time went on (the match lasted 57 minutes), it became clear that Anisimova could not put together two good shots...

She had as many as 28 unforced errors, 17 more than her opponent, and only eight winners, two fewer than the new champion.

Amanda Anisimova
Amanda Anisimovaphoto: Reuters

"Iga is an incredible player and my inspiration throughout my career. I had a great tournament, but in the final it was just not my day. The result shows it," said a tearful Anisimova.

On Sunday (17 p.m.), Carlos Alcaraz and Janik Siner will meet in the men's singles grand final.

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