Well, it was business as usual for the world's
No. 1 tennis stars at the 2015 Australian Open.
Serena Williams
and Novak Djokovic entered the first Grand Slam event of the year as the top
seeds and the favorites ... and they however did not disappoint their fans.
The unstoppable
Serena Williams captured her 19th career Grand Slam singles title by handling
"rival" and former No. 1 star Maria Sharapova in straight sets in the
women's final, while Djokovic conquered his good friend Andy Murray for a third
time in the men's Down Under finale.
Serena has now
gotten the better of Sharapova in two Aussie finals and hasn't lost to the
Russian woman anywhere in 11 years (16 straight wins). The reigning French Open
champion Sharapova is a former Aussie champ who has now lost in three finals in
Melbourne.
Murray dropped to
0-4 in his career Aussie finals, including 0-3 versus the high-flying Djokovic.
The 33-year-old
Serena is now the reigning U.S. and Aussie Open champ after nailing down an
incredible Open Era-record sixth Aussie title, while the 27- year-old Djokovic
now holds the Wimbledon and Aussie crowns after securing his men's Open
Era-record fifth Down Under championship.
Serena improved to
6-0 in her career Aussie finals, while Djokovic is 5-0 in his, including four
titles there over the last five years.
Serena actually
ran the table in Melbourne for the first time in five years.
Oddly enough, the
Aussie also marked the first time that both Serena and Djokovic came out on top
at the same Slam.
Serena surpassed
Chris Evert (18) and Martina Navratilova (18) for the second- most Grand Slam
titles in the Open Era, with only Steffi Graf (22) standing in her way to
tennis immortality. The great Margaret Court is the all-time leader with 24
major championships, but only 11 of those came during the Open Era (or since
1968).
"I would love
to get to 22," Serena said. "I mean 19 was very difficult to get to. It
took me 33 years to get here, so I would love to get there. Wishing her the
best.
"But I have
to get to 20 first, and then I have to get to 21. There are so many wonderful
young players coming up, so it will be a very big task."
With his victory,
Djokovic joined legends Jimmy Connors, Ivan Lendl and Andre Agassi as an
eight-time Grand Slam champ in the Open Era. That exclusive list is paced by
Roger Federer (17), Pete Sampras (14), Rafael Nadal (14) and my tennis hero,
Bjorn Borg (11).
Serena now has 65
career titles on the WTA, while Djokovic boasts 49.
Serena already has
the career Grand Slam (all four major titles), while Djokovic still needs a
French Open to complete his major resume.
Did You Know?: The
last time Djokovic failed to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal was at the 2009
French Open.
Djokovic is 3,800
points clear at the top of the ATP World rankings following his latest success
in Oz. The Serbian star is well ahead of second-ranked Roger Federer, who lost
ground to Djokovic with a stunning third-round exit in Melbourne.
Serena is 1,566
points ahead of Sharapova in the WTA rankings.
Serena is probably
the early favorite for the next major - the French Open, beginning May 24 -
while Djokovic may still have to take a backseat to the incomparable Nadal on
the clay. Obviously, that's the one tournament the Serb desperately wants to
win from here on out.
Culled From SportsNetwork.com
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