IGA SWIATEK (Pol, 8) v AMANDA ANISIMOVA (ZDA, 13) 6:0, 6:0

Polish Iga Swiatek won the famous Wimbledon tennis tournament for the first time in her career. In the final, she completely outplayed American Amanda Anisimova. The eighth seed needed less than an hour to win. After a great performance, she tied her opponent in both sets! The last time such a result was achieved in a women's final in London was 114 years ago.
On the centre court, the 8th and 13th seeds of the tournament competed. Both were chasing their first tournament victory at Wimbledon, the most prestigious tournament on the tennis tour, and in the end, Polish Iga Swiatek was the one to rejoice. Wimbledon has won a new winner for the eighth year in a row, and the Polish woman needed only 57 minutes to win the final. She won 6:0 and 6:0.
For Iga Swiatek, this was her sixth final at a Grand Slam tournament. She has maintained an exceptional unbeaten streak in major finals, having already won the French Open four times, and became the first Polish woman in history to win Wimbledon. This was her 23rd title in 28 finals.
The 24-year-old from Warsaw has never played so well on grass in her career. Before Wimbledon, she was in the final of the tournament in Bad Homburg and consequently came to the sacred grass with confidence. In the semi-finals, Swiatek also lost just two games against Swiss Belinda Bencic (6:2, 6:0), and she lost her only set at this year's Wimbledon in the 2nd round to American Caty McNally.
On the other hand, Amanda Anisimova lived a tennis fairy tale at Wimbledon this year, after playing in the qualifiers last year. This year, she fought for the prestigious title for the first time and thus broke into the top ten players in the world. The American, who was helpless in the final and did not win a single game, also has a special (tragic) family story behind her.
The two players met for the first time at the professional level in the Wimbledon final, and before that they met in the youth competition in 2016, when Swiatek won the youth version of the Billie Jean King Cup.
In addition to the prestigious title, the winner also received two thousand points for the WTA ranking and a prize of three million pounds (3.47 million euros). Swiatek climbed to third place in the world rankings.
Thank you Iga, your six time Grand Slam final - your six trophy! Your dream come for real and you get the trophy you dreamed about so much.
You were, you are, and you always be in our hearts, we are proud being one of your sponsors!



