Home > Tennis > Steffi Graf's magnificent seven make her the greatest Wimbledon champion
by sayan das on 12 June 2008
Email this Article (3) Comments
Free £25 bet when you register at
It has been rightly said that nothing is as strong as gentleness and nothing is as gentle as true strength. Women tennis players have consistently traversed the said path with quiet dignity, rebellious intent for equality and a carefully crafted public image of femininity and gracious sportsmanship. A few have always stood out for such qualities and have shone brilliantly at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships.
Among the greats who are the possible nominees for the title of the best Wimbledon woman champion of all time are Althea Gibson, Billie Jean King, Margaret Court, Chris Evert, Martina Navratilova, Steffi Graf and Venus Williams. Of all these wonderfully talented 'artists on the court', I believe that Graf is the one who stands out for sheer brilliance, immense athleticism, true professionalism and faultless passion.
Graf had a game which possessed true power, but was absolutely gentle in its craft. Then again her true gentleness was never devoid of power and a certain amount of ruthlessness. This was the story of the greatest female champion at Wimbledon.
Though Martina Navratilova won a record-breaking nine titles on the hallowed grass courts and Helen Wills Moody achieved eight championships, I will always hold Graf's seven titles as the best performance amongst the women. In modern times Venus Williams has ruled Wimbledon with four crowns but she has some lengths to go to attain the hallmark of the greatest Wimbledon champion ever.
Though Navratilova won Wimbledon at the peak of her rivalry against Chris Evert, Steffi overcame stiff competition from the American legend, from Monica Seles, from the glamorous under-achiever Gabriela Sabatini, from the gifted but mentally fragile Jana Novotna and from the brilliantly tenacious Arantxa Sanchez Vicario to win her seven titles.
Though her record stands blemished with the sudden absence of Monica Seles in the early '90s, still her latter wins came when women's tennis was seeing an upsurge of young talent. Her seamless domination from the back of the court at Wimbledon saw a transition from the equally powerful serve and volley game practised to perfection by Navratilova.
Her superlative forehand, whacked late, sometimes completely out of position and executing angles not known to exist, did well to conceal her weaker backhand slice while her beautiful serve built a fortress around her game which had few weaknesses. Her court coverage is certainly legendary and equally distinct. Never have we seen any woman since Graf navigate the court with such ease, refinement and spotless perfection.
Her stern resolve would flare at her favourite Grand Slam where she gave her best performances and certainly the most ruthless. In 1988 she finally defeated the great Navratilova in three gruelling sets for her first title. The 1991 title came at the expense of Sabatini who herself was close to winning the title on several occasions during the match. 1992 saw the German great beat her superlative rival Seles in another three-set wonder. 1993 witnessed the spectacular meltdown of Novotna after a winning lead which made the match a classic come-from-behind victory for Graf. And 1995 saw her battle the extremely stubborn Sanchez Vicario in a three-set classic encounter.
Graf is part of an equally great company of players. Billie Jean King fought for equality for women while she racked up 19 crowns, Navratilove went on into her 40s to garner 20 such titles. Venus Williams and Althea Gibson broke the colour barrier and records with superlative displays of tennis. Equally gifted were Margaret Court and Chris Evert.
Then again, we have to choose one, and I believe Graf was the greatest female tennis player of the past century and remains the greatest Wimbledon champion.
Comments (3)
by Angus Mc Clernand on May 19, 2009
I wholly agree with you. Steffi's seven titles at Wimbledon more than worth 10 titles like those captured by Navratilova, and this for (at least) two reasons : - Navratilova was practically without true rival at Wimbledon (her toughest opponent, Chris Evert, wasn't actually a grass player) while Steffi had to face so many fierce competitors, like Navratilova herself (whom she beat by 2 finals out of 3), Jana Novotna (who was so dreadful on grass), Monica Seles (whom she beat 2 times out of 2), Gabriela Sabatini, Jennifer Capriati, Arantxa Sanchez (don't forget the incredible fight of 95)or Venus Williams - Steffi won all her titles while her game didn't actually suit grass, fundamentally (she used to play mostly from the baseline) whereas Navratilova was on her best ground on grass, with her natural serve-and-volley game. And whenever she met Monica on grass, she beat her fair and square : 6/1 6/0 in 89 ; 6/1 6/2 in 92, after less than one hour of effective game. This final remains by far the easiest one she has ever won at the All England Club (though Monica was at her peak, then)
by Ferheen Sha on June 03, 2009
I am a huge Graf fan.. and I believe she is the greatest tennis player of all times... but you just cant overlook Martina's 9 Wimbledon titles... 9 > 7 anyway you look at it.. At Wimbledon Martina is the greatest. Steffi is the greatest when you combine the four majors... no other player has dominated on all four surfaces like Graf did... Plus Steffi is probably the only player who would dominate in any era.. Her game is a perfect mix between power and finesse.. The current crop of players would be miserable with a wooden racket and players from the wooden racket era would be completely overpowered today.. Martina Navratilova wouldnt be as effective as she was in her era, because it would be very very difficult for her to impose her serve and vlley game with the kind of power todays womens tennis has..
by Angus Mc Clernand on June 08, 2009
I totally respect your opinion, Ferheen. However, I think Sayan'point has quite firm grounds. Quantity is one thing, quality is another one. And, in my opinion, Steffi's 7 titles at Wimbledon actually worth 10 like those captured by Navratilova, (as her 6 titles at the FO actually worth 10 like those captured by Evert) considering the difference of opposition. Besides, I am pretty sure Steffi would have won more than 9 titles, if she hadn't been so unlucky at times (in 1990, she had to face very tough private problems, and in 1999, she had to play her semi-final and her final overnight, because of the rain, while she had had a much harder draw than Davenport to overcome, and while she was already 30). It shouldn't be forgotten either that Steffi stopped her career at 30, while Navratilova only retired at 38.
Add your comment here
PERSONAL ABUSE WILL NOT BE TOLERATED
First Name
Last Name
Email
Heading
Display your favourite sport or football team badge with your comment.
Sport
League
Team
Comment *
Please enter the text you see in the picture into the textbox below. *
Owen's no gamble - Liverpool's former goal-den boy could be a Manchester United bargain
Galaxies apart: Why David Beckham is NOT the pride of Landon (Landon Donovan, that is)
TEN reasons why South Africa's Peter de Villiers is rugby union's greatest
Arsenal Champions League Chelsea Cricket news Euroleague Fantasy football Football news Formula 1 Liverpool Manchester United NBA Newcastle United Premier League Sports news Tottenham Hotspur Transfer rumours Twenty20 UEFA UEFA Champions League
© SportBuzz All rights reserved 2008 Sportingo- Sports News & Sports Articles site. Sportingo delivers fresh sports news and analysis by fans-Football News, Tennis News, Rugby Union News, Rugby League, Cricket News, Cycling News, Basketball News and other Sports TV. XML Sitemap 2008.