The post-Justine Henin era has officially begun. Newly anointed world No.1 Ana Ivanovic completed a jubilant week at the French Open, defeating Dinara Safina 6-4, 6-3 in the final. She is the first Serbian woman to win a Grand Slam singles final.

In 2007, here at Roland Garros, Ivanovic was embarrassed by Henin 6-1, 6-2. In January, Maria Sharapova ruined Ivanovic's second major final in Melbourne with a 7-5, 6-3 defeat.

Ivanovic, through the tears, took these devastating losses to heart. "When I went to play these finals I was thinking more about result – what if I win this match, not what I have to do to win the match," she said on Friday, the day before her third Grand Slam final. "So that's something I want to change. Tomorrow, when I go on the court, keep working hard for each point."

‘Seeing Safina – playing in her first Grand Slam final – across the net had a soothing effect, for Ivanovic saw herself’


Part of her, she reiterated on Saturday, was already thinking of holding the trophy.

This time, Ivanovic never got too far ahead of herself. Point by point, game by game she built a grinding 6-4, 6-3 victory over Safina. Seeing Safina – playing in her first Grand Slam final – across the net had a soothing effect, for Ivanovic saw herself.

"When I was in the court, I realised she was nervous," Ivanovic said. "It made me more calm because I had that experience."

Ivanovic, with her fresh, Catherine Zeta-Jones-ish features, is now on top of the women's tennis world. Not only has she earned her first Grand Slam singles title, but tomorrow she will become the No.1 player when the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour singles rankings are updated.

"You want to make one more step and win a title," Ivanovic said. "Obviously, there were a lot of emotions inside, but until the last point I tried to [not] think about the occasion."

Ivanovic is not, it turns out, too nice to win a major championship.

And after the last shot trickled off Safina's racket, after Ivanovic had buried her face in her hands and hugged Safina at the net, Ivanovic looked truly tentative for the first time. She paused, trying to imagine a path to the people in her box. Eventually, she stepped up on to a rickety linesperson's chair, negotiated the railing and was engulfed by coaches, family and friends.

The first set was an appropriate opportunity for Ivanovic to collapse as she had against Henin and Sharapova. She was up a break and serving at 40-love when Safina exerted herself and broke back to level the match at 4-4. But Ivanovic never stopped firing those huge ground strokes. She broke Safina back and then held at 5-4 in the best game of the match. Ivanovic blew a set point, then saved a game point, then thundered another forehand that Safina could not keep in the court.

Safina, who was also seeking her first Grand Slam title, has worked hard to improve her on-court demeanour. It worked gloriously in the last two tournaments that saw her win 12 straight matches and send home six top-10 players. She even survived match points here against Sharapova and Elena Dementieva. But when Ivanovic broke her serve in the third game of the second set, the racket was sent bouncing into the dirt and the flow of the Russian's self-flagellation increased.

This is not to say there weren't flashes of nerves.

Serving at 3-2 in the second set, Ivanovic started tightening up. She double-faulted on game point and pushed a fragile backhand into the net. On the 13th and 14th points, Ivanovic escaped when Safina sent back-to-back forehands wide. In the end, Safina simply did not have another three-set comeback in her.

"I didn't have any more of that fire that I had in those matches," she said. "I was just, I think, tired."

That the championship trophies were awarded by Henin was appropriate. Henin, who won the last three titles here at Roland Garros, retired before she could win a record fourth and fifth overall. Did she see this coming? Perhaps. Henin wore a jacket that was precisely the same colour as Ivanovic's boiled-lobster-red dress. Henin, giving more than six inches to each player, looked tiny standing between Safina and Ivanovic.

When the strains of Serbia's national anthem wafted over Court Philippe Chatrier, tears welled in Ivanovic's eyes. When it was over, there was a new world order. For the first time ever, a Serbian player – not an American, Belgian, Russian or Swiss – is No.1 in the world. The new top five will feature two Serbs (Ivanovic and Jelena Jankovic and three Russians (Svetlana Kuznetsova, Sharapova and Dementieva).

In January, Novak Djokovic won the Australian men’s title for a war-torn country not know for its tennis. Now, Ivanovic is Serbia's first No.1 player. These events are not random occurrences.

"Going into today's final, I thought of his victory earlier this year," she said. "And I thought, 'Why not? I can win a title as well.'

"It's something that motivates us, and I'm sure he will also reach his goal of being No.1 one day. I feel so happy. It's my incentive to keep working hard, so I can win more."