Tennis world erupts after epic 21-year French Open first
Barbora Krejcikova is being hailed across the tennis world after joining an elite group by completing a rare grand slam double at the French Open.
Fresh from claiming her maiden major singles title against Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the women's final, the Czech backed up less than 24 hours later to win the doubles title with compatriot, Katerina Siniakova.
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The pair swept aside Poland's 2020 singles champ Iga Swiatek and American veteran Bethanie Mattek-Sands 6-4 6-2.
It not only made Krejcikova the first woman to complete the 'double' at the same Roland Garros championships since Mary Pierce in 2000 but victory will also elevate her back to the top of the rankings as the world's No.1 doubles player.
The 25-year-old is also just the seventh woman in the history of the Open era to achieve the singles-double feat at Roland Garros, with Krejcikova taking her place in an illustrious list that contains a who's who of women's tennis.
Other players to have won both the singles and doubles trophies at Roland Garros include legends Billie Jean King (1972), Margaret Court (1973), Chris Evert (1974-75), Virginia Ruzici (1978), Martina Navratilova (1982, 1984) and Pierce (2000).
The remarkable accomplishment was not lost on tennis fans, who inundated social media with praise for the Czech star.
Women to complete the Paris double 👇
King
Court
Evert
Ruzici
Navratilova
Pierce
*Krejcikova*
That’s some illustrious company, @BKrejcikova. #RolandGarros pic.twitter.com/a9JA53qACQ— Roland-Garros (@rolandgarros) June 13, 2021
Krejcikova does the double. Story of the year so far.
Super happy for her :) #RolandGarros— Rohit Suresh (@rohitkadaksures) June 13, 2021
Barbora Krejčíkova, the unseeded winner of the Women's Singles French Open yesterday, also won the Women's Double title today.
6 Grand Slam titles in doubles, her first in singles, but to win two tournaments at the same time is exceptional and hopefully will be covered.— Cherry's Cheat Sheets (@CheatSheetGuy) June 13, 2021
Barbora krejcikova has won the women’s double trophy in the French open less than 24hours of winning her first Gramd Slam title. She’s the first woman to win both trophies in 21years. #FrenchOpen #BarboraKrejcikova pic.twitter.com/tYy8NVwS4i
— IBEsports (@IBEsportsnews) June 13, 2021
I'm not a tennis fan but Krejcikova winning French open in single and double got me good. Congratulations!!
— no (@violetfrut) June 13, 2021
Impressive from Barbora Krejcikova... Anyone who knows anything about tennis knows how hard it it to win both the singles and doubles titles. Next to impossible. An incredible achievement. https://t.co/sAtEfjK9Ta
— Mr Foxnose (@asymmetricalpha) June 13, 2021
Ya.. That's some elite club and and it takes something special to be there. Congratulations...👍
— Pu$hkar Joshi (@Masterblessings) June 13, 2021
Czech duo too good for fledgling pairing
For Krejcikova and her doubles partner Siniakova, it was a third grand slam doubles title after the pair won Wimbledon and the French Open in 2018.
Krejcikova and Siniakova, the No.2 seeds, proved far too accomplished for the raw but exciting pairing of Swiatek and Mattek-Sands, who'd made the final in just their third tournament together.
After racing to a 4-0 lead in the opening set, the Czech mates, who've been a brilliant partnership ever since winning the junior titles together at Roland Garros eight years ago, continued to outplay the Polish-US combination.
Krejcikova and Siniakova, who had been beaten in the final of the Australian Open in February, made no mistake this time with Siniakova, brilliant at the net throughout, cracking the final backhand winner after just 74 minutes.
It completed a wonderful tournament for Krejcikova, who was on court for 23-and-a-half hours all told over the fortnight, having played in 15 matches.
Three weeks ago, Krejcikova had never won a singles title but following her first WTA triumph in Strasbourg, she was left practically in a state of disbelief on Saturday after adding her maiden slam singles title.
She reckoned she had been inspired by the memory of her late mentor and coach Jana Novotna, saying that she felt the former Wimbledon champion, who had died of cancer in 2017 aged 49, had been guiding her throughout the slam.
with agencies
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