| Germany's Steffi Graf won the Wimbledon Singles crown
seven times in a stellar career that included a Golden
Grand Slam in 1988.
Steffi Graf was definitely the player of her era,
dominating the women’s game for over a decade
to win 22 singles Grand Slam titles. That’s
four more than Martina Navratilova collected, though
the ex-Czech totalled many more when you bring her
doubles achievements into the equation.
Hailing from Bruhl in Germany, the 5’9”
Graf first came onto the Grand Slam scene in 1983
aged 14. Two years later her potential became evident
as she reached the last four of the US Open, a few
months after I first met her at her family home. Looking
back I can remember feeling that here was someone
destined for the big time. Whilst quiet and modest,
an underlying determination was always evident.
She revealed then that she had only played on grass
“about four times”, and, whilst a keen
admirer of Wimbledon champions Martina Navratilova
– “I think her game is perfect" –
plus Jimmy Connors’ “fighting qualities”
and John McEnroe’s “touch and feel”,
she didn’t expect to make much of an impact
at SW19 for a few years to come.
And she was right. She won The Championships for
the first time in 1988, having reached the final of
all the five previous Slams, losing just two of them.
That year was to prove her greatest year. She not
only made the Grand Slam – winning all four
majors in a calendar year, only the third woman to
do so – she turned it into a Golden Slam by
taking the Olympic title when tennis returned to the
Games in Seoul.
She reigned as world no. 1 for a record 377 weeks
and in total won 106 tour titles, all contributing
to her US$21,895,277 prize-money fortune. She was
named World Champion by the International Tennis Federation
on seven occasions, another record.
Injuries started to affect her career in 1996 and
during the ensuing years she underwent a series of
operations to remove bone chips in her left knee and
both feet. Chronic back pain also hampered her during
this period but she eventually retired when she was
beaten in a second round match by Amy Frazier in San
Diego, in August 1999.
Her fans remain numerous and it was one of her more
fanatical ones that shocked the world in April 1993
when he stabbed Monica Seles in the back during a
change-over in a match played in Hamburg in order
to help Graf regain the world number-one slot.
She won Wimbledon seven times and her last appearance
at a Slam was at the 1999 final, when she lost in
straight sets to Lindsay Davenport. She refused to
confirm it would be her last Wimbledon and when later
asked why she hadn’t, she simply replied: “It
was Lindsay’s day.”
However, a few weeks earlier she had won the French
for a sixth time in a classic encounter, destroying
Martina Hingis 6-2 in the third set. It proved to
be a traumatic experience for the Swiss, then No.1
in the world, who had come within three points of
winning her first Roland Garros title. Hingis never
recovered, losing in the first round of The Championships
four weeks later.
Graf married Andre Agassi in October 2001 and gave
birth to a son later that same month, announcing recently
that she was carrying their second child.
As expected, on her retirement and subsequent marriage,
Graf has avoided the limelight, preferring to watch
her husband in action from the stands whenever possible.
There has been no mention of any form of comeback,
though she was ranked three when she announced her
retirement. But a buzz of excitement was felt in tennis
circles when her husband announced, during Melbourne
last January, that she had agreed to play Mixed Doubles
with him at the French Open should he go on to win
the Australian Open singles. He did, but was then
forced to admit she hadn’t agreed and would
not play!
A determined lady who never abused her position and
was always considerate of others; admired world-wide
for her graciousness in defeat and victory, she is
sorely missed on the pro circuit. And the stroke which
proved her most striking weapon, her sledgehammer
forehand, has assured her of a place in tennis history.
STEFFI GRAF
Singles Champion: 1988, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996
Singles Runner-up: 1987, 1999
Doubles Champion: 1988 |