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Serena Williams of the U.S celebrates after winning the first set Angelique Kerber of Germany during the women's singles final on day thirteen of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Saturday, July 9, 2016. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
Serena Williams of the U.S celebrates after winning the first set Angelique Kerber of Germany during the women's singles final on day thirteen of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Saturday, July 9, 2016. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)Ben Curtis/Associated Press

Serena Williams vs. Angelique Kerber: 2016 Wimbledon Women's Final Score, Recap

Tom SunderlandJul 9, 2016

Serena Williams defeated Angelique Kerber 7-5, 6-3 to clinch the Wimbledon 2016 title on Saturday, successfully defending her SW19 crown and claiming her first major victory in 12 months.

Saturday's win also meant Williams equalled Steffi Graf's record for the most Open era Grand Slam titles won by a female player. The official Wimbledon Twitter account provided this photo of an elated Williams:

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Kerber put up a resilient fight against the world No.1, but Williams' serving prowess was ultimately too much for the German to replicate the upset that saw her win the same fixture at this year's Australian Open.

The serve was always going to be a key component of Saturday's showdown on Centre Court. Kerber came close to losing hers at the first time of asking after letting her foe serve first, saving three break points to stay level.

The two combatants traded early blows, and it looked as though the German could have fallen behind at several junctures. Her opponent was just generous enough, per tennis writer Matt Zemek:

The longer rallies proved to be Williams' playing field, and it was often Kerber whose shots looked forceful as points wore on. Still, the pair remained evenly poised after six games in the first set.

The official Wimbledon Twitter account posted evidence of just how impressive the world No. 1 was in the early exchanges:

There was some concern when Williams suffered a slip in the ninth game after her toes got caught on the playing surface and she appeared to roll her ankle. However, it seemed to have little impact as the score trickled to five games apiece.

The top seed timed the first break of the match to perfection. Despite Kerber saving a set point at 40-15 down, Williams booked the vital lead.

BBC Sport depicted just how elated she was:

It was a forceful way to end the opening set for Williams, but the metronomic exchange of points continued into the second. Kerber held her own to remain level at 1-1 and even showed more adventure on her return.

Williams inched ahead by a game after a powerful serving display, but Kerber garnered huge noise from Centre Court with a thunderous double backhand down the line.

Podcaster Jonathan Newman praised her endeavour:

Kerber brought the best out of the tournament favourite, and Williams looked almost superhuman at times in her ability to predict the German's path of play en route to the pair tying at 3-3.

In the seventh game of the second, Kerber snatched a 40-30 lead for the first time in the match. Williams was at risk of conceding a break for the first time, but still the American thundered back with three points in succession to end the challenge all too swiftly.

The fourth seed pulled out some of the more spectacular shots against such an irrepressible force, but time and again it seemed to be a case of one step forward and two back for Kerber.

The pivotal break came when a rare, wild error from the German saw Williams steamroll ahead at 5-3 before serving out the win, and what a deserved victory it was:

Williams' first victory of 2016 finally brings in a cherished 22nd major title, level with Graf, but the pressure is now on to see if she can finish the year stronger than the fashion in which she began it.

For the third time in her career, Williams has sealed back-to-back Wimbledon titles, and it would mark a first for the American if she could complete the hat-trick in 2017.

Post-Match Reaction

Kerber was humble in defeat to Williams.

After tying Graf's Open era record for Grand Slam titles won, Williams will now look to set a new bar before 2016 is through, but she can undoubtedly afford to revel in the moment of Saturday's triumph.

This was Williams back at her best, and one of the greatest players of all time was suitably ecstatic with her achievement when speaking to the BBC's Sue Barker:

It was a tough pill for Kerber to swallow considering she looked like posing a challenge for great lengths of their clash.

Not only was Kerber entertaining throughout, but she was magnanimous in defeat too, praising her opponent after what was a spellbinding display at times:

Just over six weeks now remain until the U.S. Open kicks off on August 29, where Williams can still make up for a trophy-less first half of the year with a gilded ending.

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