Reuters
New York, Sept 13: Flavia Pennetta won her first Grand Slam singles title over best friend Roberta Vinci in an improbable all-Italian US Open final here Saturday and then added one more shock to a stunning fortnight by announcing her retirement.
With the 7-6 (7-4), 6-2 win, the 33-year-old Pennetta became the fourth oldest Grand Slam winner in the Open Era and joined 2010 French Open champion Francesca Schiavone as the only Italian women to win a Major singles title.
But as the celebrations kicked into high gear, Pennetta dropped a bombshell that provided a dramatic finish to the year’s final Grand Slam and her career.
After embracing childhood friend and Fed Cup teammate Vinci at the net a smiling Pennetta stood at centre court during the trophy presentation and told a capacity crowd at Arthur Ashe Stadium that included Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi that she would retire.
“This is the way I would like to say goodbye to tennis,” she said before hoisting the trophy and accepting the $3.3 million winner’s check. “I’m really happy. It’s what all the players seem to want to do, to go out with this big trophy. And so this one was my last match at the US Open and I couldn’t think to finish a better way.”
The Italian said it was a decision she made a month ago when a Grand Slam triumph would have seemed improbable and suggested fate may have played a part in her goodbye. “Maybe that is why I am here today (Saturday),” Pennetta said while embracing the trophy. “I was trying to play every match like it was my last one. It will be a new life for me, I played tennis since I was young.”
Pennetta’s path to the final included two huge hurdles which she cleared with confidence, taking down Czech fifth seed Petra Kvitova in the quarterfinals and Romanian second seed Simona Halep in the semis.
The match between best friends and former doubles partners who first played each other when they were nine years old got off to a predictably cautious start for two players competing in their first Grand Slam final.
Showing signs of nerves, Pennetta and Vinci seemed content to battle from the baseline, trading early breaks as the first set went to a tie-break.
After winning the tie-break and sensing the title was within her grasp, Pennetta broke Vinci at the first opportunity en route to 4-0 lead before clinching the match with a final service break.
“We spent so much time together, we moved to Rome together when we were 13-14-years-old and stayed in the same room for four years,” said Pennetta. “It is like a sister, it is so magical you have one of your best friends with you in this moment of ecstacy.”