Świątek Crushes Anisimova at Wimbledon - Three More Shockingly One-Sided Grand Slam Finals
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Published: July 15, 2025
Posted in: News
There are moments when the final scoreline alone sends tremors through the sporting world. The 2025 Ladies' Singles final at Wimbledon was one of those occasions. Iga Świątek faced off against Amanda Anisimova, who had just seen off top seed Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinals, and fans were expecting a close and gripping Centre Court showpiece. What they witnessed was anything but.
In less than an hour, the Polish number eight seed dismantled her American opponent, winning 6-0, 6-0 in perhaps the most one-sided Grand Slam final of all time. Never in the Open Era had a Wimbledon singles final ended with such icy finality. In fact, you would have to go back a century for such a scoreline.
Świątek Demolishes Anisimova
Iga Świątek's numbers tell a tale of authority: she won 92% of points behind her first serve, carved out 24 winners, and allowed her opponent no oxygen, no hope, no foothold. The Polish superstar prowled the baseline like a panther. American Anisimova was swept under a tidal wave that bordered on the supernatural. Anisimova, returning to the sport after adversity, was visibly shell-shocked: towel over her face, searching for answers that she never looked like finding.
As the Venus Rosewater Dish was placed in Świątek's hands — the first time for a Polish singles champion at Wimbledon — the message to the field was unmistakable: she is now the woman to beat on the WTA tour. At least that's what online tennis betting sites think. The latest tennis betting at Bovada odds on the Pole reigning supreme in September's US Open have been slashed right down to 9/2, a far cry from what they were a few weeks ago.
Tennis history, however, is not short on such brutal beatdowns on the grandest stage. Here are three other lop-sided showpieces that left tennis fans with their jaws agape.
Steffi Graf vs. Natalia Zvereva 6-0, 6-0 - French Open 1988
Paris stirs with tradition and romance, but on June 4, 1988, love was in short supply inside Court Philippe Chatrier. Steffi Graf, then aged just 18 and already world number one, unleashed fury upon Natalia Zvereva that will likely never be replicated. Thirty-four minutes. That's all it took. No Grand Slam final, before or since, has ended faster—or with such utter abandonment of mercy.
Why was Zvereva, herself no pushover, reduced to a spectator in her own final? Graf painted the lines with a forehand that regularly kissed 90 miles per hour. She won 32 of 37 points, conceded just thirteen in total, and delivered an exhibition of movement and timing that reduced the perplexed Soviet to single shots — no rhythm, no solutions.
Graf did not face a single break point and hit twice as many winners (10) as unforced errors (5), a ratio almost mythic at the time. For her, this wasn't just a point in her Golden Slam year — it was the warning shot that greatness sometimes wears little more than inevitability.
John McEnroe vs. Jimmy Connors 6-1, 6-1, 6-2 - Wimbledon 1984
No rivalry in men’s tennis history sizzled like McEnroe-Connors, and yet on July 8, 1984, one of sport’s best head-to-heads saw a one-man show bordering on superhuman. John McEnroe, at his artistic and explosive best, put together arguably the most dominant men’s final in Wimbledon’s storybook.
The numbers: four unforced errors across 80 minutes. Connors, the perpetual battler, left looking haunted as McEnroe’s serve-and-volley game blurred into legend. The younger American won 17 of 18 points at the net in the opener, pressing forward behind a lefty slider that Connors saw coming and still couldn’t touch.
At the changeovers, McEnroe’s cool was theatrical — a matador savoring the slow disintegration of his rival. It was tennis high art and high drama: 89% first-serve points won, a conversion rate on break points that felt robotic, and a psychological edge sharp enough to cut glass.
Post-match, even the champion's peers watched the replays wide-eyed. Connors, a five-time major champion himself and certainly no slouch, simply never found his footing — outplayed, outfoxed, and, perhaps most tellingly, outclassed. For the next generation, that match remains the gold standard of big-stage execution.
Simona Halep def. Serena Williams 6-2, 6-2 - Wimbledon 2019
Few expected Simona Halep, for all her dogged defense and tactical pluck, to simply unravel a legend. Against Serena Williams on the lawns of SW19? Surely not. And yet, on July 13, 2019, Halep elevated her game to a place that left the tennis world stunned into silence.
The Romanian's movement was balletic, a constant answer to every thunderous Williams drive. She hit 26 winners, missed only three shots outside forced errors, and claimed an astonishing 83% of points on her first serve. She broke the women's GOAT four times, never faced a single break point herself, and left Serena swinging at shadows from start to finish.
But watch the body language and you see sporting drama at its purest: Williams, chasing a record-equalling 24th major, tightening with every passing rally; Halep, wide-eyed but unblinking, following her pre-match mantra — “Have no expectations, believe in your movement.” The result? Williams’s most decisive defeat in a major final.
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