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Williams wins fifth Wimbledon title

WIMBLEDON, England — Serena Williams is back, and she looks almost as good as ever.The 30-year-old American won her fifth Wimbledon title Saturday on Centre Court, beating Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland 6-1, 5-7, 6-2 to claim her 14th major championship.

WIMBLEDON, England — Serena Williams is back, and she looks almost as good as ever.

The 30-year-old American won her fifth Wimbledon title Saturday on Centre Court, beating Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland 6-1, 5-7, 6-2 to claim her 14th major championship.

“It’s been an unbelievable journey for me,” said Williams, who has battled health issues since winning the 2010 Wimbledon title. “I feel amazing out there. This whole tournament I felt really great physically. So I think it’s definitely the beginning of something great. I hope it is.”

After hitting a backhand winner on match point, she fell onto her back to the grass. She then rose with a grin as big sister Venus — another five-time Wimbledon champion — smiled and applauded, along with the rest of the crowd.

After shaking hands with Radwanska, Williams climbed into the box where her family was seated. She hugged her father, Venus, their mother and others.

“I think when you go through a lot of tough things you just kind of let down your guard a little bit and just be yourself,” Williams said. “I love being me. I’m a normal person. I like it when people get to see that side of me.”

Out on court, Williams had little trouble at the start, using her hard serve and powerful groundstrokes to win the first five games and run Radwanska all over the grass.

Radwanska, who was playing in her first Grand Slam final, has been ill with a respiratory problem, making it difficult for her to speak. In the second set and already down a break, the third-seeded Pole was coughing and blowing her nose during a changeover.

But she broke Williams in the next game to even the score at 4-4, and then broke again to win the second set.

“She started playing really, really well,” Williams said. “She started playing excellent grass court tennis, getting a lot of balls back, and I panicked a little bit and I shouldn’t have.”

Williams responded in the third set, taking the last five games of the match. She finished with 58 winners to 13 for Radwanska, including an edge of 20-3 in the final set. Williams lost only eight points on her first serve.

“I really had my chances, and I took the second set,” Radwanska said.

“Then I think she was just too good in important moments in the third set, so it was too hard for me to come back.”

The match was played with the Centre Court roof open, and it was delayed by rain for a short time after the first set.

Radwanska would have taken over the No. 1 ranking with a win. Instead, Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka will reclaim the top spot from Maria Sharapova.

About six hours later, Serena and Venus Williams won the doubles title.

“She hasn’t had an easy road,” Venus Williams said after the 7-5, 6-4 win over Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka of the Czech Republic. “For her to fight through that and come back and be a champion, and not only that, but to have made the finals of the U.S. Open, reached the top five, all these achievements that she’s done I don’t think anyone else can do, is just amazing.”

A little more than a month ago, many started writing Williams off for good.

She lost in the first round of this year’s French Open, the first time she had ever exited a Grand Slam tournament that early.

But at Wimbledon, she looked every bit a champion again.

She broke her own tournament record for aces in a match with 23 against Zheng Jie in the third round. Less than a week later, she eclipsed that mark with 24 against Azarenka in the semifinals.