Serena Faces Czech Test In French Open Final

•Serena Williams plays against Bacainazky of Switzerland

•Serena Williams plays against Bacainazky of Switzerland

Serena Williams plays Lucie Safarova of Czech Republic in the French Open final on Saturday and the odds, on paper and also by the statistics, are hugely in the American‘s favour.

Only the top seed‘s fragile state of health, it seems, stands in the way of what would be a 20th Grand Slam title — just two shy of the Open-era record of 22 set by Steffi Graf.

A new title to add to her collection would also take her halfway to winning all four Grand Slam titles in the same year — a feat only previously achieved by four women in the history of the sport, the last being Graf in 1988.

At 33, Williams is the consummate finisher in the top tournaments.

In 23 Grand Slam finals, she has lost just four times — twice to sister Venus and once to each of Maria Sharapova and Samantha Stosur.

In contrast, Safarova, at 28, five years younger than her opponent, will be playing in her first Grand Slam final after 12 years as a pro, mostly spent in the shadows.

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•Serena Williams plays against Bacainazky of Switzerland
•Serena Williams plays against Bacainazky of Switzerland

Her head-to-head record against Williams is a dismal 0-8 and prior to this year she had never made it past the last 16 at Roland Garros in 10 previous unremarkable Paris campaigns.

To add weight to the challenge ahead of her, only twice in the history of the French Open has a player ranked outside the top 10 seeds won the title – once in 1933 and more recently in 2010 when Francesca Schiavone triumphed.

The Italian though grabbed her moment of glory against Australian Stosur on that occasion, the mighty Williams is an altogether different prospect. Except for the fact that Williams is not well physically.

She has struggled from the start of the tournament and things got worse when she came down with the flu after her third-round win over Victoria Azarenka.

She has lost the first set in four of her six matches to date and it‘s been her fighting spirit and the best serve ever seen in the women‘s game that has kept her afloat.

Williams‘ 4-6, 6-3, 6-0 win over Swiss surprise Timea Bacsinszky in the semi-finals was at times painful to watch as she coughed and spluttered and staggered about the court fighting her illness.

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