Back in 1987, 11 years before new Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin was born, her parents left Moscow for New York City, eager to escape the Soviet Union and live in the United States because, as her father Alex, put it: "You want to see the world. You want a
From Moscow to Melbourne: Kenin's long road to the top
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Sofia Kenin played the big points superbly to capture her first Grand Slam trophy in Melbourne. Photo / Getty Images
Indeed, look at where, and who, she is: owner of a Grand Slam trophy and expected to be No 7 — the highest US woman — when the WTA rankings are released today.
Kenin won the last four games of the final at Melbourne Park with some gutsy play at the most crucial moments, beating two-time major winner Garbine Muguruza 4-6, 6-2, 6-2. One key sequence decided the outcome. Kenin faced three break points while serving at 2-2, 0-40 in the third set. All she did was conjure up an ace and four point-ending groundstrokes on exchanges that all lasted 11 shots or more.
"She pulled out something unbelievable," said Alex Kenin, who is his daughter's coach and calls her "Sonya," the Russian nickname for Sofia.
In all, Kenin converted five of six break points and erased 10 of Muguruza's 12.
"Especially in the important moments, I think," Muguruza said, "she came out with winners."
Muguruza said she thought Kenin handled the emotions of a major final debut well and didn't seem to show any jitters.
Alex Kenin, though, said he could tell earlier in the day his child was nervous because he saw "tears in her eyes" and she was "trying to hold it back."
The victory made Kenin the youngest Australian Open champion since 2008, when Maria Sharapova — someone else with Russian roots whose game was grown on the courts of Florida — was 20.
Kenin also will be the youngest American to make her top-10 rankings debut since Serena Williams was 20 in 2002.
It was a win over Williams in the third round of the 2019 French Open, Kenin's deepest run at a Grand Slam tournament until this week, that helped provide a boost that keeps propelling her forward.
She won her first three tour-level titles last season and cracked the top 20. This, though, is whole new territory.
Kenin might have been overlooked by some before, when younger Americans such as 15-year-old Coco Gauff and 18-year-old Amanda Anisimova were making deep runs at majors and gaining all the attention.
But other players knew what Kenin could do.
And so, certainly, did she.
That racket Kenin was swinging — and sometimes dropping, even kicking, out of frustration after bad points — against Muguruza? It was painted red, white and blue.
- AP