Swiatek wins Wimbledon final 6-0 6-0 to land trophy

Iga Swiatek didn’t lose a single game as she clinched her sixth Grand Slam title (Picture: Getty)

Iga Swiatek has landed a historic Wimbledon title with a dominant 6-0 6-0 victory over Amanda Anisimova in Saturday’s women’s singles final.

There had only been one 6-0 6-0 women’s singles final scoreline in the history of Wimbledon before Swiatek’s win over 13th-seed Anisimova, when Dorothea Lambert Chambers beat Dora Boothby in 1911.

Swiatek, 24, has also now become the youngest woman since Serena Williams in 2002 to win Grand Slam singles trophies on all three surfaces.

Seeded eighth, Swiatek has firmly smashed her ‘grass ceiling’ in SW19, becoming the first Polish player to win the Wimbledon title in the Open Era.

Before the 2025 Championships, Swiatek had never clinched a WTA-level trophy on grass – and hadn’t gone beyond the Wimbledon quarter-finals.

But she has made incredible progress on the surface and is now just the third woman in the Open Era to win all of her first six Grand Slam singles finals, joining Margaret Court and Monica Seles.

Swiatek’s triumph over Anisimova has also seen her become the fastest woman to register 100 Grand Slam wins since American legend Williams – and she got off to the perfect start in Saturday’s final…

Quickest matches in tennis history

Iga Swiatek won the Wimbledon final in under one hour (Picture: AP)

While the victory was wrapped up in just 57 minutes, it is still some way off the quickest matches in tennis history…

In 1988, Steffi Graff thrashed Natasha Zvereva 6-0 6-0 with the official time of the match standing at 34 minutes. Up until today, it was the only double bagel in Grand Slam final history in the Open Era.

Margaret Court holds the all-time record, winning the 1964 Eastern Grass Court Championship against Darlene Hard in 24 minutes.

Martina Navratilova’s 6-0, 6-3 victory over Andrea Jaeger in the 1983 Wimbledon final still stands as the quickest in the Open Era history at SW19. It lasted just 54 minutes.

Swiatek: I never imagined I could win Wimbledon

‘It seems super surreal,’ Swiatek said after the match. ‘I want to congratulate Amanda for an amazing two weeks, no matter what happened today you should be proud and I hope we’ll play many more finals.

‘I didn’t even dream, because for me it was just too far. I feel like I’m an experienced player after winning Slams before but I never expected this one.’

Swiatek, who has won four French Open titles and one US Open trophy, added: ‘There’s no tournament like [Wimbledon]. I was always anxious because walking around Centre Court felt like huge pressure and a bit too much.

‘But I really enjoyed it this year and improved my game enough to feel comfortable here. I’ll always remember the sound of champagne bottles popping during serves, it is a sound that will keep me up at night!’

How Swiatek smashed Anisimova in final

Amanda Anisimova lost the first set 6-0 in brutal fashion (Picture: Getty)

Anisimova endured a nightmare start as Swiatek took the first three points on her serve, securing an early break against the American.

Swiatek then took control with a hold – with her serve looking bigger than ever – before making it a double break to race into an early 3-0 lead.

‘It’s tough to watch,’ former British star Naomi Broady said on commentary duties for the BBC. ‘You can hear the silence in the crowd. They’re desperate for her (Anisimova) to get going.’

But Anisimova didn’t get going – as Swiatek held again – and secured yet another break by sending a backhand into the corner with her opponent barely making an effort to even get to it.

Things then got even more brutal for Anisimova as Swiatek completed the bagel – taking the first set 6-0 with little over 25 minutes played.

It left Anisimova with a mountain to climb and it didn’t get any better at the start of the second set as Swiatek secured her fourth break of the match.

Anisimova was heard screaming in frustration after her forehand went long – and she then found herself 2-0 down after another Swiatek hold.

The American fended off two break points in the following game – but Swiatek converted her third opportunity to remarkably lead 6-0 3-0.

Another break – and two more holds – then saw Swiatek register an incredible and historic 6-0 6-0 victory in arguably the most one-sided Wimbledon final of all time, which ended in just 57 minutes.