Petra Kvitova, Dangerous

Czech player Petra Kvitova celebrates after beating Russia's Maria   Sharapova in the Women's Final of the 2011 Wimbledon Championships at   the All England Tennis Club, in south-west London, on July 2, 2011.
Getty

Czech player Petra Kvitova celebrates after beating Russia's Maria    Sharapova in the Women's Final of the 2011 Wimbledon Championships at    the All England Tennis Club, in south-west London, on July 2, 2011.
Getty

LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 02:  Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic    celebrates after winning her Ladies' final round match against Maria    Sharapova of Russia on Day Twelve of the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis    Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on July 2,    2011 in London, England. Kvitova won 6-3 6-4.
Getty

It was her first Grand Slam final. She served out both winning sets to love, serving her first ace of the match on championship point. Her foe was a 3-time Grand Slam champion who won her first championship on the lawns of Wimbledon, blasting an anxious Serena Williams off the court in straight sets.

I fell in love with her the first time I looked into them there eyes. Them Bette Davis eyes. It was Fed Cup. 2007. A tie with the United States in the Czech Republic. It wasn't just that she wiped the floor with Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Alexa Glatch to win both her singles rubbers, it was the look in her eyes while she was doing it. Nevermind her great serve, her hard, flat ground strokes and champion-like reflexes, but there was a calmness and intensity at once that exuded from her eyes that made her dangerous in mine.

I just knew Petra Kvitova would be great. Knew it.

So when Serena drew her in the first round of the 2010 Australian Open, I feared her flawless, undefeated record in Slam first rounds would come to an end. Dangerous. Serena got through that match in a lopsided scoreline that didn't tell the whole truth about the points and games played.

So when Serena had to face her in the semifinal of Wimbledon last year, I figured she might fail to advance to defend her third Wimbledon title. Dangerous. Yesterday, after her 6-3 6-4 victory over Maria Sharapova -- in a match that was all about angles and ground missiles and shrieks and barks and breaks and nerves -- when asked about last year, Petra said she didn't believe she could beat Serena then, but knows she can now.

Dangerous.

Petra Kvitova, left, of the Czech Republic and Russia's Maria  Sharapova hold their trophies after Petra Kvitova defeated Maria  Sharapova in the ladies' singles final at the All England Lawn Tennis  Championships at Wimbledon, Saturday, July 2, 2011.
AP

LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 02:  Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic   holds up the Championship trophy after winning her Ladies' final round   match against Maria Sharapova of Russia on Day Twelve of the Wimbledon   Lawn Tennis Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet   Club on July 2, 2011 in London, England. Kvitova won 6-3 6-4.
Getty

We have crowned a new Grand Slam champion. A young woman who can call both Caroline Wozniacki and Victoria Azarenka, two players hyped to the hilt as future champions, her contemporaries. But Petra has gone about her business without any hype at all. And wouldn't you know it, she has leapfrogged her tennis generation to the Winner's Circle with something other than Hollywood good looks and an adoring press.

It's probably a blessing hardly anyone was looking. The biggest victory in her career to date is her fourth title in 2011. She has won an international (Brisbane, outdoor hard), a premier (Paris Indoors, hard), a premier mandatory (Madrid, outdoor red clay), and a Grand Slam on the lawns at Wimbledon. A woman for all seasons.

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Dangerous was the first film for which Bette Davis, the greatest actress of her generation, won an Academy Award. She won another a few years later for her lead role in a film entitled Jezebel. I'm not so sure anyone would consider Petra Kvitova a fallen woman, though she's got plenty of power behind her throne, but if the Academy Awards are to film actors what Wimbledon is to tennis players, I'd bet the farm Petra's got another acceptance speech in her somewhere down the road.

Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic blows kisses to the crowd after  defeating Russia's Maria Sharapova in the ladies' singles final at the  All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, Saturday, July 2,  2011.
AP

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