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U.S. Open Women's Final: Serena Williams Goes For Record Win

At the 2014 U.S. Open, Serena Williams has been focused on winning a Grand Slam to close out the season. If she does, she would tie Chris Evert's record of six U.S. Open titles in the Open era.
Janikowski CSM /LANDOV
At the 2014 U.S. Open, Serena Williams has been focused on winning a Grand Slam to close out the season. If she does, she would tie Chris Evert's record of six U.S. Open titles in the Open era.

When Serena Williams and Caroline Wozniacki face off Sunday, the current and former world No. 1 players will both be trying to make their own brand of history. For Williams, it's a chance to match Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova; for Wozniacki, a win would bring her first Grand Slam title.

The final is scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m. ET Sunday on Arthur Ashe Stadium court in New York. You can follow the play online at the U.S. Open website, or by watching the CBS broadcast.

The U.S. Open brings the only Grand Slam final this season for Serena Williams, who was bounced early at the French Open and Wimbledon and lost in the fourth round of the Australian Open.

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Williams hasn't lost a set in her quest to take the last big title of 2014. The U.S. Open summary describes her dominance: "she's won 80 percent of her first serve points, gotten in 76 percent of her returns and broken her opponents 29 times while losing her serve on just six occasions."

By winning Sunday, Williams, 32, would match Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova for fourth on the all-time list of Grand Slam winners, behind Margaret Court (24), Steffi Graf (22) and Helen Wills Moody (19). She would also match Evert with six U.S. Open titles in the Open era.

This would also be Williams' third consecutive U.S. Open title – and the prize money would set a record for any athlete in pro tennis.

As the WTA site notes, "If she wins, Serena will receive a $4 million payout, the largest payout in tennis history, men's or women's. That's made up of $3 million for winning the title plus $1 million for winning the Emirates Airline US Open Series. Serena herself and Rafael Nadal had the previous record of $3.6 million."

For Wozniacki, 24, the U.S. Open brings a chance to win her first Grand Slam title and give new authority to a career in which she's been seen as incapable of winning the big tournaments, despite owning the world's No. 1 ranking for 67 weeks in 2010 and 2011.

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Since falling to No. 18 in the world, the Danish star has been on a comeback, starting this tournament ranked 11th — and making some observers draw a connection between Wozniacki's recent slump and her relationship with golfer Rory McIlroy, which ended in the spring. There's even a chart.

Earlier Sunday, the Bryan brothers – American doubles team Bob and Mike Bryan — beat the Spanish team of Marc Lopez and Marcel Granollers, 6-3, 6-4, for their 100th career title and their 16th Grand Slam win, extending their own record as a team.

The win brings the Bryans, 36, their fifth U.S. Open championship, tying them with the team of Richard Sears and James Dwight for most U.S. national doubles titles. (As you might recall, Sears and Dwight helped define American tennis in the 1880s).

The U.S. Open men's final, featuring Japan's Kei Nishikori and Croatia's Marin Cilic, is slated to begin at 5 p.m. ET Monday. It'll be on CBS.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.