Did Serena Williams save her best for last? She did in Saturday’s Wimbledon final against Angelique Kerber, winning the last eight points in a gripping contest that featured just two breaks of serve and a plethora of mesmerizing rallies. It was a straight-setter in name only; this 7-5, 6-3 result was the definition of quality over quantity.

Let’s say, for the sake of this discussion, that Serena doesn’t go on to pass Steffi Graf in Grand Slam singles titles. That No. 22 is where her amazing run ends. If that would indeed be the case, this championship victory would have to be considered one of her finest.

Only eight times has Serena been taken to a third set in a major final she won, and only two of those third sets were closer than 6-2. There was the 2003 Australian Open, where Serena beat her sister, Venus, 7-6 (4), 3-6, 6-4, and the 2012 U.S. Open, where Victoria Azarenka took Williams all the way to 7-5 in the third. Both of those matches are classics and evidence of Serena at her peak.

What Kerber did over two sets today brought out that same, lofty magic from Serena. The German’s forceful counterpunching made Serena treat every groundstroke like it was critical; her returning made the American place every serve precisely, and hit every one at its optimal speed. It was a masterclass—by both women.

Golden Girl

Golden Girl

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Over the course of one hour and 21 minutes, Serena won 88 percent of her first-serve points, hit 13 aces and struck 39 winners. Kerber actually won a greater percentage of points on her second serve than Serena (68 to 39) and made just nine unforced errors. It was a high-wire act that Andy Murray and Milos Raonic will have a difficult time replicating tomorrow.

But the most incredible stat of all might be this: Of Serena’s 22 Grand Slam singles titles, she’s won nine in her 30s (along with 12 in her 20s and one in her teens). It’s a sharp contrast to Graf, who never won a major after turning 30.

As good as Serena has been since the moment she turned pro, she’s saving her best for last. She’s given us quality—and, if 21 wasn’t enough before today—quantity.