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 WIMBLEDON DAILY REVIEWS
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Lleyton Hewitt clinches the title.

HEWITT CLINCHES FIRST TITLE

Click here for day 13 results

Australia's Lleyton Hewitt claimed his first Wimbledon title with a comprehensive victory over unheralded Argentinian David Nalbandian.

The top seed and world number one was simply too good for a nervous Nalbandian, the 28th seed and first player to reach the final on his senior debut in the championships.

In the most one-sided final since John McEnroe beat Jimmy Connors in 1984 for the loss of just four games, Hewitt added the Wimbledon title to his US Open crown with a 6-1 6-3 6-2 win in just under two hours.

The writing was on the wall as soon as Nalbandian opened the match with a double fault, Hewitt racing through the first four games in just 15 minutes as Nalbandian made a string of unforced errors in his first match on Centre Court.

Nalbandian had been disqualified from his semi-final of junior Wimbledon in 1999 for turning up late, and at times it was as if he had not turned up at all as Hewitt took complete control.

The 20-year-old from Cordoba eventually won his first game of the match after saving two break points, his first two outright winners of the contest reducing his deficit to 4-1.

He then forced two break points on Hewitt's serve and at last seemed to be getting into the match, but the Australian held on and Nalbandian's woes were complete when he served a double fault to give Hewitt the set 6-1.

Hewitt then saved two break points in the opening game of the second set before the first rain interruption forced the players off court, no doubt much to Nalbandian's relief.

The rain delay proved thankfully brief but appeared insufficient for Nalbandian to pull himself together and he immediately lost his serve on the resumption to fall 2-0 behind.

But if Hewitt thought he was in for an easy ride like the first set, he was mistaken as the Argentinian broke back straight away to get back into the match.

The players were then tied at 3-3 AND 30-30 on Hewitt's serve when another shower forced them off court for a second time.

Hewitt wasted no time on the resumption in taking the next two points to hold his serve, and promptly broke Nalbandian's serve for a 5-3 lead.

The 21-year-old went 0-30 down on his serve to give Nalbandian hope of staying in the set, but Hewitt was not to be denied and held his nerve to take a two sets to nil lead.

Hewitt again took the early initiative in the third set but Nalbandian was showing much more fight than the first set and broke straight back to level at two sets all.

He needed to string several games together however and was unable to do that as Hewitt made it three service breaks in a row courtesy of a lapse in focus from his opponent.

Nalbandian thought a Hewitt forehand on break point was long and appealed to the line judge while still playing the point, which Hewitt won to take a 3-2 lead.

That seemed to shatter Nalbandian's resolve and Hewitt took the next three games to seal a comprehensive win.

Elsewhere on Sunday Australia's Todd Woodbridge claimed his seventh Wimbledon men's doubles title.

He partnered Sweden's Jonas Bjorkman to a 6-1 6-2 6-7 (6-8) 7-5 victory over Mark Knowles, of the Bahamas, and Canada's Daniel Nestor.

Woodbridge won his six previous titles between 1993 and 2000 as part of the famed Woodies partnership with fellow Australian Mark Woodford, who is now retired.

To a background of noise from Wimbledon's newly renamed "Hewitt Hill", fifth seeds Woodbridge and Bjorkman raced through the opening two sets on Court One, dropped the third set on a tie-break and finally broke the serve of Knowles to secure victory by taking the fourth set 7-5.

The Williams sisters completed their domination in SW19 by winning the women's doubles final.

Singles champion Serena and runner-up Venus beat Argentina's Paola Suarez and Virginia Ruano Pascual of Spain, the number two seeds, 6-2 7-5 in the final.

The Williams pair have now won the women's doubles twice, having first claimed the crown two years ago.

Mahesh Bhupathi and Elena Likhovtseva wrapped up this year's championships when they won the mixed doubles title.

India's Bhupathi and Likhovtseva, the Russian who ended British discovery Elena Baltacha's ladies' singles run in the third round, beat Zimbabwe's Kevin Ullyett and Slovakia's Daniela Hantuchova 6-2 1-6 6-1 in the final after overcoming American pair Don Johnson and Kimberly Po-Messerli in the semi-finals earlier in the day.

And Britain finally tasted success when veterans Colin Dowdeswell and Buster Mottram won the men's over-45 doubles title.

The two former British stars beat Americans Sandy Mayer and Peter Fleming - John McEnroe's old doubles partner - 7-5, 6-4.