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Novotna's iconic 'choke' that captured hearts of tennis fans

Jana Novotna will always be remembered for the beautiful moment she burst into tears and cried on the Duchess of Kent's shoulder after throwing away the 1993 Wimbledon final.

The Czech tennis player, a Wimbledon champion in 1998 and 16-time grand slam winner in doubles and mixed doubles, died at the age of 49 on Monday after a long battle with cancer.

In a career spanning 14 years on the professional circuit that included 24 WTA singles titles and 76 doubles titles, Novotna finally won her only singles grand slam at Wimbledon in 1998 after losing in the final in 1993 and 1997.

She won the hearts of fans around the world when she burst into tears after throwing away victory against Steffi Graf in the 1993 final when on the verge of victory, and was consoled afterwards by the Duchess of Kent.

Novotna's iconic moment with the Duchess of Kent. Image: Getty
Novotna's iconic moment with the Duchess of Kent. Image: Getty

Novotna was a true winner but it was her misfortune that will always be recalled for one of sport's most famous and heart-rending meltdowns.

Her defeat, conjured from the jaws of victory when she lost her nerve and confidence, is still considered one of sport's great 'chokes' as Novotna was a point away from taking a 5-1 lead in the third set only to serve a double fault.

It led to a capitulation that was painful to behold as Graf, who was to go on to become one of the all-time greats, took five games on the trot and won the final set 6-4.

The failure was all too much for the then 24-year-old Novotna to take.

At the presentation ceremony afterwards, she broke down and, in one of the iconic images in Wimbledon annals, burst into tears while being comforted by the Duchess of Kent, the British royal who gave her a shoulder to cry on -- literally.

"I know you will win it one day, don't worry," the Duchess told her at that moment. They proved to be prophetic words.

Four years later, Novotna, whose background as a talented child gymnast helped her to hone a dynamically athletic serve-and-volley game perfect for Wimbledon, reached the final again.

Novotna's tears turned to joy in 1998. Image: Getty
Novotna's tears turned to joy in 1998. Image: Getty

Again, she lost, this time to the teenage tyro Martina Hingis, after being a point away from a 3-0 lead in the final set but this time she was scuppered not so much by a lack of nerve as by an abdominal injury as the Swiss swept the last set.

Yet, once again, it heightened the idea that Novotna was one of sport's great "chokers" -- one reporter once described her cruelly as "No-No Novotna, the lady from Choke-Oslovakia" -- but it was a tag that she always challenged feistily.

"I wanted to win myself, instead of waiting for Steffi to lose," she once said of the Graf loss. "Unfortunately, she started playing better and I did not. Does that make me a choker? How many chokers get to the Wimbledon final?"

She had a very good point. Winning 100 tournaments -- 24 WTA singles and 76 doubles, including one grand slam singles and 16 doubles titles -- plus three Olympic medals and the Fed Cup with Czechoslovakia, made her an outstanding champion.

She finally broke her duck in 1998. Image: Getty
She finally broke her duck in 1998. Image: Getty

She finally took the chance to prove it beyond doubt when, a year after losing to Hingis, she lifted the 1998 Wimbledon crown, with practically everyone on Centre Court cheering her, by beating Frenchwoman Nathalie Tauziat in straight sets.

It seemed fitting that she should afterwards be presented with the Venus Rosewater Dish as women's champion by "the nice lady" who had once comforted her.

"The Duchess reminded me last year that if I came back for a third time, it would be third time lucky for me," she said at the time. "She said that she was very happy that I had finally won this championship."

Novotna and the Duchess in 1998. Image: Getty
Novotna and the Duchess in 1998. Image: Getty

So, it seemed, was the whole of tennis as the woman who had come so close to the biggest prizes became the oldest first-time women's grand-slam singles winner in the Open era.

As her "true friend" Martina Navratilova said on social media on Monday: "Jana was an amazing woman."





with agencies