Serena Williams, left, and Venus Williams return to Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazahkstan and Timea Babos of Hungary during the women's doubles final at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships on Saturday in London.

Serena Williams, left, and Venus Williams return to Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazahkstan and Timea Babos of Hungary during the women's doubles final at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships on Saturday in London.

2-trophy day for Serena

  • By HOWARD FENDRICH
  • Sunday, July 10, 2016 1:03am
  • Sports

LONDON — Serena Williams is leaving Wimbledon with two trophies, teaming with her older sister Venus to win the women’s doubles final just hours after collecting the singles title Saturday.

The American siblings won their sixth doubles championship at the All England Club and 14th as a pair at all Grand Slam tournaments by beating fifth-seeded Timea Babos of Hungary and Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan 6-3, 6-4.

Earlier Saturday, also on Centre Court, Serena won her 22nd Grand Slam singles title with a straight-set victory over Angelique Kerber in that final.

The Williams sisters also won doubles titles at Wimbledon in 2000, 2002, 2008, 2009 and 2012. Each time, one or the other also won the singles championship, with Serena doing it in 2002, 2009 and 2012 in addition to this year.

They’re now 14-0 in major doubles finals. But they were unseeded this time because they play doubles so infrequently, and their most recent Grand Slam title before Saturday had come four years ago at the All England Club. Until playing at the French Open in May, they hadn’t even entered a doubles draw at any major tournament since 2014.

But they’re planning to compete in doubles, in addition to singles, at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics next month. They already have won three gold medals in doubles, at the 2000, 2008 and 2012 Summer Games.

Shvedova, who lost to Venus in the singles quarterfinals this week, was trying to win her third Grand Slam doubles title, after teaming with Vania King to win Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 2010. Babos has never won a major doubles trophy; she was the runner-up with Kristina Mladenovic at Wimbledon in 2014.

In men’s doubles, Nicolas Mahut and Pierre-Hugues Herbert defeated Julien Benneteau and Edouard Roger-Vasselin 6-4, 7-6 (1), 6-3 to win their first Wimbledon title. It was the first all-French Grand Slam men’s doubles final of the Open era.

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