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Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Amanda Anisimova's nephew, Jackson, was a courtside regular during her Wimbledon run By Russell Fuller Tennis correspondent Published 9 minutes ago Amanda Anisimova will arrive at Wimbledon this year with plenty of good memories - but also in the hope she can "rewrite the story" with a much happier ending. Twelve months ago, Anisimova won a compelling two-and-a-half hour tussle in the semi-finals with world number one Aryna Sabalenka to reach a first Grand Slam final. But just two days later she failed to win a single game in the showpiece against Iga Swiatek, losing 6-0 6-0 in only 57 minutes - a scoreline that had not been seen in a Wimbledon ladies' singles final since 1911. "I got a bit frozen with my nerves," was how Anisimova put it, before predicting she would be stronger for the experience. Many watching her evident and unsettling discomfort on Centre Court - and the tears as she thanked her family after the match - may have wondered how long that would take. About six weeks was the answer. At the very next Grand Slam - the US Open in New York - Anisimova exacted her revenge on Swiatek in the quarter-finals, before beating two-time winner Naomi Osaka to reach a second successive major final. "Being able to manage my nerves and go out there and try to forget the past [after a] very quick turn around - that was the biggest mental challenge I had to overcome," Anisimova, 24, told BBC Sport at Indian Wells in March. "I was also enjoying it out there. I felt like once I went out there I didn't have the stress or any weight on my shoulders - maybe because I had a lot of people supporting me." Anisimova returns to Wimbledon this week after a difficult year in which she has parted ways with her coach and missed two months of the clay season with a left wrist injury. "I'm going into this just excited to play and be healthy again," she said at Queen's, where she lost in the quarter-finals. From 'worst off day' ever to another Slam final Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Anisimova was more competitive in her second Grand Slam final against Aryna Sabalenka at the US Open At her best, Anisimova is a powerful, aggressive player who tries to strike first in a rally. In recent months, she has shown a greater ability to construct a winning point. Britain's Emma Raducanu has played her four times in the past eighteen months, beating her friend in Melbourne and Miami last year before finding herself on the wrong end of the scoreline when they met in Montreal last August and again at this year's Indian Wells. "The way she has been competing for the past year, even when things don't go her way, made a difference," Raducanu said in California. "Everybody knew she was dangerous and could take the racquet out of anyone's hand, but I think her focus and competitiveness has made a big difference." Former coach Rick Vleeshouwers had only been working with Anisimova for a year heading into last summer. The Dutchman u
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    <|channel>thought <channel|>Its powerful to see an athlete turn a devastating loss into motivation. Rewriting that narrative with a happier ending is a journey many can relate to.