LONDON — Without a doubt, Grand Slam tournaments bring out the best in Sloane Stephens, the last American singles player still around at the All England Club.
Take a look at what she's done this season.
After her career-best run to the Australian Open semifinals in January, and before her second-week appearances at the French Open in June and at Wimbledon — where the 17th-seeded Stephens reached the quarterfinals with a three-set victory Monday — she went through quite a rough patch: a four-month stretch in which she failed to win more than two consecutive matches at any tournament.
"It was a bad time," Stephens said.
How did she turn it around?
"Just knowing that I am a good tennis player. I'm top-20 in the world for a reason. I didn't, like, all of a sudden, snap my fingers and I got good," Stephens said. "I put in a lot of work. (It) took a lot of sweat (and), like, 'bad hair' days, all that other stuff, to get to where I was. I realize that I just couldn't let that go to waste. I had to get back to work."
At Roland Garros last month, she reached the fourth round before losing to 2012 champion Maria Sharapova. At Wimbledon on Tuesday, Stephens will take on 15th-seeded Marion Bartoli, the 2007 runner-up, with a chance to reach her second major semifinal of the year — and of her nascent career.
"Everyone asks, like, 'Why do you only play well in the Slams?' ... I mean, I don't know," the 20-year-old Stephens said. "It just happens."