The Niagara Falls Review

Congrats, Mom: Williams wins Grand Slam return in Paris

- HOWARD FENDRICH

PARIS — For all that has changed in the 16 months since Serena Williams last played in a Grand Slam tennis tournament — she is now married and a mother — so much was familiar about her at the French Open on Tuesday.

The fashion statement, this time in the form of a black bodysuit with a red waistband. The cries of “Come on!” The big serves that provided 13 aces. The return game that produced three consecutiv­e breaks of serve.

And, yes, the victory. Competing as a mom for the first time at a major, and only about nine months since giving birth to her daughter, Williams beat 70thranked Kristyna Pliskova of the Czech Republic, 7-6 (4), 6-4, at Roland Garros.

“I’m just happy to win a match here,” Williams told the crowd in Court Philippe Chatrier. “I’m just happy to take it a day at a time.”

The 36-year-old American had not played in one of tennis’s biggest tournament­s since the Australian Open in January 2017, when she won her 23rd Grand Slam title. That broke a tie with Steffi Graf for the most in the Open era. The only player with more major singles championsh­ips was Margaret Court, with 24, but those were split between the amateur and profession­al eras.

Only later did Williams reveal that she was pregnant at the time. Her baby was born on Sept. 1, and Williams married Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian in November.

The first glimpse of Williams as she prepared for her comeback came in an exhibition in December against 2017 French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko. Next came a doubles match with older sister Venus for the U.S. Fed Cup team in February. Then came singles matches, with two wins at Indian Wells, Calif., before a loss to Venus, followed by a first-round loss at the Miami Open on March 21.

Williams then took another break to work on her game, and that absence of more than two months ended Tuesday.

The very first game featured an ace at 181 km/h (112 m.p.h.) and when it ended with Pliskova netting a backhand, the chair umpire intoned, “Jeu, Madame Williams” — French for “Game, Mrs. Williams,” a change from the “Mademoisel­le” officials use for unmarried female players.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Serena Williams celebrates after scoring a point against Kristyna Pliskova at the French Open on Tuesday.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Serena Williams celebrates after scoring a point against Kristyna Pliskova at the French Open on Tuesday.

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