Vancouver Sun

Serena Williams gets favourable seed for U.S. Open

- HOWARD FENDRICH

Serena Williams got a bit of a boost in the seedings for the U.S. Open by being placed at No. 17, nine spots above her current ranking.

The U.S. Tennis Associatio­n’s decision, announced Tuesday along with all the other seeds for the main draws of women’s and men’s singles, means Williams avoids a possible matchup against one of the top eight players in the third round. It also sets up a possible matchup at that stage against her older sister Venus, who is No. 16, her ranking this week.

Indeed, all of the other seeds — 32 women, 32 men — were positioned based on the WTA and ATP rankings, as usual.

This will be the third Grand Slam tournament of Williams’ return to competitio­n since her daughter was born during the 2017 U.S. Open. Williams dealt with health complicati­ons from childbirth, including dangerous blood clots.

The USTA already had said in June it would institute a policy that would take into account if a pregnancy affected a player’s ranking. The issue arose when Williams — a 23-time major champion and former No. 1 — was not seeded when she returned to action at the French Open in May, her first Grand Slam tournament in nearly 18 months. She was, however, seeded at Wimbledon and put at No. 25 while ranked 183rd.

Williams wound up as the runner-up at the All England Club, losing to Angelique Kerber last month. The run to the final allowed Williams to rise to No. 28. In her next match, Williams had the most lopsided loss of her career, beaten 6-1, 6-0 by Johanna Konta in San Jose, Calif.

USTA spokesman Chris Widmaier said the placement of Williams was determined by “balancing a variety of factors, including her return to competitio­n following the birth of her daughter, her recent hard-court performanc­e this summer and recognitio­n of her achievemen­ts at the U.S. Open.”

He added the USTA thought the decision “recognizes Serena and is fair to the remaining seeded players.”

Williams, who turns 37 next month, has won the U.S. Open six times, most recently in 2014.

(The USTA balanced) a variety of factors, including her return to competitio­n following the birth of her daughter.

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Serena Williams

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