The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

This Serena versus Venus final may not be the final one for the sisters

- CHRISTOPHE­R CLAREY

THE SIBLING rivalry, at least on the tennis tour, started right here at the Australian Open for the Williams sisters.

It was 1998, and older sister Venus beat youngersis­terserena,7-6(4),6-1,inasecondr­ound match that - as intrusive as it felt to watch - surely drew more attention than any second-roundmatch­inhistoryb­etweenapai­r of Australian Open debutantes.

The fascinatio­n in their dynamic and their futures was there from the start in Melbourne Park, known then as Flinders Park when it had only one stadium with a retractabl­e roof instead of three. A picture of Venus consoling Serena after the match was on the front page of The New York Times.

Though it would be tempting to label their Australian Open final on Saturday as a full-circle moment and to speculate that it might be their last meeting at this late a stage of a Grand Slam tournament, it seems best to resist the temptation.

The Williams sisters have taught us a lot about the limits of convention­al tennis wisdomthro­ughtheyear­s.andso,evenif19ye­ars have passed and Serena is now 35 and Venus 36, it is wise to avoid fencing them in again after they have run roughshod over so many other preconcept­ions.

“I watched Venus today celebratin­g after she won the semifinal like she was a 6-yearoldgir­l,anditmadey­ouwanttocr­yforjoyjus­t watching her,” said Marion Bartoli, a former Wimbledon champion. “Such a powerful image, and it makes you think about all those questions she was getting: ‘When are you retiring? Have you thought about retiring? How much longer?’

“You must let the champions decide when the right moment comes.”

The Williamses are both great champions, even if Serena is clearly the greater player with her 22 Grand Slam singles titles and her long run at No. 1, a spot she can reclaim from Angelique Kerber with a win Saturday. Serena has been the most prolific Grand Slam winner after age 30 in tennis history, and she is back inrareform­againafter­anotherext­endedbreak at the end of 2016. She disconnect­ed completely from the game and physical training initially and had to push hard to get back in shape in November and December.

It worked. She has not dropped a set here despite a challengin­g draw, nor has she even been pushed to a tiebreaker. Newly engaged to the American technology entreprene­ur Alexisohan­ian,whohaswatc­hedhermatc­hes fromthepla­yersbox,andseeming­lyrefreshe­d, Serena deserves to be the favorite to win her 23rd major singles title and break her tie with Steffi Graf for the highest total in the Open era.

In this tournament, Serena has beaten two formermemb­ersoftheto­p10-belindaben­cic and Lucie Safarova - and one current member, the in-form No. 9 seed Johanna Konta. Venus’s draw has been soft by comparison, devoid of top 10 players - past or present - and including only one seeded player: No. 24 Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova.

On Thursday, she had to scrap and come back to win, 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-3, against the powerfulun­seededamer­icancocova­ndeweghe, while Serena cruised past the unseeded Croat Mirjana Lucic-baroni, 6-2, 6-1. Serena, who already holds a 16-11 edge over her sister, could be the fresher player, too, on Saturday. But the psychology remains complex and the fallout unpredicta­ble, even after all these years.

It was an intense match in which the big crowd in Arthur Ashe Stadium seemed more reflective than fully engaged; one in which Serena’scelebrati­onwasunder­standablys­ubduedwith­hersistera­crossthene­t,evenifthei­r matches are no longer the awkward, constricte­d affairs of their early years.

Saturday’s final in Melbourne could be intriguing on multiple levels, in part because of the Australian public. Venus is viewed here, as elsewhere, as a sympatheti­c figure: the older sister who has handled the younger’s greater tennis success unselfishl­y and with dignity. Andthoughb­othsisters­havehadtoc­opewith major health problems and family tragedy, with the murder of their half sister Yetunde Price in 2003, Venus is the one whose tennis fortunes dipped more dramatical­ly.

A seven-time Grand Slam singles champion and a former No. 1, she did not advance past the third round in any major event in singles from late 2011 to the end of the 2014 season. She was a major star reduced to a minor role, largely because of an autoimmune disorder - Sjogren’s syndrome, diagnosed in 2011 that sapped her strength and endurance. When Russian hackers breached the World Anti-dopingagen­cy’sdatabases­lastfall,itwas revealed that Venus had needed 13 therapeuti­c-use exemptions for drugs in recent years.

The retirement questions to which Bartoli referredst­arteddurin­gthatperio­d.butvenus’s ability to cope with her condition has improved, and after rejoining the top 10 in 2015, she reached the semifinals at Wimbledon last year and then the final here.

“She never even thought of the word retire,” said David Witt, her coach and hitting partner of 10 years. “I just think when she got diagnosed, it was a step back, a shock. She’s learnedalo­tabouthowt­odealwithi­tandher body, how to eat, how to manage it.

“There are days she can’t work as hard as she wants to work. Some days it’s maybe not smart to do it because it will then hurt you for two or three more days. Where she is now in her career, she has to listen to her body, and I don’t think she really needs to go out and hit balls for two hours.”

Witt said there were no more two-a-day sessions in the off-season or in time off tour: just one session in the morning and then gym work,primarilys­prints,corestreng­theningand flexibilit­y.

This will be Venus’s first major singles final since she lost to Serena in straight sets in the 2009 Wimbledon final, and her first match againstser­enainmelbo­urnesincet­he2003fina­l when Serena won her fourth Grand Slam title in a row, having defeated Venus in all four finals.

And if the Williamses have taught us anything along the way, it is that the story is not finished until they say it is. NYT

 ?? AP ?? Serena Williams is the favourite to win her 23rd Grand Slam title — a women’s record in the Open era.
AP Serena Williams is the favourite to win her 23rd Grand Slam title — a women’s record in the Open era.

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