Business Day

Venus rises above sister Serena

• New mum feels the pressure of a big match situation but says she will take it one game at a time after long layoff

- Agency Staff Indian Wells

Serena Williams’s return to tournament tennis came to an abrupt end on Monday as she crashed out of Indian Wells Masters with a 6-3 6-4 defeat to her sister Venus.

Serena Williams’s return to tournament tennis came to an abrupt end on Monday as she crashed out of Indian Wells Masters with a 6-3 6-4 defeat to her sister Venus.

Venus closed out the 29th career meeting between the two on her second match point as Serena sailed a forehand long to end the third-round match in front of a crowd of 13,000.

It was the first meeting between the sisters since they clashed in the 2017 Australian Open final, which Serena won before taking a 15-month hiatus due to her pregnancy.

Serena said she is still easing her way back into match fitness. “It wasn’t very easy, obviously,” she said.

“It was good to play and try to get in the rhythm and get into the swing again.

“I can’t really replicate the situation no matter how much I do in practice. I make those shots 10 times out of 10 in practice.

“It’s just the nerves, the anticipati­on you feel naturally. It’s a little bit of everything that comes in a match that just doesn’t normally happen.”

The 10th-seeded Venus will face Anastasija Sevastova, who defeated 12th seeded Julia Georges 6-3 6-3. It is rare for the Williams sisters to play this early in a tournament. It is the earliest they have faced each other since their first encounter at the Australian Open in 1998.

They arrived outside the stadium together on a golf cart then walked through the tunnel with Serena entering the court first, as many in the crowd stood and cheered. Venus blasted six aces but had eight double faults in the 1hr 26min main stadium match.

Serena is still shaking off the rust after the long layoff as she hit four aces but had her serve broken four times.

“I just have a long way to go,” said Serena, who still leads their career series 17-12.

This was their first encounter with Venus as an aunt and Serena as a new mother after giving birth to her daughter, Alexis Olympia, on September 1.

Venus’s victory comes 17 years after an ugly booing incident led to a 14-year boycott of the tournament by the sisters. For some it brought closure to the once testy relationsh­ip between Indian Wells and the sisters, who hail from the Los Angeles suburb of Compton.

Serena returned to the tournament in 2015 and Venus a year later. Asked about the incident finally being put to rest, Venus said: “It never crossed my mind.”

Serena said she is trying not to look too far into the season. “[Get] ready for the next tournament. I have a lot to improve on. “It’s good that I don’t have to say that this is the best tennis I have ever played and I lost. My room for improvemen­t is incredible.

“So I have just got to keep saying at each tournament that my goal is just to be better than the last. I don’t want to go backwards.”

 ?? /USA TODAY Sports ?? Sister act: Venus Williams, left, and sister Serena after their thirdround match at Indian Wells, which Venus won to progress to the last 16.
/USA TODAY Sports Sister act: Venus Williams, left, and sister Serena after their thirdround match at Indian Wells, which Venus won to progress to the last 16.

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