The Daily Telegraph

Mother of all surprises for Serena after return from maternity leave

Twenty years after her Wimbledon debut, former champion is delighted to have been made a seed

- By Jamie Merrill

SERENA WILLIAMS has revealed her “surprise” at Wimbledon’s controvers­ial decision to boost her ranking after her return from maternity leave.

The 36-year-old American, who has dominated women’s tennis for nearly 20 years, took a break from the sport in September following the birth of her daughter, Alexis Olympia Ohanian. She wasn’t sure she would be seeded for Wimbledon, which starts today, and thanked officials for their decision.

Williams, who played her first Grand Slam in more than a year at the French Open last month, is ranked 181st in the world but was made 25th seed at Wimbledon to ensure that neither she nor other top players can meet each other until the third round at the earliest.

Some Wimbledon club officials had privately expressed concerns that seeding Williams would unfairly penalise other players who had worked all year for a top-32 place. But it was agreed that she should not be punished for taking time off to have a child, despite bitter complaints from Slovakian world number 32 Dominika Cibulkova, who was bumped from the seeding group as a result.

Two-time Wimbledon champion Andy Murray, ranked 156th in the world, was not seeded after a year out battling hip injury problems. Williams said yesterday: “I think I would be very ungrateful if I sat here and said [the seeding] was too low, to be honest. I don’t at all feel that way. In fact, I was pleasantly surprised. I came in here expecting maybe I wouldn’t get a seed.” The move follows a decision by the French Open against seeding her. In Paris, she reached the fourth round before injury forced her to pull out.

For Williams her Wimbledon return carries extra significan­ce this year, as it is 20 years since she made her debut, reaching the third round as a teenager. “I can’t say I thought I’d be here 20 years later,” she said.

She admitted it would be emotional to appear in front of her husband and daughter for the first time. Earlier this week she took her daughter on to the turf at Wimbledon.

“I got a little emotional when I was telling her a story about a girl who had a big dream,” she said.

Dressed in a skin-tight black bodysuit and red waistband, with biceps bulging and brow furrowed in determinat­ion, Serena Williams only needed a cape to perfect her Wonder Woman look. On the first day of the French Open last month, not only was she on winning form, she was also back on court a mere eight months after giving birth.

The 36-year-old, who revealed that daughter Alexis’s traumatic birth and resulting complicati­ons nearly killed the tennis star and left her bed-bound for six weeks, posted a defiant picture on her Instagram, with the caption: “For all the moms out there who had a tough recovery from pregnancy – here you go. If I can do it, so can you.”

We’re not all racing round on the tennis court in a bid for Grand Slam glory less than a year after having a baby, but Williams is part of a new wave of female athletes who are not just returning to their field after motherhood, but are coming back stronger, faster, and more determined.

“Having a baby does not mean the end of an athlete’s career,” says Mark Buckingham, a physiother­apist who treats elite athletes at his Northampto­nshire-based practice Witty, Pask & Buckingham. He has one caveat: “As long as proper care is taken at the right time.”

While many new mums struggle to build up the energy to leave the house for a coffee date (as I did), elite sportswome­n who have babies are, of course, in a different league. Paula Radcliffe, who admitted that “the athlete in me doesn’t like being pregnant”, won the 2007 New York Marathon 10 months after her daughter, Isla, was born. Longdistan­ce champion Jo Pavey won European 10,000m gold less than a year after having her second child in 2013. Meanwhile, Jessica Ennis-hill won gold at the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Beijing in 2015, when her little boy Reggie was 13 months old.

Now Williams – who begins her Wimbledon comeback today as the number 25 seed – and four-time Olympic champion cyclist Laura Kenny (née Trott), who was back on her saddle six weeks after having baby Albert last August, are following suit.

Toni Minichiell­o (toniminich­iello. com) – who is Ennis-hill’s former coach (she retired in 2016 and has since had a second baby, Olivia) – knows all about the motivation that high-level sportswome­n who are

also new mums develop. “Jess wanted to come back and win an Olympic medal, something that she could share with Reggie,” he says. “You have to remember that a sports person’s entire identity is wrapped up with their performanc­e. But having children changes anyone’s motivation­s. It can serve to reinvigora­te you.”

It’s not just a mental boost – certain physiologi­cal aspects of pregnancy can even help athletes.

One is the amount of blood pumping around the body, serving oxygen to the muscles. “Due to the needs of the foetus, blood volume and red blood cell mass increases during pregnancy,” Buckingham explains. “Cardiac output increases by between 20 and 50 per cent from week five, and all four chambers of the heart become enlarged, particular­ly the left ventricle, which can be as much as 50 per cent bigger in the third trimester. Left ventricula­r hypertroph­y (muscle growth) can be seen as a result of training in high-level athletes, particular­ly in endurance sports such as running and swimming, as well as tennis players.”

It’s not permanent – effects begin to reverse from two weeks postpartum and can take up to six months to get back to normal – but Ennis-hill found that it gave her an advantage when she needed it during training: “If I was doing 800m-related sessions, I could just do them. I could go on a bit longer and it felt easier.”

Despite the sleepless nights and seemingly endless feeding/nappychang­ing routine, being a mother can also increase an athlete’s focus, Buckingham says.

“Top-level athletes have to be driven and focused, to the point of being obsessed, with their bodies, their training and their performanc­e, which can often lead to overtraini­ng and, thus, injuries. Naturally, looking after a baby is demanding and time-consuming, and so training has to become more focused on what is absolutely necessary. It gives more time for rest and recovery.”

Minichiell­o agrees: “To be a top sports person, you have to be incredibly selfish; to be a mum is the other end of the spectrum. We used to train five to six hours a day, but

after Reggie was born we lost 25 per cent training time because Jess was adamant that she needed to leave at midday to get him from nursery.”

In fact, unlike Radcliffe, who was out running 12 days after giving birth (she’s since admitted it was “too soon”), Ennis-hill took three months off entirely after Reggie was born. When she was ready to start again, Minichiell­o says they were cautious. “The body releases a hormone called relaxin during pregnancy [to relax the muscles and tendons needed for childbirth], and it can stay in the body for up to a year. So we were careful and didn’t let her lift very heavy weights. She also had diastasis recti [ab separation] from childbirth, so we had to wait for them to knit back together. It was all very gentle.”

Buckingham agrees this is the best approach, despite the fact that athletes are programmed to push themselves hard: “I have had patients over the years who have tried to push themselves to return to sport before their body was ready, and have suffered either immediate or longer term injury as a result,” he says. “The effects of the hormones on the skeleton cannot be underestim­ated, and too much too soon on a weakened and poorly controlled skeleton will cause injury.”

Emma Brockwell, a specialist women’s health physiother­apist at Halos Clinic in Oxted, Surrey, says elites such as Ennis-hill and Williams would probably (or hopefully) be seeing specialist women’s health physio to help rebuild their pelvic floors after pregnancy, especially if they compete in high-impact sports such as tennis, and don’t want any unintended accidents on court. “The implicatio­ns of not addressing these changes and trauma can cause numerous problems, including urinary incontinen­ce,” she says.

Williams’s return to competitiv­e tennis this summer has been meticulous­ly planned. She pulled out of the Australian Open in January, saying: “Although I am super close, I’m not where I want to be.” Which is, simply, the best.

Minichiell­o says her “attitude is smart. She’s someone who’s been playing tennis a long time. She has the ability to step back and reflect objectivel­y. She understand­s where her body is at, and understand­s that she’s on a journey.”

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 ??  ?? Serena Williams speaks about her surprise seeding yesterday and, below, with baby Alexis Olympia
Serena Williams speaks about her surprise seeding yesterday and, below, with baby Alexis Olympia
 ??  ?? Super mums: after giving birth to her daughter, Serena Williams is back on the court with a winning attitude
Super mums: after giving birth to her daughter, Serena Williams is back on the court with a winning attitude
 ??  ?? Mum’s the word: Paula Radcliffe, above, and Jessica Ennis-hill, below, were keen to return to their sports when the time was right
Mum’s the word: Paula Radcliffe, above, and Jessica Ennis-hill, below, were keen to return to their sports when the time was right
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