Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Serena wants more; Djokovic scrutinize­d

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Serena Williams won her first Grand Slam title at 17, and now that she’s pushing 40 she’s still making it to the late stages of major tournament­s.

Impressive as that might be, it’s not enough for her. She wants a 24th Grand Slam singles trophy.

“A semifinal is always great. Is it great for me? Absolutely not,” Williams said in Paris on Saturday, her 39th birthday and the day before the pandemic-postponed French Open begins.

”That’s just howI feel. That’s how I always feel. I mean, I’m in a position in my career where I cannot be satisfied. I don’t want to sit here and say, ‘Oh, I’m happy,’ because I’m not.”

Since setting an Open-era record with her 23rd major singles championsh­ip at the 2017 Australian Open while pregnant, Williams has reached four Grand Slam finals, losing each.

She made it to the semifinals at the U.S. Open two weeks ago, when she stretched her left Achilles tendon and lost in three sets to Victoria Azarenka.

Only one player in tennis history has won more Grand Slam singles titles: Margaret Court, who collected 24 across the amateur and profession­al eras.

“I wouldn’t be playing if I didn’t think I could perform,” said Williams, who flew from New York to Paris to rehab her Achilles and train on clay courts at her coach’s academy.

“I’m not at 100% physically. But I don’t know any athlete that ever plays when they’re feeling perfect.”

As for turning 39?

“I honestly never thought I would be playing at my age. I mean, I don’t quite look 39,” Williams joked. “But, yeah, I don’t know when it’s going to stop for me. I just have fun.

“When I feel it’s over, it’s over. But I could have guaranteed and pretty much bet my life that I would not have been playing at 39. This is why I don’t bet.”

Here are other things to know about the 2020 French Open:

Djokovic’s emotions: Novak Djokovic already would have been closely watched in Paris — he is, after all, ranked No. 1 and seeded No. 1 and has won five of seven Grand Slam tournament­s to raise his total to 17 major titles, closing the gap with Roger Federer (20) and Rafael Nadal (19).

Now Djokovic’s every emotion could be scrutinize­d at a tournament he won in 2016 because it his first Grand Slam appearance since getting disqualifi­ed at the U.S. Open this month for accidental­ly hitting a line judge with a ball hit in anger after dropping a game in the fourth round.

“That’s something that is obviously staying in my mind after what happened in New York.,” Djokovic said. “It’s going to stay there for a long time. Of course, I will make sure I don’t make the same mistake twice.”

COVID-19 leads to fewerfans: It seems quite clear the coronaviru­s will hover over the French Open much as it did the U.S. Open, with test results as newsworthy as tennis results. After all, the COVID-19 outbreak is why the tournament was moved from May until now. More than a half-dozen players already were dropped from competitio­n — qualifying or the main draw — either because they tested positive in Paris or came in contact with someone who did.

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