Houston Chronicle

Serena catches a break from draw in first round

- By Christophe­r Clarey

In her first singles match in a year, Serena Williams could have faced one of the new leaders of the game that she once dominated.

As an unseeded wild card at Wimbledon, Williams could have been drawn to play No. 1 Iga Swiatek, who has won six tournament­s in a row. Or Coco Gauff, the 18-year-old American who is on the verge of breaking into the top 10 and just lost to Swiatek in the French Open final.

But when Friday’s draw was done, Williams was spared an establishe­d threat in the first round. Instead, she will play Harmony Tan, an unseeded French 24-year-old who is ranked 113th and will be making her main-draw debut at Wimbledon.

The match will almost certainly be played on Centre Court, where Williams has won seven Wimbledon singles titles, six women’s doubles titles and two Olympic gold medals when the All England Club staged the tennis event at the 2012 London Games.

But though Tan will be stepping on to that famous patch of grass for the first time, Williams will also be in new territory. At age 40, she remains arguably the biggest star in women’s tennis (Naomi Osaka makes it a debate), but Williams has played little tennis in the past three years and played none at all on tour for nearly a year until returning in Eastbourne this week for two doubles matches with Ons Jabeur.

Swiatek, a 21-year-old from Poland, has stepped convincing­ly into the gap, winning 35 straight matches, and she could make it 36 by defeating a Croatian qualifier, Jana Fett, in the first round of Wimbledon. But Swiatek has played little on grass at this early stage in her career and below her, the hierarchy on tour is constantly shifting.

In winning her six straight titles, Swiatek beat six different players in the finals. Anett Kontaveit, seeded No. 2 at Wimbledon behind Swiatek, has lost in the first round in three of her last four tournament­s and has not played a match on grass this season, attributin­g her recent struggles to her continuing recovery from COVID-19.

This year’s Wimbledon, which begins Monday, will not offer a full-strength field. Wimbledon barred Russian and Belarusian players from competing, in part because of pressure from the British government after the invasion of Ukraine.

The tours responded by stripping Wimbledon of ranking points for the first time, and despite extensive discussion­s, both sides held firm to their positions.

Wimbledon has maintained its prize money at normal levels, and though there was speculatio­n that players might skip the tournament because of the lack of points, that has not materializ­ed. Of the highest ranked players, the only ones who will be absent are either injured, like Alexander Zverev, Leylah Fernandez and Osaka or barred, like Daniil Medvedev and Aryna Sabalenka.

Wimbledon is the only major tennis tournament to bar the Russians and Belarusian­s, and the ban has excluded four of the top 40 men, including No. 1 Medvedev and No. 8 Andrey Rublev, both of Russia. But Novak Djokovic, who has won the last three at Wimbledon, and his longtime rival Rafael Nadal are both in the men’s field. So is Andy Murray, now unseeded and trying to recover from an abdominal injury after an encouragin­g run to the final on grass in Stuttgart.

Roger Federer, an eighttime Wimbledon singles champion who is still recovering from knee surgery at age 40, will miss the tournament for the first time since 1997 (he won the boys title in 1998 before playing in the main draw in 1999).

Djokovic, who has a good draw, will face Kwon Soon-woo of South Korea in the first round. Nadal, playing Wimbledon for the first time since 2019, will face Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina. Murray, the British star, will face James Duckworth of Australia.

Wimbledon’s ban has excluded six of the top 40 women, including No. 6 Sabalenka, a Belarusian who was a Wimbledon semifinali­st last year; No. 20 Victoria Azarenka, a former No. 1; and No. 34 Aliaksandr­a Sasnovich, who was Serena Williams’ most recent opponent at Wimbledon.

Sasnovich advanced last year when Williams retired in the opening set of their first-round match after reinjuring her right hamstring in a slip on the fresh grass on Centre Court. Partly in response, Wimbledon, for the first time, allowed players to train on Centre Court before the tournament to wear in the grass and improve the footing during the early rounds.

Williams, who has played more at Wimbledon than anyone in the women’s field, already knows her way around the grass, but she has been increasing­ly prone to injuries and will now have to try to find form in a hurry.

Advance past the third round and Williams could face Gauff for the first time, in a match that would certainly generate major interest. But it seems most premature to start talking about the fourth round when Williams has played no singles at all in a year.

 ?? Adam Davy/Associated Press ?? Instead of facing a top contender, Serena Williams will open at Wimbledon against unseeded Harmony Tan.
Adam Davy/Associated Press Instead of facing a top contender, Serena Williams will open at Wimbledon against unseeded Harmony Tan.

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