Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Venus shows she’s not at the finish line

- Howard Fendrich

The questions about Venus Williams' future have been accumulati­ng for a while now, some subtle, some less so.

About whether she'll be back at a particular event. About whether she'll stick around for the following season.

About her passion for tennis. About her motivation at age 40. About other players who recently retired or were about to retire.

The bottom line, essentiall­y, was this: As Williams accrued more and more early exits at Grand Slam tournament­s – and, well, other tournament­s, too – how much longer would she keep playing profession­al tennis? But there is another bottom line and it is this: It's really up to just one person to decide why and how long Williams will keep going. Williams, of course.

And after going 0-3 at the sport's major championsh­ips in 2020, and 1-8 overall during the pandemic-shortened season, Williams began the 2021 Grand Slam season with the best sort of answer to all of those questions. She won.

Starting her 21st Australian Open and profession­al-era record 88th appearance at all Slams, Williams beat Kirsten Flipkens, 7-5, 6-2, on Monday. That set up a second-round meeting Wednesday with Sara Errani, a 33-year-old from Italy who was a French Open runner-up and U.S. Open semifinalist in 2012 and is now ranked 134th.

“I'm trying to get better every day. I think that, no matter what happens to you in life, you always hold your head up high. You give a hundred, million percent,” Williams said after compiling 10 break points and facing merely one against Flipkens. “That's what I do every single day. That's something that I can be proud of.”

Williams went out on court with wide strips of beige athletic tape on her left knee, protection that looked something like an asterisk.

Asked about it by a TV reporter afterward, Williams deflected the query with a joke about “decoration” and a smile. She looked just fine in the match, those long strides carrying her along the baseline, just as they have against so many opponents over so many years.

“I feel like whenever I see her, it's really amazing just to watch, like, how much she loves tennis. I see her smiling so much nowadays, so it's really nice to see. She just has this aura of loving the sport and this infectious energy,” threetime Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka said. “I hope that I can learn a lot from her.”

Truth be told, anyone could. About perspectiv­e. About perseveran­ce.

About grace.

Williams is someone who owns seven Grand Slam titles in singles – five at Wimbledon, two at the U.S. Open – and another 14 in doubles with her sister Serena.

She's someone who reached nine other major singles finals that she lost (seven of those against Serena, part of the most remarkable sibling rivalry in sports history).

Someone who has won four Olympic gold medals.

Someone who has been ranked No. 1 (and currently is No. 81).

And so on and so forth.

Plus, someone who years ago needed to learn to live with an energy-sapping auto-immune disease.

“She's such an inspiratio­n, because she never gets frustrated about her situation, health-wise. She's always looking on the bright side,” Serena said after her own lopsided first-round win at Melbourne Park on Monday.

“Then she works so hard. Yeah, she's been great. We were hitting partners for the first two weeks, 2½ weeks, since we were here in Australia. It was so good to train with her,” Serena added.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Venus Williams celebrates after winning a point against Kirsten Flipkens during her 7-5, 6-2 victory in the first round of the Australian Open.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Venus Williams celebrates after winning a point against Kirsten Flipkens during her 7-5, 6-2 victory in the first round of the Australian Open.

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