USA TODAY US Edition

Serena takes away positives

‘I can come out and be a contender’

- Sandra Harwitt

WIMBLEDON, England – If asked to describe how Serena Williams has evolved from the tennis player who debuted as a giggly teenager in 1998, it would be accurate to say she’s matured into a realist.

The 36-year-old, now a wife and mother, is accustomed to being the best at almost every turn she’s taken in the game. There are 23 Grand Slam tournament titles, one shy of recordhold­er Margaret Court, to prove it.

On Saturday, the opportunit­y to tie Court’s record came and went as the Wimbledon trophy headed to Germany with Angelique Kerber, who was exacting in securing a 6-3, 6-3 win over Williams in 65 minutes.

Williams would get emotional on the court, choking up as she spoke to the crowd: “It was such an amazing tournament for me. I was really happy to get this far. It’s obviously disappoint­ing, but I can’t be disappoint­ed because there’s so much to look forward to. To all the moms out there, I was playing for you today and I tried.”

Surely, deep inside Williams there is little tolerance for losing. That said, she also knew she came to Wimbledon with only three recent tournament­s behind her, including a fourth-round French Open exit because of injury.

As hard as it might be to accept, she’s still working her way back following childbirth, being mom to 10-month-old Alexis Olympia, and surviving dangerous post-birth blood clots.

So while that champion mentality couldn’t abandon her completely, and did push her through six rounds, there was an understand­ing in the end that a two-time Grand Slam champion such as Kerber was still too big an ask.

Instead of beating herself up about the defeat, she is viewing it as a positive.

“I think these two weeks have really showed me that, OK, I can compete,” Williams said. “Obviously I can compete for the long run in a Grand Slam. I can, you know, come out and be a contender to win Grand Slams.

“It was a great opportunit­y for me,” she added. “I didn’t know a couple of months ago where I was, where I would be, how I would do, how I would be able to come back. It was such a long way to see light at the end of the road, kind of.”

So if Williams can be believed, she is looking forward because the future, not the past, is where the possibilit­ies exist. A 24th Grand Slam title could be waiting as soon as the U.S. Open in September.

“I feel like I have a ways to go,” she said. “This is literally just the beginning, literally just the beginning. It’s good to just continue that path and just continue to keep going for me.”

Williams said the seven matches she played at Wimbledon have helped her assess what she needs to do on the journey ahead. “I just got the fact of things I want to work on for the future, things that I want to do, try and execute that. … I just feel like I’m taking the steps in the right direction. I took a giant step at Wimbledon.”

As intoxicati­ng as being back on the court and playing at a high enough level to make a Grand Slam final is, she also now knows there are more important things in life than hitting a fuzzy yellow ball with a tennis racket.

“My priority is my baby, you know,” Williams said. “Just being with her, doing things with her, spending time with her. That’s totally my priority.”

And as she left Wimbledon for another year, carrying off the finalist’s reward instead of an eighth Wimbledon winner’s trophy, she did so by sending a message to other mothers in the world.

“Well, I’d just like to tell all the moms, like, I had such a long struggle to come back and it was really difficult. Honestly, I feel like if I can do it, they can do it. I’m just that person, that vessel that’s saying, ‘You can be whatever you want to be.’ If you want to go back to work, and to me, after becoming a mom, I feel like there’s no pressure to do that because having a child is a completely fulltime job. But to those that do want to go back, you can do it, you can really do it.”

 ?? SUSAN MULLANE/ USA TODAY ?? Serena Williams said Saturday, “It’s obviously disappoint­ing, but I can’t be disappoint­ed because there’s so much to look forward to.”
SUSAN MULLANE/ USA TODAY Serena Williams said Saturday, “It’s obviously disappoint­ing, but I can’t be disappoint­ed because there’s so much to look forward to.”

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