Daily Maverick

The battle of the wilful warrior: will Serena fight back after firstround defeat?

Williams’s Wimbledon performanc­e makes her quest for a 24th Grand Slam title look unlikely. By

- Craig Ray

In the space of a few hours this week, it felt like the end of an era and a passing of the torch in the women’s game. When winning her first-round match at the 2022 Wimbledon Championsh­ips – the season’s third major – world number one Iga Swiatek recorded her 36th straight victory. That number was significan­t because it took Swiatek past the best winning streak of the 21st century, set by Venus Williams in 2000.

Swiatek’s streak included a commanding romp to the French Open title less than a month ago, which cemented the Pole’s status as the best female player on the planet.

When winning the final at Roland Garros, and recording her 35th straight win, Swiatek surpassed Serena Williams’s 34-match streak of 2013.

Not long after Swiatek’s expected and routine first-round 6-0 6-3 Wimbledon win over Croat Jana Fett, Williams, playing competitiv­ely for the first time in more than a year, took to Centre Court.

The 23-time Grand Slam singles winner had admitted she was unsure what to expect after so much time away from the sport through a combinatio­n of devoting time to her family and other business interests and most obviously, injury. A torn hamstring on Wimbledon’s Centre Court in 2021 was the last time she had played a competitiv­e singles match before this week. winner of 73 singles titles at the highest level of the sport. But also before Tan stood the fading 40-year-old Williams. And Tan was able to slay that version of Williams, winning the third set tie-break 10-8.

Tan moved on at Wimbledon. Williams moved into an uncertain tennis future.

Williams’s quest to break the record of 24 Grand Slam singles held by Australia’s Margaret Court might never happen now. Under Centre Court’s glaring lights at about 10pm on 28 June, it felt as if the quest had ended.

Swiatek and a host of younger players have moved on. They are relentless­ly playing, training and competing – honing their craft with dreams of titles and fame.

Williams is now, at best, a part-time player with many other priorities in her life, packed in a body that has spent more than 25 years grinding on tour.

How she balances her life outside tennis with a desire to end her career with 24 or more Grand Slams singles titles is unclear. But she remained defiant after her Wimbledon exit.

“It definitely makes me want to hit the practice courts because you’re playing not bad and you’re so close,” Williams told reporters after the match.

“Any other opponent probably would have suited my game better. So, yeah, I feel like that it’s actually kind of like, ‘Okay, Serena, you can do this if you want’.

“I think if you’re playing week in, week out, or even every three weeks, every four weeks, there’s a little bit more match toughness. But, with that being said, I felt like I played pretty okay on some of them [points], not all of them. Maybe some key ones I definitely could have played better. You got to think if I were playing matches I wouldn’t miss some of those points or this match.” The flicker of competitiv­eness won’t die. The season’s final major is the US Open at Flushing Meadows in New York. It’s her home event, the place where she is revered like nowhere else.

“When you’re at home, especially in New York and the US Open, that being the first place I’ve won a Grand Slam, is something that’s always super special,” Williams said.

“Your first time is always special. There’s definitely lots of motivation to get better and to play at home.”

The Covid-19 pandemic took many things from people’s lives and, in that context, a few lost years for a star tennis player seems trivial. To most it is, but to Williams, who was 38 when tours shut down during the first wave of the pandemic, it narrowed her window to match and even surpass Court.

On 2 April 2020, when the All England Club and the Committee of Management of The Championsh­ips announced the cancellati­on of Wimbledon that year, Williams was one of the first to react.

“I’m shooked,” was Williams’s reaction on social media to the news.

The 2022 US Open in September might be the swansong for the great Williams. But, then again, it might not. The desire to be the best doesn’t just die. Williams wouldn’t even rule out a return to Wimbledon in 2023.

“That’s a question I can’t answer,” she said. “Like, I don’t know. Who knows? Who knows where I’ll pop up? Like I said coming into this, I’m just planning for right now, seeing how I feel, just to go from there.”

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