Sunday Times

Williams ready to find new Serena following exit

- Reuters

A defiant Serena Williams bid an emotional farewell to the US Open with a thirdround loss to Ajla Tomljanovi­c on Friday, in what may have been the last singles match of her glittering career.

Defeat has always been hard to swallow for the fiercely competitiv­e Williams and no doubt the 7-5 6-7 (4) 6-1 loss to the 46th ranked Australian stung her to her core.

But after a joyous run into the third round there was no shame in a loss to the gritty Tomljanovi­c, allowing the 23-times Grand Slam winner to exit with dignity intact and head held high.

Her three matches, highlighte­d by a second-round win over world No 2 Anett Kontaveit, were a gift to her fans, the relentless never-surrender attitude that made her tennis’ dominant player for over two decades, on display right until the very final point. “Clearly I’m still capable,” Williams told reporters. “But it takes a lot more than that.

“I’m ready to be a mom, explore a different version of Serena. Technicall­y in the world I’m still super young, so I want to have a little bit of a life while I’m still walking. “I have such a bright future ahead of me.” Always up for a fight, the 40-year-old came out swinging, forcing Tomljanovi­c to go the distance.

The Australian needed six match points to deliver the knockout punch and bring an end to an engrossing three-plus-hour slugfest.

Without a WTA Tour title and never before going beyond the quarterfin­als of any Grand Slam, Tomljanovi­c has spent most her career as one of tennis’s lesser-known names. But now the 29-year-old will live on forever in tennis history and at sport trivia pub nights, as the answer to the question: “Who was the last player to beat Serena Williams?”

“No one’s going to pronounce my name right,” laughed Tomljanovi­c. “That’s going to suck. I don’t think I’ve been part of tennis history, so that’s pretty cool.”

Williams had signalled her intention to retire in a Vogue article in early August, saying she was “evolving away from tennis” but never confirming the US Open as her final event.

Given the opportunit­y to put speculatio­n to rest that the US Open may not be the end, Williams left the door open just a crack.

Asked whether she might be tempted to return to tennis, she responded: “I don’t think so ... but you never know.

“I always did love Australia, though,” she later told reporters, hinting at a tilt at the Australian Open in January.

For fans, however, the message was clear, the US Open would be where Williams would take her final bow.

The raucous New York crowd that had backed her from the very beginning and over the years, fuelling her runs to six US Open titles, was in her corner once again but could not lift her to one more win.

Tomljanovi­c — who is yet to win a WTA Tour tournament — appeared to have had little chance against Williams, the winner of 73 career titles, but would not be intimidate­d.

Before stepping out onto centre court Tomljanovi­c paused for a moment and touched the plaque quoting Billie Jean King that hangs at the entrance: “Pressure is a Privilege.”

“I liked the quote,” said Tomljanovi­c. “I felt pressure, from myself, where I’m at in my career. I feel like I belong here now. That’s why I expect myself to perform well in these circumstan­ces. When I saw that, yeah, just felt right.”

Despite an electric atmosphere the match got off to a sluggish start with the players trading breaks before settling in.

Williams had looked to seize control when she broke Tomljanovi­c to go ahead

5-3 and serving for the set. But with

Williams two points from a 1-0 lead Tomljanovi­c dug in, breaking back and sweeping four straight games to steal the set, leaving the stadium stunned.

A defiant Williams, as she has done so many times, lifted her game — hitting back in ruthless style in the second and breaking the Australian twice on the way to 4-0.

Playing her fourth match in five nights, Williams suddenly seemed to run out of gas and Tomljanovi­c, showing some steel of her own, pulled level at 5-5 as the set moved to a tie-break. Everyone inside Arthur Ashe, now on their feet, knew Williams was not going to exit without a fight, and running on fumes dug into her reserves to take the tie-break 74.

Williams had the crowd roaring again when she broke Tomljanovi­c to start the third but simply had nothing left in the tank. The Australian put the former world No 1 on the ropes, storming through the next four games for a 4-1 lead.

But Williams was not going to hand Tomljanovi­c the win, she would have to earn it, needing six match points to get the job done.

 ?? Picture: Robert Prange/Getty Images ?? Serena Williams warms up prior to her womne's singles second round match at the 2022 US Open.
Picture: Robert Prange/Getty Images Serena Williams warms up prior to her womne's singles second round match at the 2022 US Open.
 ?? Picture: Matthew Stockman/Matthew Stockman ?? Serena Williams
Picture: Matthew Stockman/Matthew Stockman Serena Williams
 ?? Picture: Loren Elliott/Reuters ?? Serena Williams.
Picture: Loren Elliott/Reuters Serena Williams.

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