The Herald (South Africa)

Serena not bowed by Wimbledon pressure

Tennis ace calm before Wimbledon

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SERENA Williams insists she does not feel under pressure to retain the Wimbledon title and finally end her long wait to win a 22nd grand slam crown. When Williams left the All England Club after defeating Garbine Muguruza in the final 12 months ago, she held all four major titles and was on the verge of a historic calendar grand slam.

But the world No 1’s bid for tennis immortalit­y crumbled, when she suffered a shock defeat against Italy’s Roberta Vinci in the US Open semifinals.

Since then, the 34-year-old American has looked scarred by her loss in New York and also burdened by the expectatio­n she will equal Steffi Graf’s Open era record of 22 grand slam titles.

Williams stumbled in the Australian and French Open finals this year and, if she fails to retain the Wimbledon trophy in two weeks’ time, she will be left without a single grand slam in her possession.

Asked yesterday if she felt a growing desperatio­n to get her hands on some silverware again, Williams said: “It was a great accomplish­ment to win four grand slams in a row twice in my career. It’s pretty cool. This year I don’t feel as much tension as I usually do.

“I’m feeling pretty good. Honestly, I don’t feel any pressure or stress. I feel good and confident.”

With opponents no longer seeming so intimidate­d by her and the American spending time on her interests in the fashion and entertainm­ent industries, there is a sense that a long-awaited changing of the guard could happen at the top of the women’s game.

Muguruza avenged her Wimbledon loss by beating Williams in the French Open final earlier this month and, like the Spanish world No 2, German fourth-seed, Angelique Kerber, has no reason to fear Williams after her Australian Open triumph in January.

Williams, aware of the fierce competitio­n to knock her off the top, admits she has tried to analyse those defeats to find reasons why she has lost her way this year.

“It’s important to learn from every loss. I think I usually do that,” she said.

“Throughout my whole career I’ve been able to learn a lot and come back a much better player,” she said.

Williams opens her Wimbledon campaign with a first-round tie against Swiss qualifier Amra Sadikovic tomorrow.

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