Miami Herald

Revitalize­d and fit, Serena is chasing history in Australia

- BY GREG COTE gcote@miamiheral­d.com

She wore this black designer T-shirt the other day with her name in bright white block letters — except the last four letters of her surname were intentiona­lly gray and barely visible.

SERENA WILL

is

what you saw.

It looked like a declaratio­n. A promise she intends to keep.

Serena Williams, iconic athlete and tennis great, aims for a record-tying 24th career major singles title at this month’s Australian Open. She faces young rival Naomi Osaka in a semifinal match Thursday in Melbourne, one of the children she raised as she grew the sport. Naomi was not yet born when her idol turned pro in 1995, and had not quite turned 2 when Serena won her first major, a U.S. Open, in 1999.

“She’s Serena,” said Osaka this week when the semifinal pairing was set. “I’m intimidate­d when I see her on the other side of the court.”

The Williams-Osaka winner in their fourth meeting (Naomi leads

2-1) will be a big favorite to win it all on Saturday, because the other semifinal is an unexpected matchup of much lowerranke­d, lower-seeded women in Karolina Muchova and Jennifer Brady.

No matter how the rest of the week plays out, as she chases tennis history, Serena bows to no man (no, not even Tom Brady) and to no woman if the conversati­on turns to sports G.O.A.T.: Greatest Of All Time.

No matter how many athletes are under your

considerat­ion, how many seats are at that table, save a place for Serena. Her career résumé demands it. Like Tom Brady, so does her age-defying longevity. Unlike Brady, who has a team around him, such as the Tampa Bay defense that just handed him a seventh Super Bowl ring, Serena in her arena is all alone.

While we’re at it, include Serena with Dwyane Wade and Dan Marino, please, if the conversati­on is South Florida’s all-time sports G.O.A.T., considerin­g she was raised in Palm Beach Gardens, calls the Miami Open her home tournament (she has won it eight times), and even owns a small piece of the Miami Dolphins along with older sister Venus, herself a seven-time major winner.

Serena’s 23 majors already are the most, by man or woman, in the sport’s Open Era. (One of them she won while pregnant with her daughter, Alexis, in 2017). Her next major would tie Margaret Court for the all-time record and two more would see her alone on the mountainto­p.

And she is making this late climb at age 39.

In a sport where many of the women in her way are now nearly old enough to be her daughters.

I would not bet on Tiger Woods, at age 45, winning the three more majors he needs to tie Jack Nicklaus’ all-time record in golf, but I would not bet against Serena winning two more to surpass Court.

Remarkably, Serena seems to be enjoying a second wind, a rebirth of sorts. The Aussie Open has seen her playing her best tennis in years, certainly post-motherhood, with her fitness and court movement seeming its best in years.

In one nearly surreal winning point in her quarterfin­al match over Simona Halep, Serena returned six consecutiv­e shots outstretch­ed with lunging backhands and forehands, covering the entire court side to side, until finally Halep hit into the net and stood looking at her opponent, 10 years older, as if in disbelief.

Of that sequence, Serena joked after the match that she had not been able to run down shots like that “since 1926.”

Says ESPN tennis analyst Pam Shriver: “Her overall fitness improvemen­t is the biggest difference. Serena is playing much better defense, extending rallies. The past couple of years, post-maternity leave, she was unable to play enough defense.”

Serena last won a major at the 2017 Australian, the longest drought of her career. She has been in a major final but denied four times since, including by Osaka in the 2018 U.S. Open final.

It had begun to seem she might never get that record-tying 24th major and make history, but her run at this Australian

Open has seen her game revitalize­d and given hope that the designer T-shirt she’s been wearing may yet prove prophetic:

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States