USA TODAY International Edition

New version of Serena has ability to surprise us

- Dan Wolken Columnist USA TODAY

Even for Serena Williams, this shouldn’t be possible.

Not the fact she’s in another Grand Slam semifinal, so close yet again to No. 24. Or that she’s able to still beat some of the best players in the world at 39, at a time when most of her contempora­ries and rivals are long gone from high- level profession­al tennis.

No, the most shocking thing about how Williams has ripped through the draw at this unique Australian Open is that she’s been able to seemingly turn back the clock on a body that for the last few years seemed like it was going to be the biggest obstacle to winning more Slams.

Regardless of what happens in Wednesday night’s semifinal against Naomi Osaka, who has establishe­d herself as the best hardcourt player in the world, one more big run for Serena no longer seems like a long shot.

“I’m here, and I’m happy to be here and I gotta keep going,” Williams said after beating No. 2- ranked Simona Halep 6- 3, 6- 3 in a quarterfinal match that finished while most Americans were still asleep Tuesday morning in the

U. S. “Obviously, I have an incredible opponent to play and it’ll be nice to hopefully keep raising the level of my game. I’m going to have to.”

Out of fairness to Williams, let’s be clear that she is an underdog to Osaka, who arrives at the semifinals on a 19match winning streak and hasn’t lost since a Fed Cup match in Spain last February that hardly anyone watched or remembers. Ever since the U. S. Open last fall, Osaka has had that aura around her like Williams used to, where it just seems like she has a gear in the big matches that her opponents don’t.

The way Osaka has played in Australia only reinforces her status as the favorite to win a fourth Grand Slam title.

But the way Williams has played in this tournament, the way she’s looked on the court, is far more impressive than just getting here. Serena is still such a towering figure that she can play average tennis and, if the draw breaks the right way, go deep at a Grand Slam. This time, she’s truly looked like a top- five player again, maybe even good enough to get by Osaka and win the trophy.

Which, even for Serena, is a pretty pleasant surprise because after tennis’ restart last season, the trajectory did not look promising. As Williams’ game evolved into her late 30s, it was very obvious that her movement around the court was no longer a weapon and had started to become a liability.

That’s perfectly natural. After all those years of pounding on the legs, of sudden movements and stress on joints, quickness suffers and injuries mount for all tennis players. In Williams’ case, there was a pregnancy and other health issues to deal with before returning to the tour in 2018.

Williams could still power her way through games, could still serve opponents off the court, could still beat most opponents. But if her serve was even a little bit off or her timing on the forehand wasn’t there, she didn’t have anything to fall back on against the best players. By the end of last season, when she lost to Vika Azarenka in the U. S. Open semis and pulled out of the French Open due to a lingering Achilles injury, she didn’t look like a complete player anymore.

Those kind of physical issues usually don’t turn around when you’re staring down your 40th birthday. It felt like her best chance to get one more Grand Slam had perhaps slipped away.

But somehow, some way, Williams used the last four months to become faster and fitter and turn around the narrative on the last stage of her career. She showed up in Australia ready to play defense when necessary, to retrieve balls that she simply could not get to the last few years, to dig out of the corners and transition to offense. Against two

very different types of players – the powerful Aryna Sabalenka in the Round of 16 and the model of consistenc­y in Halep – she thrived in long rallies and didn’t feel the need to end points quickly.

In somewhat of a revealing comment after the Halep match, Williams talked about needing to embrace the things she’s good at, signaling perhaps that she had conceded too much in terms of her ability to outlast opponents instead of just overpoweri­ng them.

“Movement has always been one of my strengths so it’s more natural for me to move than for me not,” she said. “It’s like, ‘ Oh, that’s how I used to move,’ so it’s pretty good and I’m happy I’m doing that again and put it back into my game. I think I was more focused on other things and not focused on something that has always been a strength of mine and I had to refocus on that.”

In that sense, Williams becomes a very different opponent than even the player Osaka beat in the infamous 2018 U. S. Open final where Williams was penalized a game late in the match for verbally abusing an umpire. Those two have not played an official match since, and Osaka is no longer a newcomer to big matches or a timid personalit­y who reluctantl­y became a superstar.

Now Osaka has the game, the titles and the swagger to become the dominant player of her generation, with all the evidence pointing toward another Grand Slam title this weekend. The Williams we saw the last couple of years probably wouldn’t be a big threat to that outcome. But this version is a plot twist that gives Williams a chance for her greatest triumph.

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 ?? DAVID GRAY/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Serena Williams hits a return against No. 2 seed Simona Halep during their singles quarterfinal match Tuesday in the Australian Open. Williams won 6- 3, 6- 3.
DAVID GRAY/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Serena Williams hits a return against No. 2 seed Simona Halep during their singles quarterfinal match Tuesday in the Australian Open. Williams won 6- 3, 6- 3.
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