A couple of days before Serena Williams claimed the 22nd of her 23 Grand Slam singles titles at Wimbledon in 2016, she was asked what she makes of it when people refer to her as one of history’s greatest female athletes.
Her reply: She prefers being characterized as “one of the
greatest athletes of all time.”
That one, brief response from Williams said quite a lot —
about her one-of-a-kind talent with a racket in hand, about her status as an
icon, about her willingness to stand up for herself, about why women’s sports
should not be thought of any differently than men’s sports.
That all came to mind again Tuesday, when Williams indicated
she is preparing to walk away from her professional tennis career as the start
of the U.S. Open approaches on Aug. 29 and her 41st birthday next month nears.
Yes, with shouts of “Come on!” marking the journey, she’s
won the most major singles championships in the professional era of tennis,
which began in 1968; more than the 22 for Steffi Graf or Rafael Nadal, more
than the 21 for Novak Djokovic, more than the 20 for Roger Federer, more than
the 18 for Chris Evert or Martina Navratilova, more than anyone else. And, yes,
Williams won a total of 73 tour-level singles titles and spent more than six
years’ worth of weeks ranked No. 1. And she combined with older sister Venus to
claim 14 Grand Slam women’s doubles titles. And then there are the four Olympic
gold medals. And so on. And so on.
Still, mere numbers can’t capture everything Williams has
represented during a distinguished career that began when she was a teenager in
the 1990s and is remarkable for not just the successes but also the longevity,
including a record 10 major championships after turning 30.
“She’s lasted longer than most, if not all, female tennis
pros. She’s transcended tennis and become a leader on many important cultural,
social and gender issues. She has lived an extraordinary life,” Evert wrote in
a text message to The Associated Press, “and will undoubtedly continue to crash
the glass ceiling in the future.”
Indeed, what Williams did without a racket in her hand is
rather noteworthy, and extends past the millions in endorsement deals; the
flirtations with acting; the interest in fashion design and penchant for
bringing the catwalk to the court with body suits and knee-high boots and
whatever else she decided to try; the celebrity and place in pop culture; and,
most recently, the work as a venture capitalist (“Seventy-eight% of our
portfolio happens to be companies started by women and people of color, because
that’s who we are,” Williams said).
“It is important to take a step back and think about
everything that Serena has brought to our sport and what she has accomplished
both on and off the court,” said Steve Simon, the head of the WTA women’s
tennis tour. “She is one of the greatest champions, an entrepreneur, a mother,
an investor in women’s business ventures and an inspiration to women and girls
across the world.”
Williams spoke out about being Black in her sport — she was
the first to win a Grand Slam tournament since Althea Gibson in the 1950s — and
in her country. She stayed away from a tournament in California for years after
she and her father heard racist taunts there. She talked about being a woman in
tennis, about being a woman who dealt with complications in childbirth, about
being a mother (her daughter, Olympia, turns 5 on Sept. 1, and Williams wants
to have another baby).
She and Venus helped their sport reach a broader audience
and helped bring a broader slice of society into their sport (Coco Gauff, the
18-year-old African-American who was the runner-up at the French Open in May,
said Tuesday she plays what she called “a predominantly white sport” because
she “saw somebody who looked like me dominating the game”).
“I don’t particularly like to think about my legacy. I get
asked about it a lot, and I never know exactly what to say,” Williams wrote in
an essay released by Vogue magazine. “But I’d like to think that thanks to
opportunities afforded to me, women athletes feel that they can be themselves
on the court. They can play with aggression and pump their fists. They can be
strong yet beautiful. They can wear what they want and say what they want and
kick butt and be proud of it all.”
There were, to be sure, moments that she perhaps was not as
proud of, confrontations with match officials that led to getting docked a
point or a game in U.S. Open losses to Naomi Osaka and Kim Clijsters — maybe
the sorts of episodes she was referring to in her essay when she said: “I’ve
made a lot of mistakes in my career. Mistakes are learning experiences, and I
embrace those moments. I’m far from perfect, but I’ve also taken a lot of
criticism, and I’d like to think that I went through some hard times as a
professional tennis player so that the next generation could have it easier.”
Her serve was a gift, as were the powerful groundstrokes
that she and Venus — her opponent in nine all-in-the-family Grand Slam finals —
made a permanent part of the game. So, too, was an unbending will and desire to
always come out on top, whether the person across the net was Big Sis or anyone
else, whether she was trying to win a point during a match or make a point in
an interview.
“I want to be great. I want to be perfect,” Williams said.
“I know perfect doesn’t exist, but whatever my perfect was, I never wanted to stop
until I got it right.”
In tennis, of course, and beyond. -AP