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Serena serves up treat for fans to extend farewell

China Daily | Updated: 2022-08-31 09:33
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US player Serena Williams celebrates after defeating Montenegro's Danka Kovinic during their 2022 US Open Tennis tournament women's singles first round match at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York, on August 29, 2022. [Photo/VCG]

They came from far and wide for Serena-no last name required, befitting someone as much an icon as superstar athlete-to see her practice and play and, it turned out, win a match at the US Open on Monday night, turning out in record numbers to fill Arthur Ashe Stadium and shout and applaud and pump their fists right along with her.

Serena Williams is not ready to say goodbye just yet. Nor, clearly, are her fans. And she heard them, loud and clear.

In her first match at what is expected to be the last US Open-and last tournament-of her remarkable playing career, even if she insists that she won't quite say so, Williams overcame a shaky start to overpower Danka Kovinic 6-3, 6-3 amid an atmosphere more akin to a festival than a farewell.

What memory will stick with her the most from the evening?

"When I walked out, the reception was really overwhelming. It was loud and I could feel it in my chest. It was a really good feeling," said the owner of six US Open championships and 23 Grand Slam titles overall, numbers unsurpassed by any other player in the sport's professional era.

"It's a feeling I'll never forget," she added. "Yeah, that meant a lot to me."

This opening outing against Kovinic, a 27-year-old from Montenegro ranked 80th, became an event with a capital "E". Movie director Spike Lee participated in the pre-match coin toss. Former US president Bill Clinton was in the stands. So were Mike Tyson and Martina Navratilova, sitting next to each other. And sitting with Dad and Grandma was Williams' daughter, Olympia, who turns 5 on Thursday, wearing white beads in her hair just like her mom did while winning the US Open for the first time at age 17 back in 1999.

Williams is now 40, and told the world three weeks ago via an essay for Vogue that she was ready to concentrate on having a second child and working in her venture capital firm.

Asked after her victory Monday whether this will definitely be her final tournament, Williams replied with a knowing smile: "Yeah, I've been pretty vague about it, right?"

Then she added: "I'm going to stay vague, because you never know."

The night session drew 29,000 spectators, a high for the tournament-more than 23,000 were in Ashe; thousands more watched on a video screen outside the arena-and the place was as loud as ever. Certainly louder than any other first-round match in memory.

Both players called the decibel level "crazy". Kovinic said she couldn't hear the ball come off Williams' racket strings-or even her own.

Early, Williams was not at her best. Maybe it was the significance of the moment. There were double-faults. Other missed strokes, missed opportunities. She went up 2-0, but then quickly trailed 3-2. Then, suddenly, Williams, looked a lot like the champion she's been for decades and less like the player who came into this match with a 1-3 record since returning to action in late June after nearly a year off the tour.

"At this point, honestly, everything is a bonus for me, I feel," Williams said. "It's good that I was able to get this under my belt. ... I'm just not even thinking about that. I'm just thinking about this moment. I think it's good for me just to live in the moment now."

She rolled through the end of that opening set, capping it with a service winner she reacted to with clenched fists and her trademark cry-"Come on!" That was met with thunderous cheers and applause-as was the end of the one-hour, 40-minute contest, as if another trophy had been earned.

Instead, there is plenty more work to be done. Williams will play in the second round of singles on Wednesday against No 2 seed Anett Kontaveit of Estonia. And there's also doubles, too: Williams and her sister, Venus, are entered together in that competition, with their initial match slated for Wednesday or Thursday.

"Just keep supporting me," Williams told the crowd, "as long as I'm here."

They surely will. They were there to honor her and show appreciation for what she's done both on and off the court. After watching the victory over Kovinic, spectators held up blue, white or red placards that were distributed at their seats to spell out "We (Heart) Serena."

After Kovinic was introduced simply by name, making clear to even her what an afterthought she was on this muggy evening, Williams' entrance was preceded by a tribute video narrated by hip-hop icon Queen Latifah, who called Serena the "Queen of Queens".

The arena announcer called Williams "the greatest of all time," and intoned: "This US Open marks the final chapter of her storied tennis history."

She means a lot to a lot of people. As a tennis player. As a woman. As an African American. As a mother. As a businesswoman.

"When she started out, female athletes weren't getting recognized. She's done so much," said Quintella Thorn, a 68-year-old from Columbus, Georgia, making her eighth trip to the US Open. "And now, she's ..."

"Evolving," chimed in Thorn's friend, Cora Monroe, 72, of Shreveport, Louisiana, using the word Williams says she prefers to "retirement".

Which is why Monday mattered more than the usual first day at a major. And why the daily program did not make mention of any other of the dozens of athletes in action, showing instead a montage of six images of Williams holding her six US Open trophies above the title: "Serena Williams, A Legacy of Greatness." And why there was a sense of less importance for matches involving wins for other elite players such as past US Open champions Bianca Andreescu, Andy Murray and Daniil Medvedev, or French Open finalist Coco Gauff, an 18-year-old American.

After her own 6-2, 6-3 victory over Leolia Jeanjean earlier in the day, Gauff looked forward to sitting in Ashe herself to watch Williams, someone she credits with inspiring her to play tennis. Gauff's original plan was to tune in on TV, but then she decided this was too important to miss.

"Everybody is going to be on her side. I'm going to be cheering for her," Gauff said. "It's going to be probably one of the most electric matches that will ever happen in tennis."

Now there is more to come for Williams and her supporters.

Agencies via Xinhua

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