While Serena has worked to strike a balance between professional tennis player, entrepreneur, wife and mother over the past two years, her hunger on the court remains. “I’m still doing what I can do,” said the 38-year-old at the 2019 US Open.
In a highly personal production, eponymously titled Serena, the walls of a confident champion were torn down. Viewers saw beneath the exterior of a superstar athlete, gaining unparalleled access to Serena, the person. She exposed the pain of missing out on the calendar-year Slam, showing that a sporting hero is just like the rest of us, where getting out of bed can be the day’s toughest task. She revealed that deep inside a competitor lies an inner child, one that gains pleasure in watching Disney movies. And she discussed not fitting the mold of a prototypical tennis player, and how she grew to embrace her differences as assets.
“I love my body,” she later said, “and I don’t really care about what anyone else says about it.”
More than anything, Serena reinforced that she is human. An imperfect soul who, love it or hate it, unapologetically approaches each mission one way: the Serena way. At Wimbledon in 2016, she tied Graf’s Open era record of 22 majors, then surpassed the legendary German in January 2017 when she defeated her older sister Venus to capture her seventh Australian Open.
Unbeknownst to the public, Serena was pregnant during that Melbourne run, and once again, the strength of her resilient voice prevailed after undergoing an emergency caesarian section to give birth to her daughter, Alexis Olympia. Experiencing shortness of breath, Serena implored doctors to run tests, believing a pulmonary embolism had resurfaced. Sure enough, her instincts were spot on, and she endured six days of complications before being released.
Since returning to the game in March 2018, Serena has been within striking distance of Margaret Court’s record 24 Grand Slam singles titles she’s played in four of the past six Grand Slam title matches. From a dispute with chair umpire Carlos Ramos in the 2018 US Open final to having her catsuit banned by Roland Garros, Serena’s pursuit of Court has not been without circumnavigating controversy.
But, as her reply to French Open officials showed at this year’s event— where the proud parent donned an outfit containing hidden messages with French words for “Mother,” “Queen,” “Goddess,”and “Champion”— the Compton, CA-raised conqueror will only reach Court’s mark in one manner: by marching ahead when the going gets tough. It’s the Serena way.
**Australian Open: 41 wins / 5 losses
Roland Garros: 30 wins / 5 losses
Wimbledon: 48 wins / 5 losses
US Open: 49 wins / 5 losses
WTA Finals: 14 wins / 1 loss
Overall: 377 wins / 45 losses**