Can you beat a player in a cat suit? Serena won the title at the 2002 US Open, and she won her first-round match over Kristyna Pliskova on Tuesday, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Whether she was inspired by what she means as a symbol to mothers, or whether she was just ecstatic to be playing Grand Slam tennis—the only tennis there is, in her mind—after 15 months away, Serena put on a encouragingly gritty and determined performance.
There was no sense that she was easing her way back into competition, and no sense that she was giving herself a break for being rusty. Serena was as hard on herself as she’s always been at the majors. There was no sense that, even under these circumstances, even against an opponent who threw down 15 aces, anything other than a victory was acceptable.
When it came to her game, I knew Serena was officially back, and back to win, at 3-3 in the first set. The match was all-even, Pliskova was firing aces and Serena hadn’t really dug into it yet. At 15-15, she hit a forehand winner. At 30-15, she and Pliskova played a long point filled with counterpunching and scrambling; Serena’s grunt grew louder until she finished the rally with another forehand winner. Finally, at 40-15, Serena hit what she thought was an ace, and began her trademark “ace walk” to the sideline; but the ball was called wide. Slightly annoyed, Serena made sure she hit a third straight forehand winner, so she could do her ace walk—officially a “forehand walk” this time—anyway.
“I think the match went, you know, well,” said a relaxed-looking Serena afterward. “It wasn’t an easy match, the beginning was so many aces, and I knew after her first game of serving, I said, ‘OK, I have to serve really well today.’...But overall I was definitely happy with my performance and how I played today.”
When she went down 0-3 in the first set tiebreaker, Serena played her most consistent tennis of the day, punctuating each winning point with a vintage “Come on!” And she played with a similar back-to-the-wall stubbornness at end of the second set. Broken at 3-2, she broke back and held at love; down three break points while serving for the match at 5-4, she escaped with a hold.
“I feel like I’m on the right track,” Serena said, “I’ve been putting a lot of work in on the court—off the court, on the court, on the court, off the court, that’s kind of been my life. I’ve been really enjoying it. Hopefully the results continue to show.”
WATCH: Match highlights