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Serena Williams, the little girl with pigtails who became tennis queen

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Serena Williams, the little girl with pigtails who became tennis queen

Serena Williams has hung up her racquet and Sportish looks back on her journey and how she changed women’s tennis forever.

Time is every athlete’s greatest enemy and even the hulking Serena Williams, who competed for the last time early Saturday, couldn’t escape it.

She chose to have her last dance on American soil in front of her loved ones, who filled the main US Open seat at each performance, and of course in front of an audience that made her accept and adore her.

The giant American tennis player has given up her racquet and will now focus on her daughter Olympia and all her plans. Those who have walked her path know very well that she achieves everything she set out to do and that is why she has long been ready for the next step in her life.

Whether Olympia will return her to the courts as a coach is unclear and she certainly won’t push them because she knows firsthand the sacrifices required. But what is certain is that when her daughter decides to play tennis, she will find it very different from when she took her first steps, and for that she bears a great deal of responsibility.

The first steps and the racist attacks

Serena Williams and her sister Venus grew up with a bat in their hands. The two did not hide their love for tennis from a young age and did everything to devote themselves to it.

Her father, Richard Williams, played a big part in her journey. He tried to teach them the hard sides of life from a young age. For this reason, at the age of ten, he decided to stop playing tennis to focus on his studies.

The main reason that led him to make this decision was the racist attacks that Serena and Venus received from other athletes’ parents during their games

The age limit and the first big wins

From a young age, Serena Williams seemed ready to dominate even against bigger opponents. She herself was looking forward to her professional debut, but a regulation wouldn’t let her do it.

Serena in particular had been awarded a wild card to enter the Oakland tournament in 1995 when she was only 14 years old. Then, however, the WTA slowed down their participation due to the existing age restrictions.

Serena Williams celebrates at the US Open

Finally, her debut came a few months later when she competed in Quebec, where she was eliminated in the first round. She played nowhere in 1996, while her first main draw win came in November 1997 in Chicago.

Early casualties included Mary Pierce and Monica Seles, two gymnasts who were in the top-10 at the time. In this particular tournament she reached the semi-finals where she lost to Lindsay Davenport which allowed her to enter the top 100 at the age of 16!

The dreamy first Grand Slam and the undefeated duo with Venus

Since then she started her journey with broken brakes with the only goal to reach the top. In 1998 she had several good runs and her highlight was winning Wimbledon and the US Open in mixed with Belarusian Max Mirny.

From there the start began. In 1999 her first major titles came, including her first Grand Slam. In fact, this came at the best possible time, namely in the USA. The 18-year-old Michigan girl, who was racially abused by other female athletes’ parents as a child, managed to conquer the US Open, and she didn’t do it easily.

Venus and Serena Williams celebrate at the US Open

In the quarterfinals, she beat Monica Seles (then No. 7), followed by her win over Lindsay Davenport (No. 2), while in the final she defeated then-top tennis player Martina Hingis. To better understand her achievement, suffice it to say that the previous African American who achieved this was Althea Gibson in 1958, that is 41 years ago.

In the meantime, Serena and Venus Williams had already managed to terrify the rest of the doubles athletes. In 1999 they won two Grand Slams (Roland Garros and US Open), while a year later they won the gold medal together at the Sydney Olympics.

Unparalleled 15 years

The next two years will be spent with multiple injury struggles and Serena trying to find the second Grand Slam of her career. Losing the 2001 US Open final to her sister will give her the motivation she is looking for to get back on top.

After all, it was always Venus who challenged Serena to push her limits. What would happen next was beyond all reason. In the next 15 years, from 2002 to 2017, Serena Williams will conquer 22 Grand Slams, including five US Opens, seven Wimbledon, three Roland Garros and seven Australian Opens.

Her total collection of titles will reach 71, not including the Grand Slam Cup and gold at the 2012 Olympics. The only thing missing from her huge career is the Year Slam, which is winning all four Grand Slams in one year.

Serena Williams, the little girl with pigtails who became tennis queen

Twice in her career she won three of the four trophies, but failed to complete that feat for various reasons. There are also 14 other Grand Slams in doubles (all together with Venus Williams).

He spent a total of 319 weeks at No. 1 in the world rankings, 186 of them in a row. She is also the oldest player to top the world rankings and the oldest to win a Grand Slam title at 35 years, four months and two days when she celebrated the Australian Open title in 2017.

Of course, she was also two months pregnant at the time, as it later turned out, which makes her achievement even greater.

It changed women’s tennis forever

These were just a few of their successes on the pitch. But there are some even bigger ones that happened outside of them and things that changed women’s tennis forever.

From her first steps, she wanted to end once and for all the phenomena of racism, inequality and sexism that existed and still exist in the space. She did things that seemed odd, like competing in a jumpsuit while trying to play in a denim skirt and boots, but they wouldn’t let her.

Over the years she has always had social commitments, with children and women always being the focus of her interest. She has been a Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF since 2011, has helped build schools in Uganda, Kenya and Jamaica and since 2008 she has led a non-profit organization that bears her name and aims to help millions of children.

Source: sport 24

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Svitolina will play fourth racquet match before start of Aus Open 2026

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Svitolina will play fourth racquet match before start of Aus Open 2026

Ukraine’s first racket Elina Svitolina (WTA 14) became the “Opening Week” participant of the Australian Open 2026.

On January 14, 2026, the Ukrainian will play an exhibition match against Amanda Anisimova (USA, WTA 4) at the tournament’s main stadium, Rod Laver Arena.

The meeting will be held in the format of two standard sets as the deciding game and a super tiebreak up to 10 points.

There will also be four more exhibition matches: Elena Rybakina – Zheng Qingwen, Alexander Zverev – Lorenzo Musetti, Carlos Alcaraz – Alex de Minaur, Jannik Sinner – Felix Auger-Aliassime.

After the match between Svitolina and Anisimova, Rod Laver Arena will host the AO 1 Point Slam tournament, where tennis stars Iga Swiatek, Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Coco Gauff, Naomi Osaka, Daniil Medvedev, Zheng Qingwen, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Jasmine Paolini will compete against amateurs.

Source: Sport UA

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22-28.12 Schedule and results of matches between Ukrainians and Ukrainians at ITF tournaments

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22-28.12 Schedule and results of matches between Ukrainians and Ukrainians at ITF tournaments

Sport.ua presents the schedule and results of matches of Ukrainian tennis players at the ITF World Tour tournaments from December 15 to 21

men

M15 Antalya (Türkiye – location), Antalya Series

Singles, elimination, first round

  • Maxim Khlyvnyuk (Ukraine) – Ibrahim Yego (Kenya) – absent
  • Filip Pavic (Kosovo) – Andrey Bilata (Ukraine) – without

Singles, qualifiers, second round

  • Maxim Khlyvnyuk (Ukraine) – Stefanos Schinas (Greece, 15) – 23.12, at 10:00 at the latest
  • Alexandru Balan (Canada, 6) – Andrey Bilata (Ukraine) – 23.12, 12:30 at the latest

Singles, first round

  • TVA – Nikita Bilozertsev (Ukraine, 6) –TVA
  • TVA – Ilya Biloborodko (Ukraine) –TVA
  • TVA – Alexander Ovcharenko (Ukraine, 2) –TVA

Doubles, first round

  • Dillon Beckles (USA) and Alexander Wagner (Austria) – Nikita Bilozertsev (Ukraine) and Alp Horoz (Türkiye) – TVA
  • William Mirarchi (Italy) and Daniil Stepanov – Mihai Marinescu (Romania) and Alexander Ovcharenko (Ukraine, 4) –TVA

M15 Monastir (Tunisia – difficult), FTT by Magic Hotel Tours

Singles, elimination, first round

  • Kazuki Nishiwaki (Japan, 6) – Arseniy Mironov (Ukraine) – 6:0, 6:0

Women

W15 Antalya (Türkiye – ground), Antalya Series

Singles, elimination, first round

  • Anastasia Necule (Romania) – Yaroslava Sribnaya (Ukraine) –TVA
  • Arina Yakusheva (Ukraine) – Naz Kaynak (Türkiye) – TVA
  • Jamie Collinson (Australia) – Helen Grab (Ukraine) –TVA
  • Serafima Vasilyeva (Ukraine) – Öykü Şahbaz (Ukraine) – none

Singles, qualifiers, second round

  • Eva Galievskaya (Ukraine, 6) – Honoka Uchiyama (Japan) or Alisa Aksiyanova – TVA
  • Serafima Vasilyeva (Ukraine) – Sabina Shaidullina or Ema Garayda (Czech Republic, 14) – TVA

Doubles, first round

  • Asylzhan Arystanbekova (Kazakhstan) and Ingkar Dyusebay (Kazakhstan) – Sara Balan (Romania) and Eva Galievskaya (Ukraine) –TVA
  • Nanari Katsumi (Romania) and Honoka Uchiyama (Japan) – Helen Grab (Ukraine) and Arina Yakusheva (Ukraine) –TVA

Source: Sport UA

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The champion of the 2025 ATP Junior Final Tournament has been announced

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The champion of the 2025 ATP Junior Final Tournament has been announced

20-year-old American tennis player Lerner Tien (ATP 28) Became the winner of the ATP 2025 Junior Final Tournament.

The Americans were defeated in the final of the competition held on indoor courts in Jeddah (Saudi Arabia). Alexander Blox (Belgium, ATP 116) 1 hour 1 minute.

Next Generation ATP Finals 2025. Final, December 21

Lerner Tien (AMERICA) [1] –Alexander Blox (Belgium) [2] – 4:3 (7:4), 4:2, 4:1

Tien played in the Next Generation finals for the second time. He lost to João Fonseca in the decisive match in 2024.

Lerner suffered one defeat, losing to Rafael Hodar in the first round of the group stage in Jeddah. He then defeated Blox as well as Martin Landaluse, Nikolay Budkov Kjaer and Nishesh Basavareddy.

Tien becomes the second Youth Finals champion after Brandon Nakashima – Nakashima won the Next Gen award in 2022.

Lerner Thien received $502,250 in prize money for his victory at the Next Gen ATP Finals 2025.

Photo gallery of the award ceremony

Source: Sport UA

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