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    Serena Williams’s Magical Run at the US Open Isn’t Over Yet

    The U.S. Open threw the closest thing to a farewell celebration that Serena Williams would allow for her opening-round match Monday night. But if a party was all that the 23-time Grand Slam singles champion wanted, she could have thrown herself one and skipped all those hours of sweat on the hard courts back home in Florida.Williams did not come to New York simply for a ceremonial send-off, to listen to another series of elegies about how she has changed this sport and so much else, how she has broken down barriers and paved the way for the next generation of Black tennis stars and female athletes, and the one after that, too. She knew all of that, better than anyone.There is another legacy that Williams possesses as much as all the others — as one of the world’s great competitors. And she came to New York to compete in a Grand Slam tournament, seemingly her final one, to once more put her best on the line against the finest players in the world on the sport’s biggest stage.She got that and more on Wednesday night as she won, 7-6(4) 2-6, 6-2, outlasting Anett Kontaveit of Estonia, the world’s second-ranked player, an opponent who, like Williams, loves nothing more than blasting tennis balls as she tries to overwhelm whoever is standing on the other side of the net.If that first appearance two nights earlier was about posterity and sweet send-offs, about a former U.S. president and music and movie stars coming out to see and be seen, round two was about doing everything possible to win a tennis match in front of a whole new gallery of boldface names, like Tiger Woods, who sat in Williams’s box, and Zendaya, and some 23,000 other very partial observers at Arthur Ashe Stadium.“There’s still a little left in me,” she said on the court when it was done.“I love a challenge, I love rising to the challenge.”Williams will face the unseeded Ajla Tomljanovic of Australia in the third round on Friday, and in this tournament she feels as though she has nothing to lose, after a career of having a target on her back.“I’m having fun, I’m enjoying it,” Williams said.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesNo matter who prevailed, this was never going to be a match with much subtlety. It was a showdown between two players who, when they are on, are among the best ball-strikers in the world, and two players at the opposite ends of the sport.Serena Williams at the U.S. OpenThe U.S. Open could be the tennis star’s last professional tournament after a long career of breaking boundaries and obliterating expectations.A Magical Run: As her successes on the field prove, Serena Williams did not come to New York to receive a ceremonial send-off, but to put her best on the line against the world’s finest players.In the Player’s Box: Fans at Arthur Ashe Stadium have been catching glimpses of her family and entourage. Here is a look at who has been in attendance to support her.Her Fans: We asked readers to share their memories of watching Williams play and the emotions that she stirred. There was no shortage of submissions.Sisterhood on the Field: Since Williams and her sister Venus burst onto the tennis scene in the 1990s, their legacies have been tied to one another.In front of another capacity crowd, one of them, assuming she keeps her word, was playing to extend the greatest career in modern tennis, and to show her daughter, Olympia, just what she is capable of. Olympia was turning 5 on Thursday and showed up to this tournament in the iconic beads her mother wore the first time she began to rule this sport on this same stage.The other was attempting to get one thing that every young player wants — the chance to tell her grandchildren that on a magical night in the biggest stadium in the sport, she beat the greatest player of all time.Ultimately, a battle like that, especially on this court, was going to be better than any tribute video even her friend Spike Lee, the award-winning filmmaker, could make. And he made a pretty good one that welcomed Williams, in her bedazzled shoes and dress and hair and warm-up jacket, onto the court once more. Wouldn’t it?“I’ve grown up watching her win so many Grand Slams,” said Kontaveit, 26. “I always remember how fiercely she competed for every point.”This idea, that Williams could somehow turn what two weeks ago was shaping up to be one ceremonial goodbye match into top-level sport, began to take shape in the last games of her Monday-night win, when she started rolling those patented forehands and surging forward for those patented swinging volleys. Suddenly Danka Kovinic of Montenegro was like so many other overmatched first-round victims during the height of Williams’s powers.But for a few shaky swings early on, Williams essentially picked up where she had left off, reeling off deep forehands that had Kontaveit backpedaling and crushing serves that darted onto the lines.She hustled into the corners to dig out shots with swings of desperation. She brought the sound effects, too, the warrior grunts, screams of “Come on!” and sneakers screeching across the pavement on every pivot and twist.Williams finally notched the first service break in the ninth game, on her sixth break point, sending a crowd that had been revving up all night into its first eruption. But Williams frittered the prosperity and failed to serve out the set.Two games later, the players headed into a tiebreaker that stayed even until Williams grabbed a 5-3 lead as Kontaveit netted a drop shot. A service winner got Williams to set point, and an ace clinched it, sending a roar up through the open rectangle of the Ashe roof.Kontaveit is not known as the steeliest of competitors, especially in the biggest tournaments. She has made the quarterfinals of a Grand Slam tournament just once.Hiroko Masuike/The New York TimesMaybe everyone in the building wanted her to go away for the night, but Kontaveit was having none of it. Instead she pounced, breaking Williams’s serve three times to send the match to a decisive third set. An awkward murmur rolled around the stadium as Williams headed off the court for a brief bathroom break.For Williams, there was nothing awkward about it all. This sort of competition is what she came for, what she has been doing since she was a little girl, and the thing that makes her so ambivalent about leaving the sport and what she will miss most. She can still hang with the best even after playing just five matches in 14 months entering Wednesday.And that is exactly what she did, and then some. Maybe if Williams and Kontaveit had their last set unfold on some random tennis court in an empty park, things might have gone another way. But it didn’t. Elite competition against a magical backdrop almost never does, and Williams, a star made for the bright lights, probably would not have much use for it if it did.Kontaveit gave her very little, other than a few short serves that Williams jumped on to notch two early service breaks on her way to a 4-1 lead. Williams had to take everything else, her chest and shoulders rising and falling as she tried to catch her breath between points against an opponent who was never going to go away on her own.Serving at 4-2 with a point to win the game after nearly letting Kontaveit draw even, Williams sent a topspin lob that caught the back of the baseline and sent Kontaveit to the back wall, barely able to get her own lob back. Williams met it mid-air in the middle of the court for one more swinging volley winner to get to 5-2. It brought on what would be the second-loudest roar of the night.There was one more big one to come Wednesday, a few actually as she sat on her chair and soaked it all in. It looks like more are on the way.This is what she came for. More

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    Coco Gauff Warms Up the Court for Serena Williams, and Gets a Win

    A few hours before Serena Williams would walk into Arthur Ashe Stadium on Wednesday night for the second-round match everyone was waiting for, Coco Gauff warmed up the hardcourt with a win.The experience wasn’t lost on Gauff, 18, who has credited Williams for showing her that being a star in professional tennis as a Black woman was possible. She said it was “an honor to open up for her.”The win wasn’t bad either.After Gauff and Elena-Gabriela Ruse of Romania split the first two games of the first set of Wednesday’s second-round match, Gauff quickly took control.Gauff went on to win the next two games. But while a point away from claiming a third straight game, she double-faulted, and the Gauff-favoring crowd in New York let out a sigh of disappointment, and Gauff muttered quietly to herself in frustration. Gauff responded with back-to-back powerful aces, leaving Ruse frozen and leaning awkwardly as the ball blazed past her like a batter caught off guard by a fastball.The moment reflected one of Gauff’s weaknesses and, at the same token, offered a glimpse of the talent that has many crowning her as the future of American tennis. Gauff went on to win the set and the match over Ruse, 6-2, 7-6 (4). Gauff will take on her American compatriot Madison Keys in the third round. Keys, ranked 20th in women’s singles, defeated Gauff at Adelaide International 2 in January on her way to winning the tournament.Serena Williams at the U.S. OpenThe U.S. Open could be the tennis star’s last professional tournament after a long career of breaking boundaries and obliterating expectations.A Magical Run: As her successes on the field prove, Serena Williams did not come to New York to receive a ceremonial send-off, but to put her best on the line against the world’s finest players.In the Player’s Box: Fans at Arthur Ashe Stadium have been catching glimpses of her family and entourage. Here is a look at who has been in attendance to support her.Her Fans: We asked readers to share their memories of watching Williams play and the emotions that she stirred. There was no shortage of submissions.Sisterhood on the Field: Since Williams and her sister Venus burst onto the tennis scene in the 1990s, their legacies have been tied to one another.“I learned a lot from that match,” Gauff said. “In the beginning of the year I felt like in general I just wasn’t in a good head space and I wasn’t confident in my tennis, but I feel like now I’m really confident in my tennis and I feel like that maybe might change the outcome of the match.”Wednesday’s match was the second between Gauff and Ruse in their careers. They had faced off in June at Wimbledon, where Gauff bested Ruse in three sets.At times, it seemed like Wednesday’s match would need a third set, too. The two were evenly matched early in the second set. Gauff’s shot to win the third game came as she was tracking a ball down the baseline — with her braids flowing behind her — hitting the ball to the opposite side of the court to draw roars from the crowd. The momentum seemed in her favor, but Ruse responded by winning three games to take a 5-3 lead and silence the crowd.Gauff bounced back with a three-game win streak of her own to take a 6-5 lead. With one point away from a win and the crowd on her side, Gauff double-faulted, sending the match to a tiebreaker. After splitting the first four points, Gauff won five of the next seven to win the match. The winning point came from a backhand that was too powerful for Ruse to return. Gauff yelled, threw her fist in excitement and relief, and waved her arms high, igniting the crowd.Gauff said that she would likely have lost a match like Wednesday’s in the past, but she has learned how to respond when her opponents take a lead.“Down love to 30, 5-3, I definitely could have threw it in the can and got ready for the third set,” Gauff said, “same at 15-40, but I didn’t, and I think that shows growth.”The third round is the furthest Gauff has advanced in the U.S. Open. She was ousted in the second round last year and the first round in 2020. The last time Gauff made it this far in the tournament, she was just 15 years old, facing Naomi Osaka, who was then the reigning champion and held the world No. 1 ranking. Osaka defeated Gauff handily in that match, 6-3, 6-0, and Gauff walked back to her bench in tears before Osaka invited her to do the post-match interview with her.“I’m going to learn a lot from this match,” Gauff said then, through tears.At 15, Gauff became a marquee name in tennis after defeating Venus Williams at Wimbledon, when she was competing as the youngest player ever in the women’s main draw. She now has a signature shoe with New Balance, (she sported a luminous pink and green version of it Wednesday) and has a deal with the Italian food brand, Barilla, but she has yet to win a major title.Unlike for Serena Williams’s first-round match Monday, Gauff said she would not be in the stands Wednesday because she would be receiving her post-match medical treatment and had a doubles match Thursday morning, but she would be watching on television in the stadium. “Maybe at the end if it’s not too late I’ll catch the end of it,” Gauff said.“If it goes those three sets I probably won’t be staying to the end, unfortunately. I would love to but that’s the problem when you have to play and when you like tennis as a fan, too.” More

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    From Start to Finish, Venus and Serena Williams Always Had Each Other

    Since the Williams sisters first burst into tennis in the 1990s, their legacy has been tied to one another. They will play doubles in perhaps the final tournament of their careers.The Williams sisters. They are the yin to the other’s yang. Starkly different in disposition but tied together by history and sisterly bond.Serena Williams, of course, has been the unquestionable North Star of this U.S. Open. After announcing plans to “evolve” away from tennis once she strikes her last ball here, she is the darling of the tournament and indeed the sports world — lauded and feted and dripping in diamonds and light for her swan song.Venus Williams, at 42 the trailblazer and older of the two, has willingly settled into the backdrop, as has become customary since Serena grabbed the mantle of most famous and accomplished sister.But with Venus’s years piling up and her ranking stuck in the 1500s, this may well be her finale, too.Venus took to the court for her first-round match this week with the statuesque, Zen-like calmness that has been her trademark for years. Through an error-prone loss played in front of a muted, half-full Arthur Ashe Stadium, Venus’s bearing never broke.At virtually every moment of her defeat, 6-1, 7-6 (7-5), to Alison Van Uytvanck of Belgium, she was the picture of chin-up, shoulders-back regality.We tend to take the greats for granted, especially when greatness comes in two. It’s easy to forget that among the sisters, Venus burst onto the world stage first. As an unseeded 17-year-old, she marched to the finals here in 1997.“It’s been such an amazingly long career that people lose track of what she was back then and at her peak,” said Lindsay Davenport, who lost to Venus in the championship match of the 2000 U.S. Open (Venus won again in 2001). “She was so powerful, serving at 120 miles per hour, all over you with every shot, running down everything.”Those days are gone. What has never diminished is the unyielding interdependence Venus and Serena share.Lindsay Davenport recalled facing Venus Williams in 2000. “She was so powerful, serving at 120 miles per hour, all over you with every shot, running down everything.”Vincent Laforet/The New York TimesEarly in the week, Serena, 40, described Venus as “my rock” and spoke of how important it was to have Venus be part of this week’s celebration. For the first time since 2018, and most likely the last time ever, the two will play in a Grand Slam doubles tournament.With a mischievousness glimmer, Venus told reporters she had no choice in the matter. It was Serena’s idea. “She’s the boss so I do whatever she tells me to do,” she said.Since the mid-1990s, they have been playing professional tennis on an unrelenting tour that offers little time for rest and plenty of time to feel isolated and alone.Serena Williams’s Farewell to TennisThe U.S. Open could be the tennis star’s last professional tournament after a long career of breaking boundaries and obliterating expectations.Decades of Greatness: Over 27 years, Serena Williams dominated generation after generation of opponents and changed the way women’s tennis is played, winning 23 Grand Slam singles titles and cementing her reputation as the queen of comebacks.Is She the GOAT?: Proclaiming Williams the greatest women’s tennis player of all time is not a straightforward debate, our columnist writes.An Enduring Influence: From former and current players’ memories of a young Williams to the new fans she drew to tennis, Williams has left a lasting impression.Her Fashion: Since she turned professional in 1995, Williams has used her clothes as a statement of self and a weapon of change.It’s a grind for top competitors like the Williams sisters, who for years made it their business to reach the last stages of almost every event they played. Add race to the mix — the fact that, as Black women, Venus and Serena were always symbols of something much more than just themselves — and the pressure deepens.That they had one another all this time was more than a blessing, it may have helped keep both of their careers going well past the typical due dates.They had one another, and we watched them both.The sisters faced off 16 times in major tournaments, almost always in late rounds. Venus won five of those matches. How many Grand Slams would Serena have won if Venus were not there to fend her off? And what about the other way around?There were Venus’s walloping wins the first three times they played on tour. And the nervous way they played as the rivalry approached full stride.Serena’s balky performances led to awkward post-match hugs. “No, no, you, little sis, take the next one,” Venus seemed to reply. “I just can’t play the way I want against you.”They had a habit of playing so poorly against one another that some in tennis fandom became convinced that their father, Richard, had fixed their matches. When Venus pulled out with an injury just before their semifinal match at Indian Wells in 2001, the conspiracy theory reached a peak.Venus sat in the stands as Serena battled Kim Clijsters in the final of that tournament, the predominantly white crowd angrily booing both of the sisters and, according to Richard Williams, shouting a racial slur. They were 20 and 19 at the time.From 2002 to 2003, Serena began taking over as the sister destined for ultimate greatness. In that period, they faced off in the finals of four consecutive Grand Slams. Serena won them all.Did this cause sibling jealousy? Not for these two.Having just lost to her sister at the 2002 French Open, Venus was so proud and delighted for Serena that she stepped off the podium, retrieved a camera and joined the press photographers taking photos of the newly crowned champion.Having just lost to Serena Williams at the 2002 French Open, Venus joined the group of photographers to get a shot of the newly crowned champion.Photo by Phil Cole/Getty ImagesTheir on-court rivalry became one-sided over the last dozen years, decidedly swinging in Serena’s favor, but on and on they went, always together, always close, Venus ever the careful big sister with the broad shoulders to lean on.Would either have reached the highest of heights if the other’s example had not provided a constant push to improve? Remember, Venus won seven Grand Slam singles titles and a stunning 14 playing doubles alongside Serena.Then consider all that the sisters have gone through together. The murder of their half sister Yetunde Price in 2003. Venus’s 2011 diagnosis with Sjogren’s syndrome, a fatigue-causing autoimmune disorder. Serena’s pulmonary embolism that year and, later, near-fatal post-pregnancy complications.Would they still be playing if they were solo acts and not siblings?One of the most beautiful things about their careers is the way we’ve witnessed both of them mature and learn from both success and embarrassing failure.Venus spoke to this after her first-round loss when asked about her role in helping Serena conclude that the time was right to leave tennis.“We’re a huge influence on each other,” she said, “and I’m a huge influence on her.”As she continued, Venus noted how she had tried to step away and let her sister’s retirement emerge naturally with Serena, her husband, Alexis Ohanian, and their young daughter, Olympia, taking the lead.“This decision needs to be all hers and her family’s,” Venus said. “The newest part of the family.”Since the 1990s, when they first emerged on the scene, the sisters have been synonymous — tied together in the public mind and their daily reality, a firm knot that never loosened.Time alters everything, though. New family members are central to the equation.Long after this tournament is over, Serena’s story will continue to be there for all to see. Her journey as a venture capitalist or a media mogul is one we will know about. If she has another child, we’ll know that, too: They’ll probably land on the cover of Vogue.Serena will remain in the spotlight. And whenever she needs her sisterly rock, Venus will be there, self-contained and confident, all majestic presence and blistering serve, loyal as can be. More

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    ‘I’m Just Serena,’ Swinging Freely for Another Grand Slam Run

    Of course Serena Williams is confident. She deserves to be. And her opponents know that her improving game and overwhelming crowd support make beating her in this U.S. Open all the more difficult.Serena Williams is almost 41. She did not play competitive tennis for nearly a year, and it showed — truly it showed — at Wimbledon, in Toronto and in Mason, Ohio, at the three tournaments where she made painfully brief appearances earlier this summer before arriving in New York for her farewell U.S. Open.She looked slow to react and slow on the run. She looked rusty, mistiming returns off second serves that she would once have punished.But that is all irrelevant now. Williams is relaunched, as she made clear by defeating Anett Kontaveit, the No. 2 player in the world, on Wednesday night.Williams is into the third round of what is very likely her final tournament: convincingly replaying her greatest hits — big-point aces, swing-volley winners, full-cut groundstrokes on the move — and quickly giving first-time opponents like Danka Kovinic and Kontaveit a true taste of what it is like to face the real Serena.With her 7-6 (4), 2-6, 6-2 victory over Kontaveit complete, Williams was asked on court by ESPN analyst Mary Joe Fernandez, “Are you surprising yourself with your level at the moment?”Williams looked at her for a little while and chuckled.It was the most telling answer of the evening, and no actual words were required even if Williams did tack on a few when the chuckling was done: “I’m just Serena you know,” she said.“She’s not coming here to be surprised by winning, otherwise she wouldn’t be here,” said her coach Eric Hechtman.This is not bravado. This is hard-earned confidence. The kind that comes with being raised by parents who made it clear that greatness lay ahead if the right choices and sacrifices were made. The kind that comes from measuring yourself against an uber-talented big sister named Venus from the moment you could pick up a racket on a court full of cracks in Compton, Calif. The kind that comes from winning 23 Grand Slam singles titles across nearly two decades against rivals from multiple tennis generations and despite all manner of setbacks, both professional and personal.Williams has good reason to believe that she can rise above, even in the twilight, because she has done it so often.Serena Williams’s Farewell to TennisThe U.S. Open could be the tennis star’s last professional tournament after a long career of breaking boundaries and obliterating expectations.Decades of Greatness: Over 27 years, Serena Williams dominated generation after generation of opponents and changed the way women’s tennis is played, winning 23 Grand Slam singles titles and cementing her reputation as the queen of comebacks.Is She the GOAT?: Proclaiming Williams the greatest women’s tennis player of all time is not a straightforward debate, our columnist writes.An Enduring Influence: From former and current players’ memories of a young Williams to the new fans she drew to tennis, Williams has left a lasting impression.Her Fashion: Since she turned professional in 1995, Williams has used her clothes as a statement of self and a weapon of change.“I would never, ever count Serena Williams out, and if you do, that would be your biggest mistake,” said Kathy Rinaldi, the captain of the United States King Cup team, who was watching on Wednesday.If you do count her out, as Williams has explained before, you are only going to help her.“Because she’s going to use that to prove you wrong,” Rinaldi said. “But she’s really enjoying this one. You can clearly see. It’s got to be really tough for her opponents: to face her and face the crowd.”It has been quite a team effort so far: Williams rolling back the years and five tiers of stands packed to the roof in sold-out Arthur Ashe Stadium with fans wholly committed, perhaps for the first time, to showing Williams nothing but love in a venue where she has generated ambivalence in the past with her outbursts and, at other times, with her dominance as she racked up six U.S. Open singles titles and made long runs at No. 1.But with Williams preparing, in her words, to “evolve away from tennis,” the U.S. Open crowd seems to have considered her body of work, enduring excellence and manifest love of the game and the battle and decided to go all in.“There’s no rush here,” Williams said with a grin, alluding to her impending evolution. “I’m loving this crowd. Oh, my goodness, it’s really fantastic. There’s still a little left in me. We’ll see.”Watching her lose 6-4, 6-0 last month to Emma Raducanu in the first round of the Western and Southern Open with tape on her left leg, it did seem reasonable to believe she might not be able to pull her game together in time.“She was a little banged up in Cincy,” Hechtman said. “She’s much better now and of course the crowd helps a lot, absolutely. At the end of the day, you play that many years and that many tournaments and win that many titles, you need the big stage to get you up for it.”There have been more standing ovations than at a national political convention, myriad shouts of support and, less sportingly but probably unavoidably, plenty of cheers for the opposition’s errors, including their missed serves.The latest sellout crowd on Wednesday night even booed a machine: disagreeing with the electronic line-calling system when one of Kontaveit’s winners was shown to have landed on the extreme outside edge of the sideline.In the second set, Kontaveit won one of the points of the tournament — a spectacular scrambling effort punctuated with a backhand winner — and was greeted with a golf clap.It will not get easier for her rivals. Ajla Tomljanovic, the tall and unseeded Australian who will face Williams in the third round on Friday night, was playing on Court 7 on Wednesday as Williams and Kontaveit dueled in the main stadium.“I was hearing the crowd and it like scared me, even though I was playing on a different court,” Tomljanovic said. “So I’m going to have to get my earplugs.”Tomljanovic said before even seeing the draw she had a vision that she would face Williams in New York and was only hoping that it was not going to be in the first round.So it has turned out, and Tomljanovic, like nearly all of Williams’s opponents in this latest comeback, has never played her before. Like Kontaveit, she wants the experience to make her career feel complete but is not sure how she will handle the moment (Kontaveit ended up in tears at her news conference).“I do this trick where I feel like the crowd is cheering for me as well,” she said. “I heard Novak Djokovic say that once about doing that in his matches. It’s a good one. It’s all about tricking your mind really, because you can’t control what the crowd does.”The British chair umpire, Alison Hughes, tried her best on Wednesday night and ended up saying “please” a great deal more than she succeeded in truly quieting the din.It is a moment that spurs thoughts of U.S. Opens past, particularly of Jimmy Connors’ rip-roaring run to the semifinals in 1991 as he was celebrating upset victories and his 39th birthday.“I just feel like I have had a big red X on my back since I won the U.S. Open in ’99,” Williams said. “It’s been there my entire career, because I won my first Grand Slam early in my career. But here it’s different. I feel like I’ve already won, figuratively, mentally.”A record-tying 24th Grand Slam singles title still seems an unreasonable notion to many of us outsiders. She is 40, after all, and also playing doubles with Venus starting Thursday night, which could put extra strain on her injury-prone frame.Her ex-coach Patrick Mouratoglou counseled against doubles during majors and was proved correct in 2018 when in her first major after coming back from childbirth she played both events in the French Open and had to exit the singles draw with an injury.She and Venus have not played doubles at a major again until now, but it is understandable that they want this full-circle moment, and Hechtman said the plan is simply to eliminate a full practice session on the days Serena plays doubles.But her singles draw certainly gets one thinking about the possibility of a deeper run. There are no Grand Slam singles champions left in Serena’s quarter of the draw and only one left in her half: the unseeded Canadian Bianca Andreescu, who beat Williams in the 2019 U.S. Open final.But going all the way surely does not seem preposterous to Team Serena, and when Hechtman was asked very late on Wednesday night about the Connors precedent, he mulled it over and said he was leaning toward a different U.S. Open swan song: Pete Sampras, who won the 2002 men’s title in what turned out to be his final tournament.Dream on New York, and as the Williams family would surely endorse, dream big. More

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    It Was Anett Kontaveit Against Serena Williams, and the Crowd

    Anett Kontaveit walked out of the players’ tunnel first, with barely a notice from the audience in Arthur Ashe Stadium, which was half full at the time. She made a small waving gesture, to no one in particular, and then went to her chair to prepare for her role as the villain in the biggest tennis spectacle of her life: the Serena Williams U.S. Open.As Williams made her own appearance underneath thunderous applause just moments later, Kontaveit never looked up or glanced over. She just continued to put on her wrist bands, drink water and select her first racket.She got up, walked onto the court first, knowing that for the vast majority of people in the building, she was there only to be the foil for the queen of tennis, there to lose.“It was her moment,” Kontaveit said. “I was trying to do my own thing. Of course, this is totally about her and I was very aware of that.”In the face of a tidal wave of support for Williams, Kontaveit played her role as the antihero as if fashioned from a script, playing well enough to raise the drama, but not well enough to win. Williams took the match, 7-6 (4), 2-6, 6-2, to advance to the third round, eliminating the worthy Estonian challenger and No. 2 seed from the U.S. Open.But Kontaveit did not go out without conjuring some of the best tennis from Williams in years. She made some brilliant shots and penetrating serves, but Williams was better on the biggest points, to the delight of 29,959 spectators, a record crowd for a U.S. Open night session. In team sports, athletes regularly encounter hostile environments of 30,000 fans or more. But standing alone in front of all that passion, energy and desire is something different, and Kontaveit informally awarded the audience an assist in the outcome.“It was really hard,” Kontaveit said of the crowd, adding, “I knew it was coming. I guess you can’t learn from anyone else’s mistakes. Feeling it, it was something I never experienced before.”The fans not only cheered when Williams won a point; they yelled encouragement to their heroine throughout the match, shouting, “We love you, Serena,” and “Come on, Serena,” including at critical moments on Kontaveit’s service toss, which is against audience decorum. Several times the chair umpire had to take the fans to task and ask for quiet as Kontaveit waited.Serena Williams had 11 aces to Kontaveit’s five.Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times“They were not rooting against me,” Kontaveit said. “They just wanted Serena to win so bad. I don’t think it’s a personal attack against me or anything. It’s fair. She deserves this.” When the match was over and the players had shaken hands at the net, Kontaveit quickly gathered up her rackets and within moments was back in the locker room, sorting out her feelings after playing one of her best matches of the summer, only to lose to a crowd favorite.Kontaveit knew what was coming well beforehand. She understood she would be facing a substantial onslaught of support in favor of her opponent, and claimed it would relieve her of all expectations and pressure.The precedent had been set on Monday during Williams’s declarative first-round straight-sets win over Danka Kovinic of Montenegro. The crowd for that match was so loud, and in such a celebratory mood, that Kovinic said she could not hear the ball coming off the strings of the rackets, an important signifier of how the ball might move after it lands. Kovinic, ranked No. 80, spoke of actually being swept up in the moment herself, dazzled by the celebrities in attendance that night. For Kontaveit, it was more about the competition, and she was not as carefree afterward.Although she has earned the No. 2 ranking, she has had a difficult summer, losing three of her last four matches on hardcourts entering the U.S. Open. She said she contracted Covid-19 in April and had difficulty regaining her strength. Her one singles title this year came in St. Petersburg, Russia, in February, but she also made it to the finals in Doha, Qatar, later that month.Kontaveit reached the fourth round of the U.S. Open in her first try in 2015, but since then has not been immune to getting knocked out in the first or second round of a major. It has now happened 16 times in the 27 majors she has entered since that run. Her best result at a major is reaching the quarterfinal stage at the 2020 Australian Open, where she lost to Simona Halep.She does have some experience of going deep into the tournament at the U.S. Open. As a junior in 2012 she reached the final, losing to Samantha Crawford.This year, players have commented that the courts at the U.S.T.A. Billie Jean King National Tennis Center are faster than normal, a factor that would tend to enhance the playing style of both Williams and Kontaveit, since each relies on power. Kontaveit indicated she was all for it.Michelle V. Agins/The New York TimesAfter an early exit from the Western and Southern Open outside Cincinnati, she arrived early in New York and practiced on the same courts. The difference was that then, there was virtually no one in the stadium watching. On Wednesday, the entire tennis world was tuned in.As Kontaveit said on Monday, “I’m not sure if I’ll ever experience something like this again.”The next player to experience it will be Ajla Tomljanovic, from Australia, who beat Evgeniya Rodina in three sets on Court 7 at roughly the same time that Williams and Kontaveit were playing. Even from over there, Tomljanovic could hear the noise pulsating from Ashe, the same din that she will be facing in person on Friday night.“I’m like, Court 7 isn’t that close,” Tomljanovic said. “I kept thinking, ‘Oh, my God, that’s annoying me and I’m not even playing against her.’” More

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    Who Will Serena Williams Play in the Third Round?

    The scene was quieter on the much smaller Court 7, with only a few dozen people sitting on the metal bleachers on Wednesday night to watch Ajla Tomljanovic of Australia defeat Evgeniya Rodina of Russia in three sets.Tomljanovic, 29, will now face Serena Williams in the third round. The two players have never faced each other.Tomljanovic, No. 46 in the world, arrived at the U.S. Open after an impressive performance at Wimbledon in which she advanced to the quarterfinals before losing to the eventual champion, Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan.Rodina handily took the first set of the night, 6-1, but then Tomljanovic quickly took the first three games of the second set. Down 3-0, Rodina called for a medical trainer to the court. The trainer appeared to be treating her leg before they left the court.While Rodina was being treated, Tomljanovic put on a sweatshirt and practiced her serves to stay warm. Rodina returned to the court after several minutes with what appeared to be tape over her right thigh.Rodina won the next two games to make it 3-2, and then called for a trainer to the court again. Down 5-2, Rodina again called for a trainer, who appeared to redo the tape on her leg.Tomljanovic won the next set, 6-2. After the second set, Rodina took another medical timeout and left the court. Tomljanovic appeared to take issue with Rodina’s second break and had a few words with the chair umpire about it.Serving at 5-3, Rodina failed to close out the match, as Tomljanovic pushed it to 5-4, winning the break with a forehand.At 5-5, the two players dueled out an 11-point game that Rodina lost on a forehand unforced error. Up 6-5, Tomljanovic closed out the match on her serve.The third round starts on Friday. More

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    Celebrities and Athletes Who Showed Up to See Serena Williams Tonight

    Two nights after a number of politicians, A-list actors and professional athletes came to see Serena Williams play in the first round of the U.S. Open, the stars aligned again.Like Monday night, the guests in Williams’s player’s box included Alexis Ohanian, her husband; Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr., her daughter, who turns 5 on Thursday; Oracene Price, her mother; and Anna Wintour. Tiger Woods was also joined, and he was eventually greeted by Venus Williams during the first set.After coming to Monday night’s match, Spike Lee returned for the second round match, sitting courtside. Tennis star Billie Jean King also came back.Dionne Warwick before the matchMichelle V. Agins/The New York TimesGov. Kathy Hochul of New York joined the list of politicians to come watch Williams, after former President Bill Clinton and Mayor Eric Adams of New York were in attendance on Monday.Others in attendance or expected to attend include: Dionne Warwick, Jason Collins, Amy Schneider, Zendaya, Anthony Anderson, Bella and Gigi Hadid, La La Anthony, Chelsea Handler, and Steve Nash. More