SI.com 2003 Wimbledon



Sibling rivalry

Serena aims to defend title, extend win streak vs. Venus

Posted: Friday July 04, 2003 11:03 AM
Updated: Saturday July 05, 2003 9:39 AM
  Serena Williams Serena Williams seeks to become just the fifth woman to successfully defend her Wimbledon title since 1968. AP

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -- Check out who's back in a Grand Slam final: two Williams sisters. Well, it might be more like just one and a half.

When they meet Saturday in a rematch of the 2002 Wimbledon championship, Serena Williams will be defending her title against an injured opponent, big sis Venus.

While Serena hit on the practice courts at the All England Club on Friday, Venus stayed at home to rest and get treatment for the strained abdominal muscle that has pestered her for two months and flared up during the semifinals.

"She's definitely a tough opponent, and she's playing very well, but it doesn't matter who is on the other side of the net," said Venus, the 2000-01 Wimbledon winner. "I'm still going to go for it. I would love to win here again."

It will be their sixth showdown for a major title, and it's not the first time Venus has been hurt. She was hindered by a right shoulder problem during the Wimbledon final a year ago, and two months later took on Serena for the U.S. Open title with tape on her right hand to cover a blister.

Both times, Venus lost. Both times, she discounted the injuries' significance.

Advantage: Serena
Career head-to-head meetings
Year  Tourney  Round  Winner  Score 
1998  Aus. Open  2nd  Venus  7-6, 6-1 
1998  Rome  qtrs  Venus  6-4, 6-2 
1999  K. Biscayne  final  Venus  6-1, 4-6, 6-4 
1999  G.S. Cup  final  Serena  6-1, 3-6, 6-3 
2000  Wimbledon  semis  Venus  6-2, 7-6 
2001  Indian Wells  semis  *Serena  walkover 
2001  U.S. Open  final  Venus  6-2, 6-4 
2002  Miami  semis  Serena  6-2, 6-2 
2002  Fr. Open  final  Serena  6-3, 7-5 
2002  Wimbledon  final  Serena  7-6, 6-3 
2002  U.S. Open  final  Serena  6-4, 6-3 
2003  Aus. Open  final  Serena  7-6, 3-6, 6-4 
* Does not officially count as a win or a loss
 
 

Neither appeared to be as serious as her current malady, which had her gasping for air or doubling over between points Thursday against Kim Clijsters.

During the third game of that 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 victory, Venus aggravated the muscle injury that first forced her to stop playing during the final of a tournament in Poland in May, then contributed to her fourth-round French Open exit.

But she toughed it out.

"I never retired out of a Grand Slam match, and I just felt I couldn't do it," Venus said. "Obviously, if I got to the point where I really just was feeling really horrible, awful and awful, I would hang up the racket. I'm no fool."

From the first Wimbledon women's final in 1884 -- incidentally, the only time siblings not named Williams met in a Grand Slam final -- never has a player quit during the match or failed to show up because of an injury.

Two men's finals weren't completed. In 1911, H. Roper Barnett retired during the fifth set, ceding the title to Anthony F. Wilding, and in 1931, Sidney B. Wood Jr. won in a walkover when Francis X. Shields didn't play at all.

"I'm going to do what I can," the fourth-seeded Venus said. "I have to at least show up for the final."

 
Venus 'feeling better'
LONDON (Reuters) -- Venus Williams, who suffered a recurrence of an abdominal injury during her Wimbledon semifinal win over Kim Clijsters, said she was feeling better after treatment on Friday.

Despite the injury, Venus came from a set down to beat Clijsters in Thursday's semifinal and vowed to play in the final against her sister on Saturday.

"I've had treatment with my trainer at home and I'm feeling better," Venus said on Friday. "I didn't practice today as I'm trying to get as much rest as possible for tomorrow's final."

The 2000 and 2001 champion lost her title to Serena in the final last year, and she will be gunning for revenge when play starts on Centre Court.

"It would be a very special feeling to hold that trophy again because Wimbledon is very dear to me," said the world No. 4. "It's a special place."

"It's where I won my first Grand Slam, and I admire the history and the tradition of The Championships."

The siblings have contested five Grand Slam finals. Although Venus won their first showdown at the U.S. Open in 2001, she has been upstaged by Serena in the past four.

"She's definitely a tough opponent and she's playing very well," said Venus, who became the first women to lose four consecutive Grand Slam finals following her defeat by Serena at the Australian Open in January.

"But it doesn't matter who is on the other side of the net, I'm still going to go for it.

"I would love to win here again. I've had a good tournament, fought through some tough situations and played well in general." 
 

Serena has played very much like a player ranked No. 1 and someone who has won four of the past five majors (to lead Venus 5-4 overall in Slams).

She's doing everything quite well, even if she always asks herself for more.

"I can't afford to be 70-to-80 percent. If I'm not 100 percent, it is going to be hard for me to win," Serena said, looking ahead to Saturday. "It's not easy for me to play someone I care so much about."

Indeed, that's been a knock against the siblings: As fantastic as they are against everyone else, they don't always seem to bring out the best in each other on court.

The 2002 Wimbledon final was an exception, with both smacking balls with full force and chasing down each other's apparent winners to the corners. It was riveting for 1 1/2 sets -- Serena won 7-6 (4), 6-3 -- and probably was the best of their 11 head-to-head matches. Serena holds a 6-5 edge, including wins in the past five matchups, all Grand Slam finals.

Venus is only the third woman to reach four straight Wimbledon finals, after Chris Evert (1978-81) and Martina Navratilova (1982-90). And she might not have made it without Serena's help.

During a rain delay less than an hour into her match against Clijsters, Venus was in a bad state. Down a set and in real pain, she was panicking in the locker room.

That's when her mother and sisters, including Serena, showed up to calm and encourage her. Suddenly, Serena was in the unusual position of helping a potential opponent reach the final.

Asked whether she thinks Serena will go after her Saturday, Venus said: "Oh, definitely. If I'm playing an opponent that's injured ... I hope it doesn't become something horrible, but there's nothing I can do about it.

"That's probably how she feels."

 
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