TENNIS will move on from Serena Williams. It has to. Might not be easy, mind you, given what a transcendent figure she was, on the court and off. But that is what sports do, even when superstars leave. They all leave, of course, and sports always move on.
The matches will be played, new stars will emerge, fans will continue to watch. And Williams will be missed, of course. By spectators. By executives from the tours, tournaments and television. By other athletes.
And as the 2023 Australian Open gets started Monday, the first Grand Slam tournament to be held since she walked away with a farewell at the US Open in September, shortly before her 41st birthdayâthe owner of 23 major singles championships said she preferred the term âevolvingâ to âretiringââtennis will get a real taste of what a post-Serena world looks like on a big stage.
That is the case even if her impact wonât fade away, as US Open tournament director Stacey Allaster put it: âShe leaves an indelible legacy of grace and grit that will inspire athletes, female and male, for many generations to come.â
There surely will be those who keep an eye on tangible data during the two weeks at Melbourne Park and as this season, and future seasons, go along. Numbers such as attendance figures and TV ratings will be parsed in an effort to gauge what effect there is from the departure of someone who earned status as a just-one-name-necessary celebrity.
In a way, that is all a bit beside the point, however.
âHer legacy is really wide, to the point where you canât even describe it in words. She changed the sport so much. Sheâs introduced people that have never heard of tennis into the sport,â said Naomi Osaka, a 25-year-old from Japan who has won four Grand Slam titles but hasnât played a full match since August and will sit out the Australian Open. âI honestly think that sheâs, like, the biggest force in the sport. Thatâs not intentionally trying to make (Roger) Federer or (Rafael) Nadal smaller. I just think sheâs the biggest thing that will ever be in the sport.â
In recent decades, folks might have worried about what would happen when Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova stopped playing. Or when Bjorn Borg, John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors moved on. Or Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi. Or Steffi Graf. And so on.
âItâs always a loss when you have great players leave. But Iâve been through six or seven generations of this,â said Billie Jean King, a two-time inductee into the International Tennis Hall of Fame who won 12 Grand Slam trophies in singles and another 27 in womenâs or mixed doubles.
âI mean, I remember when Sampras left and when Martina and Chris left. I was like, âOh, no! Whatâs going to happen?â Well, Sampras was there, and guess what? Thereâs Roger Federer. Thereâs Nadal. ⌠Itâs the same thing with the women. Weâve got Iga (Swiatek) now, whoâs taken over,â King said. âEvery generation gets better, and the depth of womenâs tennis is better than itâs ever been, and Serena is somewhat responsible for that, because every generation builds on the last generation.â
Shortly after Williams lost to Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round at Flushing Meadows, another titan of tennis, 20-time major champ Federer, announced his retirement. Federer hadnât played an official match in more than a full year because of a series of knee operations.
For Williams, there were moments when she stepped away from competing for stretches, either because of health issues or simply because she wanted to spend time on other interests, which she thought contributed to her longevity.
Womenâs Tennis Association (WTA) CEO and Chairman Steve Simon thinks those gaps left room for some new faces to emerge in womenâs tennis, such as current No. 1 Swiatek and American teenager Coco Gauff.
âSerena has played what I would call a limited schedule over the last several years, anyway. So clearly, we have a new set of stars that are coming in and certainly establishing themselves and doing well,â Simon said. âBut I see us continuing to celebrate Serenaâand I hope she comes back and plays another five or 10 years.â
Good luck with that.
But those she brought to tennis, whether players or fans, should last long beyond that timeframe.
âSerena got a lot of people interested in our sport. And now itâs up to the next generation to do that,â King said. âPeople alwaysâthe mediaâgoes into this every time: âOh, theyâre leaving! Oh, whatâs going to happen?â Somebody always comes up to the top. The cream rises to the top.â
Image credits: AP