Venus Williams returns to court at DC Open after 16-month layoff
Image: Anne-Christine Poujoulat, AFP
Venus Williams will make her return from a 16-month layoff at this week's DC Open, the seven-time Grand Slam singles champion saying Sunday she is not sure of anything beyond that.
The 45-year-old American overcame a serious health scare last year and after enjoying a visit to Wimbledon decided to accept a wildcard into the US capital tournament, the first hardcourt tuneup for the US Open.
"I think I know what I want to do, but I don't always want to talk about it," Williams said. "I'm just here for now. And who knows? Maybe there is more. I hold my cards close, but at the moment, I'm focused just on this."
Williams will open against 23-year-old American Peyton Stearns, ranked 34th in the world. Stearns won her only WTA title last year on clay at Rabat.
The older sister of 23-time Grand Slam singles champion Serena Williams has not played since a first-round loss at Miami last year.
"My personal goal is to have fun I think right now and enjoy the moment, not put too much pressure on myself," Venus Williams said.
"I don't know if I define success at this moment in any sort of way other than believing in myself and sticking to my process. That's not easy to do, especially after a layoff. So those are my goals."
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
Ad loading
Venus Williams, the 2000 Sydney Olympic singles champion, has won five Wimbledon singles titles and two US Open crowns.
The most recent of her 49 WTA titles came in 2019 at the Taiwan Open. That was the last year she played a full tour schedule.
"I definitely feel I'll play well," Williams said. "I'm still the same player. I'm a big hitter. I hit big. This is my brand.
"So it's about hitting big and actually putting it in. So this will be my effort. Put it in the court. That's my main goal."
A year ago, tennis was far from the most important thing on her mind.
"Yeah, my health journey was very scary. You know, this time a year ago I was preparing to go to surgery," she said. "There was no way for me to play tennis or play the US Open... I was just trying to get healthy.
"In this last year, I have been through a lot physically, so to come back and be able to play and hopefully enjoy myself is a great opportunity."
'Fun of the challenge'
Williams was feeling well enough to accept a wildcard and a visit to Wimbledon added some inspiration.
"I had been hitting the ball and of course I love the game and the hard courts. It's my favorite surface, what I feel comfortable on. so all those different factors," Williams said of her choice to play in Washington.
"When I went to Wimbledon this year, I was there for a day and it was so beautiful and exciting. I remembered all the times that I had, and of course the adrenaline, all those things.
"I think just the pure fun of playing the game, the fun of the challenge, overcoming. Those things are very exciting."
The seven Slam singles titles by Williams match the rest of the Washington field, which includes four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka of Japan.
AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


eNCA
35 minutes ago
- eNCA
Kenya athletics trials under shadow of Chepngetich suspension
Kenya held trials for the World Athletics Championships on Tuesday under the cloud of renewed doping concerns after women's marathon world record holder Ruth Chepngetich was provisionally suspended last week. Chepngetich, 30, tested positive for the banned diuretic hydrochlorothiazide on March 14, according to the Athletics Integrity Unit. It threatens to destroy a career that has seen her win the 2019 world marathon title in Doha and set the marathon world record in Chicago last October at 2hr 09min 56sec, making her the first woman to run the distance under 2hr 10min. Her case has also cast a shadow over Kenya's preparation for the World Championships in Tokyo from September 13 to 25. Few in the Kenyan sports community have been willing to talk about the case. "It has increased suspicions that it is still a big issue. The authorities still have a lot more to do in the fight against doping," a former Kenyan world champion, who requested anonymity, told AFP. Kenya has invested massively to clean up its image after a string of doping scandals around the 2016 Rio Olympics led to it being declared non-compliant by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Nearly 130 Kenyan athletes, mainly long-distance runners, have been sanctioned for drugs offences since 2017, and Kenya has put in place a $25 million, five-year programme to attempt to combat the problem. In June 2024, Kenya handed out its first lifetime ban to marathon runner Beatrice Toroitich and a six-year ban to 10km record-holder Rhonex Kipruto. Kenyan sports lawyer Sarah Ochwada said Kenya has made significant strides. "Anti-doping is a complex system. It is a mix of bio-chemistry and medico-legal regulations," said Ochwada, who has represented several athletes suspended for doping including Rita Jeptoo, Ferdinand Omanyala, and Mark Otieno. "With more testing, the system is likely to catch both inadvertent and intentional anti-doping rule violators," she said, adding that it was up to Kenyan athletes to take "destiny into their own hands" and make sure they don't accidentally break the rules. Diuretics are banned because they can be used to rapidly lose weight or to flush out signs of performance-enhancing drugs. Athletics Kenya still has high hopes of success at the World Championships 10 years after it stunned the world by claiming the overall title for the first time in Beijing with seven golds, six silvers and three bronzes. Among the athletes expected to shine on Tuesday include rising 1,500m star Phanuel Kipkosgei Koech, the 18-year-old who upset Britain's reigning world champion Josh Kerr at the London Diamond League on Saturday.


eNCA
35 minutes ago
- eNCA
New-look Australia swim team use worlds to build towards LA 2028
Seasoned campaigners Kaylee McKeown and Kyle Chalmers spearhead a young Australia squad for the world championships in Singapore as the swimming powerhouse undergoes a post-Olympics changing of the guard. Since Paris, where Australia won seven golds to the eight by the United States, several big names have either retired or are resting. Australia's most successful Olympian, Emma McKeon, has hung up her goggles as have other stalwarts including Mitch Larkin, Brianna Throssell and Jenna Strauch. Four-time Olympic gold medallist Ariarne Titmus -- who lost her 400m freestyle world record to Canadian Summer McIntosh last month -- is on an extended break. That has opened the door for 10 debutants to make the Australia squad for the World Aquatic Championships, where the action in the pool begins on Sunday. Head coach Rohan Taylor characterised Singapore as the beginning of a new cycle building to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, and a key learning experience for Australia's next potential superstars. "I am excited by what this team can do over the next four years," said Taylor. "This is the beginning of the third Olympic campaign I have been the head coach for, and this team has a strong nucleus in place. "The end goal is LA, but to be great in LA this very young team, which boasts 10 rookies, is going to learn what is needed on the global stage in Singapore." Eleven of the squad are aged 20 or under. At just 16, Sienna Toohey has Australian fans most excited after she came from nowhere to qualify for the 50m and 100m breaststroke. Australia also have high hopes for fellow newcomers such as Hannah Fredericks (200m backstroke) and Ben Goedemans (800m freestyle), while Ella Ramsay, 21, will contest four events. The experienced core of the squad is led by Paris Olympics 50m freestyle champion Cameron McEvoy, who will be at his seventh world championships. His close friend Chalmers -- who has won medals in the 100m free at three consecutive Olympics including gold on debut in Rio 2016 -- toyed with packing up swimming after Paris, but a new coach has rejuvenated him. - Scintillating form - He was in scintillating form at the trials, qualifying in speedy times for the 50m and 100m freestyle, and the 50m butterfly. "I'm just trusting what I have been doing in training, listening to what my coaches are telling me, trusting that we've done the work," said Chalmers, who has won 12 world championship medals, including five golds. The women are headlined by McKeown, who successfully defended her 100m and 200m backstroke titles in Paris. She will also swim the 50m in Singapore -- an event added to the Olympic programme in 2028 -- looking to emulate the treble she won at the 2023 world championships. AFP | DAVID GRAY Like McKeown, Olympic 200m champion Mollie O'Callaghan has been open about her struggles mentally after the high of Paris, where she achieved her dreams with three golds, a silver and a bronze. She has refocused and is a gold-medal prospect in both the 100m and 200m freestyle. Fast-rising teenager Olivia Wunsch is Australia's other women's 100m freestyle entrant, also qualifying for the 50m free alongside Olympic silver medallist Meg Harris. Lani Pallister has taken giant strides since the Olympics and had a breakthrough trials. She became only the third woman to swim under 15min 40sec in the 1500m freestyle behind American great Katie Ledecky and the retired Dane Lottie Friis. Pallister also shattered Titmus's 800m national record and went under four minutes for the first time in the 400m. "I think I've shown what I can do and I'm excited to build on it -- I don't think this is my limit," she said. By Martin Parry


The Citizen
3 hours ago
- The Citizen
Four matches, four wins: 10 things we've learned about the Boks this season
It's been a mixed bag from the reigning world champions so far in 2025, with bigger challenges to come in the Rugby Championship. Two fringe first-choice players who would have made coach Rassie Erasmus take notice over the last month are Canan Moodie, left, and Edwill van der Merwe, right. Picture: Phill Magakoe / AFP The reigning world champions have got their 2025 season off to a flying start, recording impressive wins against the Barbarians, Italy in two Tests, and Georgia in a one-off Test. They have hardly been troubled and coach Rassie Erasmus has used close to 50 players so far this year, with several up-and-coming men getting their debuts. Bigger challenges lie ahead, in the Rugby Championship, but for now South African rugby fans can sit back and digest what they have seen of the Boks. Here are our 10 takeaways of the Springboks in 2025. Unbelievable all-round depth The coach has said he wants each position to have three players good enough to slot in at any stage, against any opposition. Well, he's pretty much there. Erasmus has built unreal depth over the last few years. The Boks have got several quality players in each position now … and settling on matchday-23s in the coming Tests won't be easy. Willemse or Fassi, Kriel or Moodie, Pollard or Libbok, De Jager or Nortje … and where does Edwill van der Merwe fit in? Sacha's not there yet Rising flyhalf star Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu has got all the makings of being a great Test No 10, but he's still got some growing up to do. For all his attacking threats, he simply makes too many basic errors, while his goal-kicking in Mbombela was also not up to scratch. It almost seems like he tries too hard to be the X-factor player many fans want him to be, rather than being the general, with a calm head, who makes clear and smart decisions. Williams ticks the right boxes He took a while to get back to fitness, but Grant Williams has shown in recent weeks he is the first-choice man to be wearing the No 9 jersey. His service, decision-making and sniping runs are better than any other scrumhalf in the Bok mix. Williams has jumped ahead of Jaden Hendrikse, Cobus Reinach and Faf de Klerk in the scrumhalf queue, though Morne van den Berg has also been good this year, and is second-best behind the brilliant Williams. Grant Williams in action against Georgia in Mbombela. Picture: Dirk Kotze/Gallo Images No 8 issues Jasper Wiese is seemingly the Boks' first-choice eighthman, a position he's held since Duane Vermeulen's retirement, but he's yet to fully convince at Test level and is now also suspended. Where does it leave the Boks? Siya Kolisi can play 8, and Kwagga Smith, too, while Cobus Wiese was tried in the position against Georgia, with mixed results. Is Evan Roos the answer? Or Jean-Luc du Preez? Does Erasmus even know? Etzebeth still the best No 4? South Africa's most capped Springbok has been somewhat off his game in recent times and one's got to wonder if he'll still be the first choice No 4 come the World Cup in 2027? Cobus Wiese has a bright future ahead of him, while the other quality locks in the Bok squad, such as Lood de Jager, RG Snyman, Ruan Nortje, Jean Kleyn (who picked up an untimely injury) and Salmaan Moerat, will be pushing hard during the Rugby Championship. Has the next Bok hooker been found? Bongi Mbonambi (34) has found himself more on the bench this season than before and is getting on in age and might not be around in two years' time, hence the decision to include Marnus van der Merwe for the July Tests. Van der Merwe grabbed his chance against Georgia, after Joseph Dweba and Andre-Hugo Venter were overlooked this month, and could be Malcolm Marx's back-up man very soon. Marnus van der Merwe was on song in all departments in his debut. Picture: Anton Geyser / Gallo Images Breakdown concerns Perhaps it's because Erasmus picked different packs for all four of the Boks' matches this June and July, but the world champions struggled at the breakdowns. Italy, in particular, caused the Boks plenty of issues, which hampered the quality of ball that came out for the scrumhalf. Against better teams in the Rugby Championship, the Boks are going to have to be sharper in this area, so there's work to be done. Attack and defence When the Boks got on to the front foot and the quality of ball was good, they showed they have made big strides in playing a fast, attacking brand of rugby. They weren't afraid to have a go in the last four matches and they scored some good tries — 22 in total in the three Tests. Defensively, they were also very solid, letting in just four in the three Tests, a good sign ahead of the bigger challenges to come. Innovations We've seen plenty from Erasmus' Boks over the last few years, the biggest 'innovation' being the 7-1 bench split between forwards and backs. But over the last few games we saw the 'fake lineout' in midfield, and the short-kick-off. We were also introduced to the 'hybrid player' Andre Esterhuizen who can play centre and flank. What next will Erasmus introduce to the world of rugby in the Rugby Championship? Andre Esterhuizen, Test rugby's first 'hybrid player'. Picture: Anton Geyser/Gallo Images Rugby Champs readiness The Boks have played against weak opposition in the last four weeks — the Barbarians, Italy and Georgia. They pushed the Boks in some areas, but the world champions won all their matches convincingly. Australia, Argentina and New Zealand, meanwhile, will go into the Rugby Championship having played a number of big Tests — Australia and New Zealand especially, against the Lions and France respectively. It's also important to note Erasmus made 10, 15 and 16 personnel changes to his teams in successive weeks this last month.