build a web site | fundraising | community | collect fees online | blogz
Williams Sisters Tribute
Williams Sisters Tribute  
 
 
Home Home
News Events News Events
Photo Gallery Photo Gallery
Cool Links Cool Links
Guestbook Guestbook
Venus Venus

Admin

Las Vegas Local Weather
Venus & Serena
Coach T.
Las Vegas, Nevada
89128
 
  Welcome  
 

Welcome

This WebSite is a Tribute to to fine young women who have transcended the Tennis World. Take a Look Around our Site, we have tried to maker user friendly as possible.






image_name3

08 Venus Wimbledon
Saturday, July 5

Venus beats Serena for her fifth Wimbledon title

WIMBLEDON, England -- Venus Williams beat her sister Serena Williams 7-5, 6-4 Saturday for her fifth Wimbledon title and seventh Grand Slam championship.

This was Venus' first victory over her younger sibling in a Grand Slam final since the 2001 U.S. Open, and it evened their career record at 8-8.

Venus Williams

Venus Williams came back from a shaky start Saturday to beat her sister for the first time in a tournament final since the 2001 U.S. Open

"I can't believe that it's five," Venus said. "But when you're in the final against Serena Williams, five seems too far away. ... She played so awesome, it was really a task to beat her."

Venus came from 3-1 down in the first set to turn around the match, breaking Serena four times while dropping serve twice in a final that produced breathtaking tennis despite swirling wind. This was more than a matchup between siblings; it was a contest between two of the hardest-hitting, most athletic players in the world at the top of their game.

Venus broke to finish the match in 1 hour, 51 minutes, with Serena hitting a backhand wide on the second match point. The sisters embraced at the net, and Venus kept her celebrations in check as she twirled and waved to the Centre Court crowd. Venus accepted the winner's trophy -- a sterling silver salver aptly named the Venus Rosewater dish -- from the Duke of Kent.

"It's so rewarding to perform here," Venus said. "Every time I come back I know I have the chance to play well and make history. My first job is big sister and I take that very seriously."

Watching from the players' box was the sisters' mother, Oracene. Their father, Richard, had flown back to the United States because he can't stand to watch his daughters play each other.

Referring to the mixed feelings of her family about who to support, Venus said, "It's hard for all of them, but I like to think they want me to win."

Serena Williams

Serena Williams let her frustration show during Saturday's final as her chance at another Wimbledon title -- and another win over her big sister Venus in a Grand Slam final -- slipped away.

The 26-year-old Serena accepted her runner-up trophy and paid tribute to her 28-year-old sister. "I'm so happy that at least one of us was able to win," Serena said. "She's played great this year. We're just glad to be in the finals again."

The sisters were set to return later to Centre Court to play for the women's doubles title, joining forces to face Lisa Raymond of the U.S. and Samantha Stosur of Australia in the final. "Serena deserves to win something, so I'll try even harder for that," said Venus, who collected a winner's check of $1.49 million.

Venus, appearing in her seventh Wimbledon final, avenged her two losses to Serena in the 2002 and 2003 title matches and stopped her sister from winning her ninth Grand Slam.

Many all-Williams finals have been awkward affairs that didn't live up to expectations, with the sisters having trouble playing their best. But this final featured long, corner-to-corner rallies, booming serves and winning shots flashing all over the court.

In the opening game of the second set, Venus smacked a service winner on game point at 129 mph -- breaking her own Wimbledon record of 127 mph and matching her women's tour record set at last year's U.S. Open.

Serena took more chances and finished with 32 winners and 11 unforced errors; Venus had 27 winners and 13 unforced mistakes. Serena also outaced her sister 9-4, but Venus won the big points when she needed them.

Both sisters struggled in the wind, with Venus repeatedly stopping to catch her service toss and rallies often disrupted by sudden gusts.

"It was so not easy," Serena said. "Every time I tried to hit a shot, the wind would blow it."

The third game of the second set was a match in itself -- lasting 14 minutes and 21 points. Serena broke on her seventh break point, hitting an easy volley into the open court after Venus slipped and fell backward going for a backhand at the baseline.

That gave Serena a 2-1 lead, but she failed to grab her chance and Venus broke right back in the next game. They remained on serve, engaging in a 23-stroke rally in the ninth game, until Venus broke again to end the match.

Serena came out roaring, ripping clean winners to break in the first game and go up 3-1, with two aces and two serve winners in the fourth game. She earned a break point and a chance to go up 4-1, but Venus saved it with a stretch forehand cross-court volley and managed to hold.

Two games later, the momentum changed when Venus broke for 4-4, capitalizing on her second break point with a backhand serve return.

Serena fashioned two break points in the next game, but Venus ran down a drop volley and made a forehand pass on the run to save the first and erased the second with a deep forehand return.

The game ended in unusual circumstances when Serena, thinking her shot was going out, shouted "No" before the ball landed. The chair umpire called a let, meaning the point should be replayed, but Serena conceded the point and the game.

Venus broke in the next game to take the set, with Serena swiping her racket in disgust after netting a backhand return.

 



image_name3

Tennis Better with Successful Williams Sisters

image_name2

So the question, naturally, is whether the Williams sisters are really done with tennis this time.

And the answers are:

1) You mean, as opposed to every other time one or the other woman was assumed to be ready to ditch the sport in favor of the vast world of nonspecific celebrity?

and

2) All together, now: Let's hope not.

Tennis is so much more interesting with the Williamses in it, and if you doubt that, consider the wind that abandoned the sails of the Australian Open this week when first Venus, then Serena made an unceremonious exit in the early rounds.

The defeats were troubling for different reasons, but not least of all because they both suggested a sort of semi-dabbling in the sport for the Williamses. Venus, bounced by Bulgarian Tszvetana Pironkova (that's right, I said it) in the first round, hadn't played a competitive match since early fall. Serena's third-round defeat, at the hands of Daniela Hantuchova, wasn't so much a titanic upset as it was confirmation that Serena just isn't fully into it right now.

Just this time a year ago, Serena was winning the Aussie and essentially re-establishing herself as the greater heir to her sister's place in the tennis pantheon. As Venus' game and interest appeared to wax and wane (waxing highest with the title at Wimbledon), Serena took her intensity and conditioning up a notch. It was as if she would get on top of the tennis world by simply wanting to and committing to the idea.

Now? Not so much. Serena hasn't made it past the fourth round at a major since winning in Melbourne in 2005, and she really looked this week like a player who wasn't ready to go -- a little slow, a little heavy, a little unfocused. She's just not there.

That's not such a shock, actually; it's more that the world outside hard-core tennis fandom is just now catching on to Serena's diminished vigor for the sport. She rightfully was assigned just a 13-seed for the Australian despite being the defending champ, and Hantuchova, at No. 17, didn't constitute a wild surprise as the winner Friday. Serena's overall ranking in the tennis computer system most likely will drop into the 30s, possibly even lower.

But that's the smaller picture. The larger view is the one without the Williams sisters in it, and that's a bleak view indeed.

I don't know what possesses either Venus or Serena to get inspired about tennis, but the sport almost always benefits from that inspiration. These are not only two of the most visible figures in the industry but two of the most fun to watch, to follow and to gossip about. From fashion sense to shopping habits, from fatherly involvement to deep, powerful groundstrokes and closers' mentalities, the Williamses make for great dish -- and sport, on the national and international levels, does not exist without dish.

Also, there's this sort of sense of incompletion with both when it comes to their tennis careers. You are constantly left wondering what either woman might have achieved in the sport had it fully commanded her attention and passion for more than, say, 12 months at a stretch.

Between them, they carry 12 Grand Slam singles titles and almost $30 million in career earnings just in sanctioned tour money. When they're on their games, they're both incredibly fun to watch. Venus is all range and reach, while Serena runs opponents off the court with her power. Even as it became apparent over the years that Serena was the one with the more merciless kind of killer instinct as a match player, there were those who would rather watch Venus' flowing style of play.

But you always knew not to count on that flow, on that power. You learned a while back that the Williams you saw on the court this month might not be seen again for months. It depended on other things, maybe -- on outside interests or simple boredom with just playing the game. Neither woman ever did make a lasting peace with the single-minded demands of the truly elite athlete.

What that means, in the end, is that they'll both probably wind up being more fully rounded citizens of the planet than they would have otherwise. They might know more things, or they might simply have fun doing other stuff.

The one thing they won't ever be, it now appears clear, is the tennis titans they might have been. You can argue the merits of those decisions all day long as long as everyone agrees with the obvious: The sport sure could have embraced those titans.


image_name3

Tournaments


image_name3

Monday, June 23
LATEST TOURNAMENT: Wimbledon 2008



Site: London, England | Surface: Grass/Outdoors   
Dates: June 23 - July. 6, 2008 Tier: Grand Slam Seed: 23   
Schedule Of Play | | Draws: Singles   

WTA Tour    Venus Williams (USA) def. Serena Williams (USA) 7-5, 6-4




Rankings
Monday, September 4

1 A. MAURESMO
2 J. HENIN-HARDENNE
3 K. CLIJSTERS
4 M. SHARAPOVA
5 E. DEMENTIEVA
6 N. PETROVA
7 S. KUZNETSOVA
8 P. SCHNYDER
9 M. HINGIS
10 N. VAIDISOVA


WTA Tour
UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS


Date ... Type ... Event ................. Location
May 25-June 7, 2009 French Open       Paris, France      



image_name2

image_name3

Legs


   
Williams Sisters Tribute
Williams Sisters Tribute
View Our Guestbook | Sign Our Guestbook
3 visitors have signed our guestbook.

 
 
 
  Web Sites Instruction Community
  Local Sites
Spotlight Sites
Build a Web Site
Tips and Drills
Sport Tip Email
Customer Support
News & Updates
Bulletin Boards
Camps & Clinics
Tournaments
Coaches' Corner


   
"Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice." - Unknown
   
Copyright © 2012, eteamz.com, Inc
User Agreement