Mon | Dec 2, 2024

Venus falls early, then loses to Svitolina at Wimbledon

Published:Tuesday | July 4, 2023 | 1:19 AM
Officials assist after Venus Williams of the United States slipped while playing Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina (left) in a first round women’s singles match on day one of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London yesterday.
Officials assist after Venus Williams of the United States slipped while playing Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina (left) in a first round women’s singles match on day one of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London yesterday.

WIMBLEDON, England (AP):

As Venus Williams entered Centre Court for her 24th Wimbledon appearance at age 43, greeted by a standing ovation, she held a green exercise band overhead with both hands and stretched it while striding to her sideline seat.

Once her first-round match against Elina Svitolina began, Williams played like a throwback version of herself. Those big serves. Those crisp strokes. Quickly, she was a point from a 3-0 lead yesterday.

And then, moving forward to attempt a volley, Williams slipped on the green grass. Her right foot gave way. She collapsed to the ground. She shrieked and clutched at her right knee, which already was covered by a beige sleeve. Williams twice was treated by a trainer – including getting that knee taped up during a medical timeout after the first set – and, although the American kept playing, she could not manage to overcome 2019 Wimbledon semi-finalist Svitolina in a 6-4, 6-3 defeat.

“I’m not sure what I’ve done. I’m going to have to investigate it tomorrow. It’s late today but it was quite painful,” Williams said. “Grass is inherently going to be slippery; you’re going to fall at some point. It was just bad luck for me. I started the match perfectly. I was literally killing it. And then I got killed by the grass.”

Williams, a former No. 1 now ranked outside the Top 500 after a series of injuries that limited her to 22 matches since the start of 2021, was the oldest player in this year’s field and the fourth-oldest to compete in the main draw at Wimbledon.

“Right now, I’m kind of in shock. I can’t believe this happened. It’s bizarre. I’m still processing it at the moment,” Williams said at her news conference more than an hour after the match ended. “What makes this one hard to process is that I’ve had so many injuries. ... This is not what I want for myself.”

Svitolina was only two when Williams made her Wimbledon debut in 1997 and just five when Williams won the event for the first time in 2000.

“It’s always a pleasure to play against Venus,” Svitolina said, calling her opponent a “big legend”.

No. 1-ranked Iga Swiatek, who won her opening match 6-1, 6-3 against Zhu Lin, used that same term – “legend” – to describe Williams.

“I admire (how) she still finds motivation to play. I think it’s amazing. She really must love the game, like truly,” said Swiatek, who has won four major titles but is yet to get past the fourth round at the All England Club.

Something of a surprise arrived at No. 1 Court just before darkness when Coco Gauff – who burst onto the scene at age 15 by beating Williams in the opening round at Wimbledon – was eliminated by Sofia Kenin 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 in a highlight-reel matchup between two Americans.

While Kenin did win the 2020 Australian Open, even knocking off Gauff along the way, she had exited in the first round at each of her past three majors, is ranked just 128th, and needed to go through qualifying rounds to get into the main draw at Wimbledon. Gauff, meanwhile, was seeded No. 7 and established herself as a consistent Week 2 presence at Slams, including a run to the French Open final last year.