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Venus, 45, becomes the oldest woman since Navratilova to win a singles match

Updated: 2025-07-24 09:37
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Venus Williams celebrates her win over Peyton Stearns during a round-of-32 match at the DC Open in Washington on Tuesday. AP

WASHINGTON — Venus Williams became the second-oldest woman to win a tour-level singles match in professional tennis, delivering some of her familiar big serves and groundstrokes at age 45 while beating Peyton Stearns — 22 years her junior — by a 6-3, 6-4 score at the DC Open on Tuesday night.

This was the first singles victory for Williams in nearly two years. The only older woman to win a match was Martina Navratilova at 47 in 2004.

The former No 1-ranked Williams had not played singles in an official match since March 2024 in Miami, missing time while having surgery to remove uterine fibroids. She hadn't won in singles since August 2023 in Cincinnati. Until this week, she was listed by the WTA Tour as "inactive".

"It is not easy," Williams said, "to (come back) after all that time and play the perfect match."

But, backed by a crowd that clearly was there to see and support her at the hard-court tournament in the nation's capital, Williams showed glimpses of the talent she possesses and the skills she displayed while earning all of her Grand Slam titles: seven in singles, 14 in women's doubles — all alongside younger sister Serena — and two in mixed doubles.

"I wanted to play a good match," she told the fans, then added a phrase that drew appreciative roars: "and win the match".

In Tuesday's second game, for example, Williams smacked a return winner to get things started, then delivered a couple of other big responses to break Stearns, a 23-year-old who won singles and team NCAA titles with the University of Texas and is currently ranked 35th in the world.

In the next game, Williams sprinted forward to reach a drop shot and replied with a winner. Soon, she led 4-2, and then closing that set.

She was accompanied by a chorus of cheers. The first arrived when Williams walked out into the main stadium at the DC Open, a 7,000-seat arena that's more than twice as large as where she was for her doubles victory a day earlier. Another came when she strode from the sideline to the center of the court for the formality of the coin toss. The noise really reached a crescendo when Williams began hitting aces — at 177 km/h and faster — the way she used to.

There also were moments where Williams — who said her fiance was in the stands — looked as if it had been just as long as it actually has since she competed, including in the opening game, when she got broken at love this way: forehand wide, forehand into the net, forehand long, backhand long.

At the end, it took Williams a bit of extra effort to close things out. She kept holding match points, and kept failing to convert them. But, eventually, on her sixth attempt, Williams powered in a 180 km/h serve that Stearns returned into the net. That was it: Williams smiled wide as can be, raised a fist and jogged to the net to shake hands, then performed her customary post-win pirouette-and-wave.

She advanced to a second-round matchup against No 5 seed Magdalena Frech, a 27-year-old from Poland.

In other action Tuesday, Emma Raducanu handed No 7 seed Marta Kostyuk a sixth consecutive loss, eliminating her 7-6 (4), 6-4. That set up a meeting between Raducanu and four-time major champion Naomi Osaka, who was a 6-2, 7-5 winner against Yulia Putintseva.

Two top men's seeds exited: Cameron Norrie beat No 2 Lorenzo Musetti 3-6, 6-2, 6-3, and No 3 Holger Rune withdrew from the tournament because of a back injury. No 4 seed Ben Shelton defeated Mackenzie McDonald 6-3, 6-4.

Agencies via Xinhua

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