Serena Williams shook off the rust from a 15-month layoff due to
pregnancy to win her opening match at the WTA Indian Wells event with a
7-5, 6-3 victory over
Zarina Diyas.
The unseeded Williams was the top-ranked player in the world when she
began her long layoff following her victory at the 2017 Australian Open,
where she was already expecting daughter Alexis Olympia who was born in
September. After a couple of exhibitions and a Fed Cup doubles match,
Williams said Thursday she is ready to hit with the big guns on the Tour
again. “I am not going to be there today or next week but I will get
there and I do have my goals,” Williams said.
“At some point I need to jump and fly. It takes time to get back.”
Williams entered the court Thursday night to a loud ovation, with many
in the half full stadium standing and applauding as she came out of the
tunnel for just her third appearance in Indian Wells in the last 17
years.
After that it was a matter of gradually asserting herself by taking
control of the rallies, and she got the first break of serve in the 11th
game of the first set and secured the set in the next game on her third
set point. Her daughter was born on September 1 but Williams says
throughout the postnatal period she tried to maintain a level of
fitness.
Sitting in Williams’ box were her husband and Reddit co-founder Alexis
Ohanian, mother Oracene, sisters Lyndrea and Isha, her agent, and her
coach Patrick Mouratoglou. Older sister Venus watched from a seat in an
upper-level box.
The 36-year-old American is the star attraction in Indian Wells, but
behind her popularity this year was the mystery surrounding her match
fitness and ball-striking ability.
The 23-time Grand Slam winner answered some of those questions Thursday
by blasting four aces and winning 63 percent of her first-serve points.
“From zero to Serena I am with the S,” she said. “I have got a ways to
go. It is a journey for me and I am just going to go for it.
“I wanted to stay fit and just be ready. I wasn’t ready to retire yet even though it would have been a great way to retire.”
Venus clash ahead?
Williams set up a second round match with 29th seeded Kiki Bertens. A
win over Bertens could see her face Venus in the third round. Venus, who
is seeded eighth, enjoyed a first round bye and will play Romania’s
Sorana Cirstea in her opening match. Serena boycotted Indian Wells for
14 years after she was booed in the 2001 final. She returned in 2015 but
had to pull out before her semi-final against Simona Halep with a knee
problem.
In 2016, she lost in the final to Victoria Azarenka, 6-4, 6-4.
Indian Wells features a star-studded women’s field in a tournament that
looks wide open for the taking by any of the top 10 seeds, led by world
number one Halep. Like Williams, Azarenka ended a long layoff from a
pregnancy by competing in the final match of the Indian Wells night
session Thursday.
Azarenka, who needed a wild card to get into the draw, cruised past Britain’s Heather Watson 6-4, 6-2.
Meanwhile Argentine Federico Delbonis saved two match points and earned a
second-round clash with Roger Federer when he outlasted Ryan Harrison
6-2 4-6 7-5 in the men’s section. Delbonis used his powerful forehand to
good effect, eventually dispatching the American in a match that
featured numerous long rallies.
Russian Daniil Medvedev maintained his perfect career record against Steve Johnson when he beat the American 7-6(0) 6-4.
Canadian teenager Denis Shapovalov, meanwhile, was too good for qualifier Ricardas Berankis of Lithuania, winning 6-3 6-4.
Serena Williams leaves the court after defeating Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan during the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, California. (Getty Images/AFP)