Sports

Why Serena Williams Isn’t Watching Wimbledon

In an interview with Vanity Fair, the GOAT of women’s tennis talks about the struggle of becoming a spectator, hosting this week’s ESPYs, and why a comeback is always in the “back, back, back of my mind.”
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By Damon Winter/The New York Times/Redux.

Serena Williams couldn’t bear to watch.

As the quarterfinal action of Wimbledon unfolded on Tuesday, Williams tuned in to the tournament she’d won seven times––but not for long. “I just had to turn it off,” she said. “It was too hard.”

Nearly two years into retirement, Williams is finding the role of tennis spectator more challenging than the role of player. That wasn’t the case initially, as Williams said she “watched every single tournament” in the first year after hanging up her racquet.

Not long after ending her tennis career, Williams, who already had one daughter, Olympia, with her husband, Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, became pregnant with their second, Adira, who was born last August. She felt more content with retirement while pregnant, Williams said, but now “it’s definitely harder.”

“I miss it, and I think that’s normal. It’s normal to miss something that you’ve done since the day you were born,” she said.

But when it comes to watching tennis these days?

“Oh my God,” she said. “I just can’t right now.”

Such angst is normal for an athlete transitioning to a post-playing career––particularly one as decorated as Williams, winner of 23 Grand Slam singles titles and the greatest sportswoman of her generation. The ecstasy of high-level competition is not replicable in civilian life.

Which is why Williams, now 42, can’t fully rule out a comeback, no matter how remote the possibility.

“I think as long as I’m healthy, that’s always going to be in the back, back, back, back, back, back, back of my mind,” she said. “I stay fit. I stay healthy. When I’m watching, it’s like, Okay, well, you could be out there too.”

Despite the sense of longing, Williams still believes she made the right decision to walk away from tennis when she did. And she has hardly languished in retirement.

Since playing her final match at the 2022 US Open, Williams has kept busy––with motherhood and her portfolio. Her venture capital fund, Serena Ventures, which she founded in 2017, has continued to invest in start-ups and unicorns, particularly those run by women and people of color. She and Ohanian also have stakes in the National Women’s Soccer League’s Angel City FC and the Los Angeles Golf Club, a franchise in the TGL golf league, which is set to launch next year.

On Thursday, Williams will shift from investment to entertainment when she hosts the ESPY Awards, ESPN’s annual ceremony honoring the best teams, athletes, and moments from the past year in sports.

It’s a bucket list moment for Williams, who said she had always wanted to host the ESPYs but never could due to scheduling conflicts. The ceremony has long been held in the middle of the summer, a time that used to see Williams dominating on the grass courts of Wimbledon. With her playing career wrapped, Williams didn’t think twice when ESPN courted her in the spring to host.

But not every part of the gig has come naturally to her.

“I think as a host you have to make fun of people, and I’m struggling with that,” she told me by phone while in between rehearsals on Tuesday. “I got a line the other day, and I was like, I don’t want to say that. But I also understand that’s part of the job.”

Her hosting appearance serves as a cross-promotional opportunity for ESPN, which will begin airing a new eight-part docuseries called In the Arena: Serena Williams on Wednesday.

But it also represents a snapshot of the sporting zeitgeist.

“Women’s sports are having a well-deserved moment in the spotlight right now, and we couldn’t think of a more perfect person to host the ESPYs than Serena Williams,” said Kate Jackson, vice president of production at ESPN.

Williams is happy to see other female athletes garnering recognition, but she said she is “frustrated” with the narrative of a women’s sports renaissance.

“Women’s sports has been around forever. Basketball has been around forever,” she said. “Women have been doing so amazing for so long, so for me, I’m like, There is no resurgence. It was always here. You guys just started paying attention.”

Tennis has historically had far more gender parity than other sports when it comes to media coverage and public interest. Unlike with basketball or soccer, there is no gap in popularity between the men’s and women’s games. Dating back to Williams’s reign, the women’s final of the US Open has routinely drawn a larger television audience than the men’s final.

Williams attributes that to pioneers like Billie Jean King, the women’s tennis icon and a fierce champion for gender equality.

“We had Billie Jean King, and not every sport had that. I think I would be remiss not to say that, because Billie did so much for women’s tennis and put it on the map,” Williams said. “I don’t think other sports necessarily had that person, that one person, but now they have media; now they have a lot of people. But I think we were so fortunate to have that.”

Williams has expressed interest in owning a WNBA team someday, but she isn’t entirely sure what retirement will entail. When I asked if the ESPYs portended more work on camera, Williams noted that she wanted to be an actor when she was younger.

“I always said I’d be a good action star,” she said. “I mean, that’s kind of obvious, though, right?”

Williams is less interested in entering the world of sports broadcasting, though she hasn’t ruled it out completely.

“One thing I have learned to say is ‘never say never,’” she said.

I asked her if that same mantra applied to unretiring from tennis.

“Oh gosh,” Williams said. “Don’t do that.”