There will be no fairytale ending for Serena, says Navratilova
			
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
			
			
			 [August 24, 2022] 
			By Steve Keating 
			 
			(Reuters) - Serena Williams may have planned retirement her way but 
			the American must be prepared to accept the goodbyes as well as the 
			losses and exit the stage with grace, tennis great Martina 
			Navratilova has told Reuters. 
			 
			Williams signalled her intention to retire in a Vogue article in 
			early August saying she was "evolving away from tennis" but never 
			confirming the U.S. Open as her final event. 
			 
			However, for Navratilova, like most of the tennis world, the message 
			was clear -- Flushing Meadows, where Williams won the first of her 
			23 Grand Slam titles in 1999, will be the place she takes her final 
			bow. 
			 
			Navratilova said she completely understood the emotions Williams was 
			wrestling with as she approaches her final match having experienced 
			many of them herself. 
			 
			But having made her decision, Williams must be prepared to live with 
			it and say goodbye even in the face of defeat. 
			 
			"It's hard," said Navratilova, who is working with Sense Arena on a 
			virtual reality tennis training product that provides players with 
			enhanced visualisation. 
			 
			"When I retired in '93 I told the press it was my last year which 
			was a mistake because every single tournament was a freaking 
			tear-jerker." 
  
		
			
			  
		
			 
			Williams' short farewell tour, which has included two stops - in 
			Toronto and Cincinnati - has been more bitter than sweet. 
			 
			The 40-year-old Williams also said in the Vogue article that she did 
			not like the word "retirement" and has been clearly frustrated by 
			the inability to dictate the terms of her exit. 
			 
			"Serena did it her way, which was announcing in a very glamorous way 
			on Vogue magazine, but then she is not accepting the losses, she is 
			not accepting what comes with it which is saying goodbye," added 
			Navratilova. 
			 
			ONE VICTORY 
			 
			Beaten in the last 16 at Roland Garros in June 2021, Williams has 
			played sporadically and that has been reflected in her results, 
			winning only one match since. 
			 
			[to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            
			
			Serena Willams (USA) follows through on a forehand in her match 
			against Emma Raducanu (GBR) at the Western & Southern Open at the at 
			the Lindner Family Tennis Center. Mandatory Credit: Susan Mullane-USA 
			TODAY Sports/ 
            
			  
 
			 At the Cincinnati Open last week, her final tune-up 
			ahead of the U.S. Open which starts Aug. 29, Williams was humbled 
			6-4 6-0 by U.S. Open champion Raducanu and marched off the court 
			stone-faced, barely acknowledging an adoring crowd. 
			 
			Navratilova believes Williams should brace herself for more 
			disappointment because the U.S. Open is unlikely to provide the 
			fairytale ending she would like for her career. 
			 
			If Hollywood were writing the script Williams would walk off into 
			retirement in triumph by winning an elusive 24th Slam that would 
			pull her level with Australian Margaret Court at the top of the 
			all-time list. 
			 
			While the U.S. Open can produce a good Cinderella story like last 
			year when Raducanu, an 18-year-old qualifier ranked 150 in the 
			world, hoisted the trophy but Navratilova does not see Williams 
			turning back the clock and conjuring similar magic. 
			 
			"Emotions can only carry you so far, I don't see a Cinderella happy 
			ending where she wins the tournament," said Navratilova. "The way 
			she has looked it doesn't look like she is going to make a 
			miraculous comeback and win the tournament. 
			 
			"And with the stress of knowing this is likely your last tournament 
			it doesn't help. 
			 
			"But if anyone can overcome it would be Serena." 
			 
			(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by Ken Ferris) 
			[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.]  This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. 
			
			
			   |