• For The Win

In Her Return to the Court, Serena Williams Reminds Us Why She’s the GOAT

  • June 03, 2026
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After winning 73 singles titles, 14 doubles titles, four Olympic gold medals, and reigning as the No. 1 women's singles tennis player in the world for a collective six years, Serena Williams decided she was ready for a new challenge. In 2022, she announced that she was "evolving away" from tennis, playing her final match at the US Open that September against Ajla Tomljanovic. A retirement this was not: by that point, Serena Ventures, her venture capital firm, had raised more than $100 million dollars for start-ups focused on female and POC consumers, and she wanted to devote more time to growing that work even more. She was also 40, wanted another child, and knew that she didn't want to be pregnant and competing again. (She had her first child, Olympia, in 2017, eight months after she won the Australian Open, her 23rd Grand Slam, while eight weeks pregnant; she didn’t drop a single set.) Throughout her farewell tour, reporters and fans asked if she'd ever come back. She didn't say no.

Now four years, and another daughter, Adira, later, the Nike athlete since 2003 is back on court. Her return competition is fitting — the Queen's Club tournament in London — where she’ll play doubles.

Tennis has evolved since Williams took her pause, but then again, so has she. Below, in her own words, Williams shares her new outlook, why it's important for her daughters to see her return, and why she’s always believed in herself.

"This moment is for my daughters too. I want them to see what a strong woman I am, who I am."

Serena Williams, 23-time Grand Slam winner

Serena Williams guiding daughter Adira through a tour of Nike's world campus, including her Serena Williams Building.

This return is not about wins or losses. I just want to have fun. I want to travel and I want to enjoy myself. I've always enjoyed tennis, but this time it's from a different angle. Every time I watched a tournament, I missed it. I miss the atmosphere. I miss the court. 

Still, what I'm looking for in a doubles partner is someone that wants to win and can win. I guess that hasn't changed! I’m choosing doubles because I'm not putting any pressure on myself to do singles right now. This is a good way to start for me. 

The only different thing in my training now is that I don't get angry. Although, yesterday, I did want to crack my racket. But I thought, ‘Serena, you're absolutely not going to do that.’ In the past, I would have.

This moment is for my daughters too. I want them to see what a strong woman I am, who I am. Now, they'll be able to see what I do and the impact that I've had.

There are so many different things that define excellence. But a lot of people don't understand the full work. We see lots of results that are really fast, things that seem like they happened overnight. But there's always some sort of sacrifice. To gain something, you have to not have something. You have to decide what it is. And sometimes, it's at a cost.     

Pressure can feel very heavy, but lighter if you step up to it and own it. There's this old saying, “He who doubts, loses.” Doubt is for those who don't want to win. You can't doubt yourself. I work very hard, but I also know I'm at a different stage in my life, so I learn how to get more bang for my buck without sacrificing my hard work.

Who Serena's Looking for In a Doubles Partner

“There's this old saying, ‘He who doubts, loses.’ Doubt is for those who don't want to win. You can't doubt yourself.”

Serena Williams, 23-time Grand Slam winner

When I first started playing tennis, I had to fight to just belong. As a woman, you have to fight to show what you have done, and what you can do. And not necessarily fight, but "calmly and confidently remind." When you're sure of yourself, it's ok to walk away and say, “This isn't for me right now.” I'm very fortunate that now I get to pick and choose the battles that I decide to fight. Some of those battles are great, especially if they involve my children, but other battles end with me saying, “You know what? Not my day today.”

To stay on top, you have to welcome change. You have to pivot. Take learning AI, for example — I pivoted instantly. I don't wait, I don't think, I just do. That's how I've always been. Especially with my career, I've always thought, oh, Roger's doing that? I'm pivoting immediately. That's why I had the ability to play for so many years, I was always open to change. I changed my racket and my strings at a time where no one was doing it, and people thought that was really crazy. It was unheard of at the time. I did it, and then suddenly everyone else did it.

My partnership with Nike is all about building and creating new.
I can see Nike’s gotten back to those roots of Phil, starting each idea with “how do we help athletes.” I love what's happening in NikeSKIMS. It embodies innovation. When I first saw that, I called Kim and said, "This is genius."

I have always believed in myself.
Other people believing in you is fantastic, but let's face it, that doesn't always happen. And there's a lot of times where people will say things that make you not believe in yourself. Having your self-belief is so important. Then, it doesn't matter what happens — it won't change your foundation. It doesn't mean you self-believe in everything, because, quite frankly, I don't. I always have to go to my foundation and say, “This is what I'm great at, this is what I'm good at — now let's build on it.”    

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