By Osabuohien Imuetinyanosa

Serena Williams has become the latest A-list athlete to plan an encore performance with a return to competitive tennis after a nearly four-year absence for the 23-timesShockimg Grand Slam winner and mother of two.
The 44-year-old received a ​wildcard entry into the doubles draw at this month’s Queen’s Club Championships, where British media reported ‌she will play with 19-year-old Canadian Victoria Mboko. She ended months of speculation over a rumoured return with a cheeky social media video captioned: “Good news travels fast.”
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“I’m semi-shocked that she’s decided to do this at her age after having two kids and what she’s ​accomplished,” commentator and retired great John McEnroe said on TNT Sports on Monday.
Williams had announced she was “evolving ​away from tennis” when she last played at the 2022 U.S. Open, where she received ⁠a hero’s send-off in a multi-day celebration of her glittering career at the crown jewel of American tennis in ​New York.
Williams came up short in her bid to capture a 24th major after having her first child, Olympia, ​in 2017. She gave birth to her second child in 2023, making it appear increasingly unlikely that she would return to competitive tennis.

“She didn’t win a major after she had her first kid and I know that was something she wanted to prove she could ​do and so I’m assuming she was slightly disappointed in not doing that,” McEnroe said.

OTHERS
She is not the only ​top-level athlete with unfinished business, as advancements in training and medical care have allowed for longer careers across several sports.
Seven-times track gold ‌medallist Allyson ⁠Felix said earlier this year that she would try to make the U.S. squad in what would be her sixth Olympics. She is aiming to secure a spot on the mixed 4×400 metres relay team at the 2028 Los Angeles Games, despite having previously said that the Tokyo Games would be her last.

“It’s just about testing the limits, ​kind of an experiment of ​what’s still left there,” the ⁠40-year-old Felix, who gave birth to her second child in 2024, told “The TODAY show” last month.

Her fellow American Lindsey Vonn became the oldest downhill skier to win a World Cup race ​in December, when she mounted a comeback after knee-replacement surgery.
Vonn, whose Milano-Cortina campaign ended ​abruptly with ⁠a horrific crash, was among the first top-level athletes to offer her encouragement to Williams on social media.

In tennis, long-time Williams friend Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark made it to the fourth round at the U.S. Open in 2023 and 2024 during her own ⁠comeback campaign, ​while older sister Venus became the oldest WTA singles match winner ​since 2004, when she returned from a 16-month absence last year.
“(Serena’s) return is an expression of her passion for competition,” WTA Chair Valerie Camillo said ​in a statement on Monday. “I cannot wait to see her face a new generation.”

photo credit Reuters.

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