Williams sisters loom over Wimbledon
The imposing figures of Serena and Venus Williams are looming over
Wimbledon as the most famous sister act in sport attempts to maintain a
decade of dominance at the All England club.
At least one Williams sister has appeared in 10 of the last 11
women's singles finals stretching back to 2000, when Venus downed
Lindsay Davenport in straight sets to claim her maiden Grand Slam
triumph.
Since then the sisters have turned Wimbledon into a personal fifedom,
winning the title on nine occasions - Serena with four, Venus with five.
But the $2.9 million dollar question - the record purse on offer to this
year's champion - is the extent to which lengthy injury lay-offs have
diminished the power of the all-conquering American duo.
Until her appearance at this week's Eastbourne WTA event, Serena had
not played since last year's Wimbledon final, where she swatted aside
Russia's Vera Zvonareva in straight sets.
Since that imperious victory, the 29-year-old 13-time grand slam
winner has struggled with a life-threatening health problem before
suffering a serious foot injury when her foot was sliced open by broken
glass. Serena insists she arrives at Wimbledon merely grateful that she
is in the draw, and claims to have put aside thoughts of defending her
crown. AFP |