SERENA Williams will make a surprise return to singles action at Wimbledon later this month after accepting a wildcard.
The 44-year-old has been given the final spot in the women’s main draw – filling a gap left following the initial announcement on Tuesday.
Williams has played two doubles matches since making her competitive return earlier this month after a four-year absence.
She has won the Wimbledon singles title seven times but remains one short of Margaret Court’s long-standing women’s record of 24 Grand Slam wins.
Williams had already been given a wildcard to play alongside older sister Venus in the Wimbledon doubles.
But asked earlier this month if she would consider a singles return at SW19, she said: “You think I’m ready for singles? I need to get to work.”
Williams has not won a singles match at Wimbledon since 2019, when she lost in the final to Romania’s Simona Halep.
She spent 319 weeks at the top of the world rankings and has won 73 singles titles on the WTA Tour during an illustrious career.
She has also completed a career ‘Golden Slam’ in singles and doubles – winning all four Grand Slams and Olympic gold – and won every singles major at least three times.
Williams will discover her first-round opponent when the draw takes place on Friday, with the tournament getting under way on Monday, June 29.
Williams won her first Wimbledon singles title in 2002 – beating sister Venus in the final – and repeated the feat a year later.
She won again in 2009, 2010, 2012, 2015 and 2016 – with her seventh triumph meaning she equalled Steffi Graf’s Open era record of 22 major singles titles.
After taking maternity leave in 2017, she reached the final on her next two Wimbledon appearances, but lost in straight sets to Angelique Kerber and Halep.
Her 2021 campaign ended after just six games as she retired injured against Aliaksandra Sasnovich, and there were doubts she would return.
Given a wildcard in 2022, she was two points from victory against Harmony Tan before being edged out in a final-set tie-break.
Asked afterwards if that would be her final Wimbledon appearance, Williams said: “That’s a question I can’t answer. Who knows? Who knows where I’ll pop up?”
Williams has won 14 titles at Wimbledon, with six women’s doubles and one mixed doubles among her tally.
She also won Olympic singles and doubles gold on the same courts at the 2012 London Olympics.
Williams has won 107 of her 123 singles matches on grass courts, and it is the surface she has the best record on with an 87% win-rate.
BBC Sport