Serena Williams delivered one of her most complete performances since returning to the
game after the birth of her daughter to rout a helpless Maria Sharapova in the first round of the U.S. Open on Monday, reports Reuters.
The ruthless American needed less than an hour to defeat Sharapova 6-1, 6-1 and notch her 19th consecutive win over the Russian in what some charitably dub a "rivalry."
Williams, seeded eighth, has her sights set on a record-tying 24th Grand Slam title after coming up short in the final of last year's U.S. Open and the last two Wimbledon finals.
The biggest question for Williams, who returned to the sport after overcoming life-threatening medical complications related to the birth of her daughter in 2017, was whether she was physically up for the challenge of the U.S. Open.
Back spasms forced her to
withdraw from the Rogers Cup final in Toronto earlier this month and skip the Cincinnati
Masters but she put those doubts to rest with a brilliant performance under the lights on Arthur Ashe Stadium.
"The body is good, I feel good. My back is a lot better. So I'm excited, this is going to be fun," she said.
She credited her form to "super intense" practices with coach Patrick Mouratoglou but said
she benefits just as much
from spending time with her daughter.
"I play with my baby, I'm obsessed with my daughter," she said.
"We were at the fair the other day so maybe we'll go back. But that's what I do to relax. I come out here and I have such a great opportunity to play this sport in front of you guys and then I feel even more blessed to come home to my family."
"It's the best."
Williams appeared eager to put last year's U.S. Open final loss, where she infamously clashed with chair umpire Carlos Ramos, behind her.
"Yeah, I don't know who
that is," she told a reporter
who asked how she felt about
the USTA deciding not to
have him umpire her matches
this year.
Next up for Williams is a second-round meeting with American teenager Caty McNally on Wednesday.