
Serena Williams walked out onto Wimbledon's Centre Court, closed her eyes, took a deep breath and smiled at the ovation that greeted her.
Williams has consistently said she has nothing left to prove as she resumes the tennis career from which she evolved away in 2022.
But no-one was sure what to expect on Tuesday evening when she faced Australia's Maya Joint in what was the 44-year-old's first singles match in four years.
There would have been a moment of relief for Williams when she won her first point at SW19 for 1,462 days - a forced error from Joint in response to a huge return of serve from the American.
The match ended in a 6-3 6-7 (6-8) 6-3 win for Joint, who started strongly, weathered a second-set dip, and regrouped impressively from a break down in the third.
The competitive nature that propelled Williams to 23 Grand Slam titles means she will not be satisfied with the outcome. She has often said she hates losing more than she loves winning.
And this was not vintage Williams. She played better as the match went on before fading in the third set. There were, however, glimpses of the player that dominated the WTA Tour for over two decades.
"I was a bit cynical and very curious about what was going to happen in this match," former Wimbledon champion Pat Cash said on BBC Radio 5 Live.
"What we saw is two people playing very good tennis and Maya being able to handle the pace of Serena.
"Serena played an incredible level. If she wants to play this way and play some more tennis, she is going to be a real handful.
"Serena played better now than she did at the end [of her career] four years ago."
Williams had been practising hard while preparing for her return, but there is no substitute for time on the match court - and ultimately she only played two doubles matches before her singles return.
She will need more matches under her belt if she wants to win in singles, particularly if she plays on the hard courts against opponents who hit the ball flat and hard.
Williams' movement was exposed by Joint, with the American finding herself either off balance or rooted to the spot as a winner went past her.
The next major is the US Open - her home Slam, and the site of what was assumed to be her final singles appearance in 2022.
Four years ago in New York, Williams beat then world number two Anett Kontaveit on an electric night on Arthur Ashe Stadium. All three of her matches drew packed, star-studded crowds - something few players can achieve.
"If that is the level of your first match back, imagine if she plays a bit more," Croft added.
"I guess the factor will be if her body can stand up to it and how is she going to feel tomorrow.
"I'm looking at her today and thinking 'how on earth did we doubt that she wasn't sure if she was going to come back to playing singles?'"
View original source — BBC Sport ↗

