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Sisters superior
Venus and Serena -- alone and together atop their sport
Posted: Wednesday June 26, 2002 12:18 PM
I've been very amused lately whenever some new accomplishment of the Williams
sisters -- Venus and Serena -- is mentioned in this fashion:
The first sisters ever to play in the finals of a major tournament . . .
The first sisters ever to rank 1-2 in the world . . . as if all sorts of
other sisters through the years have made the semifinals or been ranked third
and fourth. Let's put this in perspective: What Venus and Serena have achieved
-- two sisters being the very best in the world at one thing -- is not only
unique to tennis, not only unique to all major sports, but also, as far as I
know, unique to all human endeavor. The only brothers I can think of who stood
1-2 in their field were Wilbur and Orville Wright , and they
invented their
field.
Well, in tennis, there were the Doherty brothers -- Reggie and
Laurie -- who dominated Wimbledon a century ago, but they were sequential
champions, and, anyway, tennis wasn't much bigger than a steak and kidney pie
then. Dizzy and Daffy Dean won all four games for the Cardinals in
the 1934 World Series, but they weren't the best overall. With Venus and Serena,
though, it's as if Mozart and Beethoven were
brothers.
And, let's get it straight: The Williamses simply are, suddenly, tennis today.
They're it. The whole sport. Women's tennis used to be this wonderful
championship smorgasbord, but Lindsay Davenport is injured; Martina
Hingis is recovering from an operation, happily trailing her boyfriend,
Sergio Garcia , about the links; Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario and
Monica Seles have grown long in the tooth, and Jennifer Capriati ,
last year's sweetheart, has morphed into an ungracious churl. All who's left to
contend with Venus and Serena are two Belgians and a collection of Eastern
Europeans whose names all end in -ova . . . except, unfortunately, none of them
is Anna Kournik-ova .
As for the men playing tennis nowadays, it's like prime-time television. There's
plenty there, but there's never anything on. The best men all beat each other --
eight different champions in the last eight Grand Slams -- parity gone to the
dogs. Andre Agassi provides occasional pizzazz, but Pete Sampras'
gallant run at the U.S. Open last September was, apparently, his trooping of the
colors. Sampras has lost a step, and no stroke correction can make up for
that.
No, it's just Venus and Serena now -- better, stronger, and even more becoming.
Speaking some French in their joint victory-and-defeat speeches after Serena
beat Venus in the Roland Garros final earlier this month was just so attractive
-- especially at a time when Europeans find Americans so self-centered and
superpowerishly insensitive to others. So the Williams women not only won the
French, they also won over the French, and if there's a sure bet in sports
today, it is that they will get through to the Wimbledon final,
rat-a-tat-tatting their power game on the
grass.
Unfortunately, that's the problem. Venus and Serena have no passion for playing
one another. And tennis, like boxing, thrives on contrast. Somebody once said
that a tie is like kissing your sister. Well, now we know that playing your
sister is also like kissing your sister. But then, Venus and Serena can't be
blamed if they're simply too good, and the finals now are just a sweet embrace
of
sisterhood.
Sports Illustrated senior contributing writer Frank Deford is a regular
contributor to CNNSI.com and appears each Wednesday on National Public Radio's
Morning Edition. His new novel, The Other Adonis (Sourcebooks Landmark), is
available now at bookstores everywhere.
The opinions expressed here are solely those of the writer
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