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HSBC Championships - Day Three - The Queen's Club
Source: Ben Whitley – PA Images / Getty

Serena Williams doesn’t owe tennis another point, another serve, another comeback, or another reminder. She already gave the sport more than enough. Twenty-three Grand Slam singles titles, four Olympic gold medals, 319 weeks ranked No. 1, countless iconic fits, unforgettable finals, and a whole generation of Black girls who got to see themselves as powerful, dominant, stylish, emotional, competitive and still worthy of being called great.

That’s why her return at 44 feels different. It’s not about chasing history, silencing doubters, or trying to prove she can still hang. Serena has already done all of that. This comeback feels like a woman walking back into a room she built, not because she needs permission, but because she felt like showing up.

HSBC Championships - Day Two
Source: Harriet Lander / Getty

After “evolving away” from tennis following the 2022 U.S. Open, Serena stepped deeper into motherhood, business, family and life outside of the grind that made her one of the greatest athletes ever. She has been honest about not loving the word “retirement,” and honestly, that always made sense. Serena never felt like someone who could be neatly boxed into a goodbye speech and a highlight reel. She was always going to move on her own timing.

Her return came at Queen’s Club in London, where she teamed with 19-year-old Victoria Mboko in doubles and walked away with a win over third-seeded Nicole Melichar-Martinez and Erin Routliffe, 7-6(2), 6-2. Was it perfect? Serena herself graded the performance a “C-minus.” But that almost made it better. She still served up to 120 mph, still flashed that power we all know, and still reminded everyone that even when she’s rusty, she’s Serena Williams.

The best part is that she’s not framing this as pressure. Ahead of the comeback, Serena made it clear that winning wasn’t the main thing. This chapter is about joy, enjoying the game, and letting her daughters see her in that element. That part matters. Because for so long, Serena had to carry expectations, criticism, racism, sexism, body-shaming, and impossible standards while still winning everything in sight. Now, she gets to come back just because she wants to.

Fans responded exactly how you’d expect: with love, nostalgia, jokes, awe and a whole lot of “Serena is really back?” energy. Seeing her on the court again hit people in a sentimental place, especially with her family watching and a younger player like Mboko getting to share the court with the woman she grew up admiring. It felt less like a comeback built on desperation and more like a celebration of everything Serena still represents.

HSBC Championships - Day Two
Source: Paul Harding / Getty
Serena Williams at HSBC Championships - Day Two
Source: NurPhoto / Getty

As for what’s next, Serena is taking it one step at a time. There’s talk of more doubles (she and Mboko will face Leylah Fernandez and Laura Siegemund on Thursday), questions about whether Wimbledon could be in play, and plenty of curiosity about whether singles will ever become part of the plan again. But honestly, that’s secondary. Serena Williams came back at 44 with nothing to prove — and that’s exactly why it feels so good to watch.

RELATED: Serena Williams Announces Her Return To Tennis In Nike Commercial

Serena Came Back At 44 With Nothing To Prove – And That’s Exactly The Energy We Need was originally published on cassiuslife.com