“Love is the key, right?” Evergreen Venus Williams plays through and at 45

“Love is the key, right?” Evergreen Venus Williams plays through and at 45

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SUntil the rolling stones have not seen, “says Venus Williams, smiling smiling, reminded her unforgettable professional tennis debut at the age of 14 in Oakland, California, an opportunity that has justified 1970s about her stratospheric potential. Her first professional tennis competition took place the next door to a Roller Concer

Three weeks after returning to professional tennis for the first time in 16 months with a straight sets singles victory in the then world no. 35 Peyton Stearns in the Citi Open in Washington, who marked her as the second oldest woman in history to win a WTA-Tour level Singles game and also the silence of criticism on criticism of criticism of criticism of criticism of criticism of criticism of criticism.

Once one of the most early ripe young people of her time, a US Open finalist against the age of 17, William’s continues to compete. She is one of the greatest tennis players in herself, a seven-time singles Grand SLAM champion, Olympic gold medal winner and former no. 1 in Singles. Despite everything she has achieved, her lasting love for her sport means that she continues to step on the practice court every day with the aim of being the best player she can be.

“Love is the key, right?” Williams says. “If you don’t like it, go out. If you can, if you have that luxury, not everyone has that luxury. For me I think that much of the motivation is for me to come back and try to play in the best health I can.

“I never stopped beating the ball, even when I was gone, not as intense as you would play tournaments, but I still went outside. And I think you should live your life on your own conditions at the end of the day. Your conditions should be yours. You don’t care what someone else says or what someone else thinks if you have to live of life [do] That. And I am firmly convinced of it. ‘

However, this comeback is not just about beating a tennis ball. Last month, Williams revealed that she has suffered with fibroids for years, non-cancer-like tumors that develop in and around the womb, leaving her unbearable symptoms, including pelvic pain and heavy bleeding. In addition to the significant impact that Fibroids have had on the daily life of Williams, it also influenced her tennis career. She says she had been incorrectly diagnosed for years.

Last week, in the aftermath of her return to Washington, Williams placed a series of videos from exactly a year ago when she underwent an open myomectomy operation to remove the fibroids and a large focal adenomyoma in her womb, tissue of the womb of the womb.

Venus Williams spoke about her health problems and desire to compete before the Cincinnati opened. Photo: Robert Prange/Getty images

“I was told that I was unusable,” she wrote. “I was told that I could bleed to death on the table. I was told to get a surrogate and to forget the hope of wearing my own children. I was incorrectly diagnosed. I went untreated for years and years.”

While she returned to court, Williams used the publicity around her return to shed light on the medical problems of women. “I just remember it after my operation, I felt so much gratitude, but I was able to have the means to finally get through it, and I remember that it was the greatest feeling that I had. And at that moment I was not nearly near professional tennis, but now I am a year later in a completely different space, and I am ready to play and I am a clean bill of health, thanks, thanks, thanks, thanks”

The next competitive challenge for Williams will be 22-year-old world no. 51 Jéssica Bouzas Maleiro. On the day Bouzas Maleiro was born, September 24, 2002, Williams had already won four Grand Slam Singles titles, reached No. 1 and disputed the previous three consecutive big finals against her younger sister, Serena.

The older Williams brother or sister said that the American Swing was the focus for her return and it is unlikely that it will compete after the US Open. The rest is unknown. “I’m very much in the moment,” she said. “I don’t think you should ever exclude me. That is all I can say.”

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