Inside the life and career of Serena Williams, who is set to retire with 23 grand slam titles and $2
- Serena Williams is set to step away from tennis after this year's US Open, she announced on earlier this month.
- She'll leave as one of the greatest athletes of all time, with 23 Grand Slam wins and nearly $100 million in on-court earnings.
- Williams has a daughter with husband and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, and they hope to expand their family soon.
Serena Williams was born in 1981, the youngest of Richard and Oracene Williams' five daughters.
She was born in Saginaw, Michigan, but her family soon relocated to the Compton area of Los Angeles.
Of course, one of her sisters is the fellow legendary tennis champ Venus Williams.
Their father was formerly a Louisiana sharecropper and wanted his daughters to have a better life than he did. So he began training Serena and Venus in tennis at a very young age, based on information he'd gathered from videos and books.
By 1991, Serena Williams was ranked No. 1 in the 10-and-under division on the junior United States Tennis Association tour.
Although Serena and Venus were doing well, Richard relocated his family to Florida so that his girls could get better instruction and rise to the professional level.
Williams turned pro in 1995 and rose 205 spots in the world rankings in just one year.
She drew attention for her powerful playing style and fierce athleticism. Soon, she graduated from high school and signed a $13 million deal with Puma. In 2000, she and Venus won gold medals in the doubles event at the Olympics in Sydney, Australia.
She won the French Open, the US Open, and Wimbledon in 2002 — beating Venus in each final.
In 2003, she became one of six women to earn a career Grand Slam in the open era when she won the Australian Open, again defeating Venus in the final. Holding all four grand slam titles at once, it was dubbed the "Serena Slam."
She went on to repeat the feat in 2015.
Over the years, Williams continued to be one of the best players of the sport but also suffered setbacks due to injury.
She had knee surgery in 2003 and underwent several procedures in 2011 due to a blood clot in her lung. Many wondered if she would retire.
Williams got engaged to Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian in 2016.
They met in 2015 amid rumors that Serena was dating rapper Drake. Williams shared the news of their engagement with a poem on Reddit:
"I came home / A little late / Someone had a bag packed for me / And a carriage awaited / Destination: Rome / To escort me to my very own "charming" / Back to where our stars first collided / And now it was full circle / At the same table we first met by chance / This time he made it not by chance / But by choice / Down on one knee / He said 4 words / And / r/isaidyes"
In 2017, Williams won the Australian Open, her 23rd Grand Slam, later disclosing that she was pregnant at the time.
She told Vanity Fair that she had taken a pregnancy test before the tournament at the behest of a friend. She couldn't believe the result.
"Oh my God, this can't be — I've got to play a tournament," she recalled thinking. "How am I going to play the Australian Open? I had planned on winning Wimbledon this year."
She went on to win in straight sets — again beating Venus.
Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr. was born in September 2017 in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Williams later revealed that she had a blood clot scare after her daughter's birth, and that hospital staff didn't heed her warnings when she identified the problem.
"I told you, I need a CT scan and a heparin drip," she remembers telling the medical team, according to Vogue. "I was like, listen to Dr. Williams!"
She was right — a scan found a series of small blood clots in her lungs. Doctors quickly administered the treatment she had asked for initially.
Williams and Ohanian got married in New Orleans in November 2017.
Wedding guests included Beyoncé, Eva Longoria, and Kim Kardashian.
Williams owns homes in Florida, Paris, and California.
She's been spending most of her time at her $2.5 million Palm Beach Gardens home with her husband and daughter. She owns a second Palm Beach Gardens home with Venus.
She sold her Bel Air mansion for $8.1 million in 2019, Architectural Digest reported, and was trying to sell her Beverly Hills villa in 2021.
Williams also has her own clothing line with HSN, the Serena Williams Signature Statement collection.
"My designs are inspired by all women. I want women to know that it's okay to love and embrace who you are … to be unapologetically bold and beautiful in anything you're wearing," she writes on her personal website. "Through HSN, my Signature Statement collection is about empowering fans everywhere to connect with this message."
She also makes time for charity, running the Serena Williams Fund.
The organization has built schools in Kenya and Jamaica to provide education to underprivileged youth.
An HBO documentary about her life, 'Being Serena,' debuted in 2018.
The five-part series looked at this particular moment in Williams' professional and personal lives, including her pregnancy and marriage.
In 2022, Forbes estimated Williams' net worth to be $260 million.
Forbes ranked her at No. 90 on it list of America's Self-Made Women.
Williams uses her money in part to support Serena Ventures, a venture capital firm that raised an inaugural fund of $111 million.
Williams has said that investing in start-ups has become a passion of hers.
"I really fell in love with early stage, whether it's pre-seed funding, where you're investing in just an idea, or seed, where the idea has already been turned into a product," she wrote in Vogue. "I wrote one of the very first checks for MasterClass. It's one of 16 unicorns—companies valued at more than $1 billion—that Serena Ventures has funded, along with Tonal, Impossible Foods, Noom, and Esusu, to name a few."
In 2021, Williams made $45 million in off-court earnings alone, thanks to her numerous partnerships — the 10th highest among all athletes.
Williams was one of just two women to finish on Forbes' list of the top 100 earning athletes in 2021, joining fellow tennis player Naomi Osaka.
In August 2022, Williams announced in a piece published in Vogue that she intended to step away from tennis after the US Open.
Williams said that while she did not like the word "retirement," she was ready for the next stage of her life.
"I love playing, though. It's amazing, but I can't do this for ever," she said. "Sometimes you just want to try your best and enjoy the moments and do the best that you can."
Williams will leave tennis with more than $94 million in on-court earnings and at least 23 Grand Slam titles.
If she manages to win the US Open, she would tie Margaret Smith Court's record for most singles Grand Slam victories — male or female — in the history of the sport.
She's the greatest tennis player who ever lived.
68 incredible photos of Serena Williams playing tennis throughout her career
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