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Serena Williams skips mandatory media after Wimbledon loss

Serena Williams has been slammed for failing to front the media after her first-round defeat at Wimbledon. The 44-year-old’s grand slam comeback was sensationally dynamited on Centre Court by Australian Maya Joint, who delivered a stunning performance to out-battle and finally subdue the hugely impressive returning legend. WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Maya Joint stuns Serena Williams at Wimbledon Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today Arrow In the match of her life, the 20-year-old Queenslander produced the best display of her career to

prevail 6-3 6-7 (6-8) 6-3, withstanding everything that the player who may be the game’s greatest ever could throw at her. But while Joint deservedly got all the plaudits for her handling of the occasion, the same cannot be said of Williams. The American gave a lukewarm handshake to Joint, packed up her things, smiled and waved to the crowd and then walked of the court. However, instead of fronting the media as every player is obliged to do, Williams just issued a brief statement.

“It was really great to be back at Wimbledon. I never expected to be here. The atmosphere was amazing. Walking out was amazing. I definitely relished it and missed it and enjoyed the moment more than anything,” she said Williams could face a fine for failing to do the obligatory post-match media conference. Journalists were scathing of the move with International Tennis Writers Association president Simon Cambers leading the charge. “Impressed at how hard (Williams) fought tonight. Not impressed that she refused to do her

obligatory media conference. Having been given a wildcard by Wimbledon, that’s not on,” he wrote. Aussie tennis reporter Todd Scoullar said: “So Serena doesn’t play a match for 4 years. Gets a Wildcard into the biggest tournament on the calendar. Loses to a player with a 3-13 record and 103 in the race this year. Gives a rubbish handshake. Refuses to do press. Didn’t need her at Wimbledon.” He later added: “To clarify for certain people, she’s the best female player in history. If she

played a few matches at smaller events to help boost them, and to get matches in, a WC at Wimbledon makes sense. And why not do press? Horrible look for the player with the most eyeballs watching her.” Fans were equally furious. “No grace in defeat at the net as usual, and then refuses to front the press. She’d be happy to face the media had she beaten Maya. Has there ever been anyone more distasteful in defeat than Serena?” One fan wrote. “Wow so

it seems Serena Williams who rocks up to Wimbledon after not playing singles for 4 years, requests and gets a main draw wild card worth £80,000 is not going to do her post match press conference which is a mandatory requirement. That’s next level arrogance imo,” another raged. The loss marks Williams’ third consecutive first-round exit at Wimbledon after also crashing out in 2021 and 2022. Her conqueror in 2022, Harmony Tan, revealed that she has been blocked by Williams on Instagram. Meanwhile, Joint, was

left amazed by the whole occasion. Having never even seen her idol Williams before this week, she laughed after her victory: “When we were in that hallway before we walked out into Centre Court, that was the craziest moment of my life . just insane. “It’s difficult to explain here aura. I don’t know. It just seems like she’s just so much better, in general, than you as a person.” Joint overcame the disappointment of missing out on a match point when on the verge

of a straight-sets win, then battled back after Williams had roared into a third-set lead to seal a monumental triumph in two hours 22 minutes. The emotional victory left Joint, who grew up in the US state of Michigan where Williams was also born, almost dumbfounded. “I didn’t get much sleep last night, I was up ‘til 2am just thinking about it,” she told the crowd. “I’ve been dreaming about this moment since I was a little kid, so this is pretty crazy.” Williams left

her old Centre Court domain as she’d entered it, to thunderous cheers from the crowd, and she offered a wave to all sides. It had a real valedictory feel. This ultimate competitor, though, had nothing to reproach herself for. For though she may have been more than half-a-step slower and inevitably rusty after nearly four years away from singles action, she was still astonishingly impressive, almost unbelievably so, three months before her 45th birthday against one of the sport’s rising stars. Yet Joint stayed strong,

even as seemingly all the crowd were baying in the late evening for a sentimental Serena triumph under the roof, perhaps proving how much the game has moved on in the 23-time slam champion’s absence. Joint had lost 13 of her previous 14 matches stretching back to January and had dropped to No.87 to be only the Australian No.4, but she was still a cut above the old champion, who threw in 190km/h-plus serves and occasional rocket groundstrokes, only to have them, for the large

part, returned with interest. In a way, Joint, who jokily refers to herself as the “Ginger Ninja”, looked the perfect target for Superwoman Williams — a rising star suffering a difficult ‘second-season’ slump who looked as if she might fold under pressure. The opposite proved true, though. Yes, Joint did succumb at the end of the second stanza, but she only responded even more fiercely in the decider when the 23-time grand slam champion earned a break for 2-1, moving into her first lead in

the final set. Joint took the next four games as the physical toll really told on the mother-of-two, and there was even a limp by the end of her first singles match since she was beaten by another Australian, Ajla Tomljanovic, at the 2022 US Open. Williams still has doubles with 46-year-old sister Venus, but, already the oldest player to feature in the women’s singles at Wimbledon since 47-year-old Martina Navratilova in 2004, this felt like the end. Watched by her two daughters and Venus

in her player’s box, Serena was outplayed by Joint in the opening set, her movement around the court inevitably shown up at times by a player who is 24 years younger. Her matchless competitive streak was in evidence as she let out a primal scream after saving a break point at 3-4, but Joint moved into a set and 3-1 lead before her work got more ragged under the improving groundstrokes from Williams, who would have beaten plenty of other first-round opponents on this form.

After she had a first match point repelled at 6-5 in the second set tiebreak by a huge serve, and Williams went on to steal the stanza, it looked ominous, but time waits for no athlete and it felt like a career-changer for Joint as she got through to the second round of a grand slam for the third time. In the next round, Joint will play Alexandra Eala, the Filipino who she beat to win her first grass-court title in Eastbourne last year.

Serena Williams, Maya Joint, Wimbledon, media conference, Centre Court, post-match press, wildcard, Harmony Tan, Alexandra Eala

4 Comments

  1. Wait so she lost and then didn’t do the post-match thing? Like is that just Serena being Serena or is Wimbledon rules different now? If they have mandatory media then yeah she should probably show up.

  2. I saw the headline and thought she got like injured or something, my bad I guess. But she smiled and waved… so she should’ve just talked for 2 minutes. Also “mandatory” sounds kinda harsh, like she’s not a robot.

  3. Serena skipping media after a loss is wild, but the article makes it sound like the other girl won because Serena was mad or something. She got beat fair and square, sure, 6-3 6-7 6-3 whatever. Still, I don’t get why they expect the loser to be all chummy on TV, like press conferences are mandatory in sports now? Next thing you know they’ll fine her for breathing.

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