There was basic racism in tennis What they fought through probably made them great champions Rennae Stubbs on Venus and Serena Williams breaking barriers
There was basic racism in tennis What they fought through probably made them great champions - Rennae Stubbs on Venus and Serena Williams breaking barriers × Follow Us Create Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Link Approve Reject & ban Delete Log in Manage your profile Editing Story Queue Video Queue Editing Stats Writer Home SEO Redirection Admin Wiki Edits Taxonomy Home Edit Site Menu Mapping Dashboard Tag Pages Community Social Feed Queue Feed Center Notification Center Affiliate Home Manage Pages Bottom Tagline Dash Timeless Stories Logout Tennis News
#Serena on sister Venus Williams.
#USOpen2832467"She's the only reason Serena Williams ever existed."#Serena on sister Venus Williams. #USOpen https://t.co/8TjcBHhGcO The Williams sisters felt the need and the desire to keep winning so they could be respected in the sport, believes Stubbs. The six-time Grand Slam doubles champion was happy to see that Serena and Venus Williams were eventually successful in getting the love and respect they deserved. "They probably felt like they had to win so much just to be respected and accepted. And they were. In the end, you know, they have gotten the love that they deserve because they're both quality people," added Stubbs. While Serena Williams played her final singles event at the 2022 US Open, the sisters also played their final doubles match together at Flushing Meadows. Their iconic careers in singles tennis often overshadowed their remarkable achievement of having won all 14 Grand Slam doubles finals they played together.
There was basic racism in tennis What they fought through probably made them great champions - Rennae Stubbs on Venus and Serena Williams breaking barriers
By Aayush Majumdar Modified 18 Sep 2022 Follow Us Comment Share Serena Williams and Venus Williams; Rennae Stubbs (inset) Serena Williams and Venus Williams' endurance through some of the toughest times in their lives and careers helped them become great champions, believes Rennae Stubbs. The former doubles World No. 1 highlighted the racial discrimination the iconic duo had to face early in their careers. Stubbs was part of Serena Williams' coaching team at the 2022 US Open, during which the 23-time Grand Slam champion bid farewell to the WTA tour. The former Australian player feels that the Williams sisters were forced to fight through and overcome some traumatic times in the past as they made their foray into the tennis world. Speaking during a recent episode of the Off The Ball podcast, Stubbs hailed Serena and Venus Williams' resistance and fighting qualities that have played a big role in them earning legendary status. "What they went through early on in their careers was pretty traumatic in some ways," Rennae Stubbs said. "You know, they weren't accepted by the tennis establishment, there was a lot of pushback on them." "There was basic racism in tennis. What they fought through probably made them great champions because they had to fight for everything. They had to fight for acceptance and they had to fight for respect." TENNIS@Tennis"She's the only reason Serena Williams ever existed."#Serena on sister Venus Williams.
#USOpen2832467"She's the only reason Serena Williams ever existed."#Serena on sister Venus Williams. #USOpen https://t.co/8TjcBHhGcO The Williams sisters felt the need and the desire to keep winning so they could be respected in the sport, believes Stubbs. The six-time Grand Slam doubles champion was happy to see that Serena and Venus Williams were eventually successful in getting the love and respect they deserved. "They probably felt like they had to win so much just to be respected and accepted. And they were. In the end, you know, they have gotten the love that they deserve because they're both quality people," added Stubbs. While Serena Williams played her final singles event at the 2022 US Open, the sisters also played their final doubles match together at Flushing Meadows. Their iconic careers in singles tennis often overshadowed their remarkable achievement of having won all 14 Grand Slam doubles finals they played together.