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Rick Macci: Serena Williams Could Return to Team with Venus at the US Open
Macci predicts Serena could return to partner Venus in US Open doubles; he praises her serve. 2025 .
Rick Macci, who coached both sisters early in their careers, has suggested Serena Williams might return to competitive tennis to partner Venus at this year’s US Open.
Macci pointed to Serena’s enduring strengths and recent activity from Venus as context for his view. “Asked if Serena will play doubles with Vee at the OPEN,” the American wrote on X. “My gut is probably because at the end of the day Serena can still play even though she has been away. “Her serve is still one of the best on the planet and when she competes her mindset is like granite.”
Serena’s record is one of the most decorated in the sport: she won an Open Era record of 23 women’s singles Grand Slams, spent 319 weeks as the world No 1 and secured 73 WTA Tour singles titles. The American turned pro in 1995 and played the final match of her career at the 2022 US Open, when she was 40, losing to Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round.
Venus Williams, by contrast, remains an active competitor. The 45-year-old made headlines with her comeback at the Washington Open last month. She became the second-oldest player in WTA Tour history to win a singles match after Martina Navratilova by beating Peyton Stearns in her first match in over 16 months. Venus has entered the US Open mixed doubles event and is also expected to receive a singles wildcard.
The Williams sisters have a unique doubles legacy, winning 14 Grand Slam doubles titles together between 1999 and 2016 and never losing as a team in a major championship match.
Macci, speaking to Tennis 365, reiterated his view of Serena’s place in the game. “Serena’s the GOAT and the best player of all time, and I don’t think anybody is even in the passenger side when you talk about Serena,” the 70-year-old asserted.
He also reflected on Venus’s recent match and their long association. “Both her and Serena, as you saw from the movie King Richard, both like my daughters,” Macci said. “Especially Venus, because she was a little older and I spent more time with her. “Listen, at the end of the day, she just loves to play. I saw the same smile and enthusiasm. She won that match [against Stearns in Washington], she’s bouncing up and down like a human pogo stick. The same exact thing I saw at age 14, it was identical.”
ATP Player News WTA
Sabalenka and Kyrgios to meet in Dubai ‘Battle of the Sexes’ exhibition
Sabalenka and Kyrgios will meet in Dubai on Dec. 28 for a ‘Battle of the Sexes’ exhibition. indoors.
Top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka and former Wimbledon finalist Nick Kyrgios are scheduled to face each other in a “Battle of the Sexes” exhibition set for Dec. 28 in Dubai. The match will be played indoors at the 17,000-seat Coca-Cola Arena, and both players posted logistical details on their social media channels after Sabalenka confirmed during the U.S. Open that discussions for the match were underway.
Before their head-to-head meeting in Dubai, both players will take part in an exhibition in New York on Dec. 8, though they will not play one another there. Sabalenka will face Naomi Osaka and Kyrgios will play Tommy Paul in that event.
Kyrgios has outlined specific conditions for the Dubai match, saying he would get only one serve and would be hitting toward a smaller side of the court. The Australian, who has barely played in recent years because of injuries, has predicted he will win easily.
“I cannot wait to get back out on court,” Kyrgios said in an Instagram story. “Honestly I’m feeling amazing. I never thought I would be back into this position, being able to travel the world, see my fans and play some amazing tennis.”
The exhibition borrows its name from the famous 1973 meeting between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs, a match King won in straight sets in the Houston Astrodome. Sabalenka enters the off-season as a four-time Grand Slam champion and one of the top attractions on the women’s tour, while Kyrgios returns to a spotlighted appearance after a period of limited competitive play.
Billie Jean King Cup Governing Bodies Player News
Alizé Cornet named captain of France’s Billie Jean King Cup team
Alize Cornet named France Billie Jean King Cup captain after retiring; will prepare Olympic team…
Alizé Cornet has been appointed captain of France’s Billie Jean King Cup team a few months after retiring from tennis a second time earlier this year. The French tennis federation announced the nomination on Sunday, saying Cornet stood out from other candidates because of her “investment in French tennis, her profile, her motivation and her availability.”
The 35-year-old replaces Julien Benneteau, who held the role since 2019. Cornet’s remit will extend beyond the Billie Jean King Cup squad and includes preparing the French Olympic team leading up to the Los Angeles Games in 2028, monitoring national team players during competitions and overseeing youth teams.
“I appreciate the trust the federation has placed in me, and I am determined to do everything I can to help our players reach their full potential,” Cornet said in a statement. “My goal is to build a strong team spirit, based on high standards, solidarity, and a passion for the French jersey.”
Cornet brings the experience of a 20-year professional career to the role. Touted as a young prodigy, she achieved a career-high ranking of No. 11 in 2009 and won six singles titles. Known as a solid baseline player with a strong backhand, she also held the women’s record for most consecutive Grand Slam tournaments played at 69, a streak that ran from the 2007 Australian Open to last year’s French Open.
The federation emphasized Cornet’s availability and motivation when confirming the appointment. Her new duties place her at the centre of France’s national-team planning as preparations begin toward future international events and the 2028 Olympic cycle.
Analytics & Stats Player News Tennis Coaching
Alcaraz’s off-hand: the hidden engine behind his forehand
Alcaraz’s extended off-hand increases shoulder coil, storing energy that fuels his explosive forehand
Watch almost any top-level player hit a forehand and you will notice the off-hand is not idle. During the takeback it helps position the racquet and rotate the upper body, creating structure and stored energy to release into the shot. For most players the hands separate during the takeback and the off-arm stays parallel to the net.
The current men’s No. 1 takes a different route. Where most players let go of the racquet’s throat when the off-arm is just about parallel to the net, he holds it until his left hand is even with his hitting shoulder. That retained contact changes how his stroke loads and unloads.
Keeping the off-hand on the racquet longer creates greater upper body tension. Mimic his turn and you can feel the stretch in the lats. The added shoulder rotation builds more stored energy that can be transferred into the swing. Yet the result is not a bigger, slower motion. He turns his shoulders more while maintaining a compact geometry: a bent hitting elbow and the racquet head level with the chest, similar to players who use a more modest shoulder turn.
That combination lets him generate faster swing speed without an exaggerated path. He uncoils with a relatively loose arm and so produces immense racquet head speed without relying on an extreme loop or oversized swing.
He is not a template everyone can copy. Few players can replicate his range of motion, upper body flexibility or world-class timing. Even so, approximating a deeper shoulder coil and delaying the separation of the off-hand can measurably increase the amount of energy available to a forehand. For players and coaches focused on adding speed and consistency, the lesson is clear: the off-hand is an active tool for storing rotation-based power, not merely a balancing aid.
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