Four years, three months and several hundred days after her last professional tennis match, Serena Williams stepped back onto a court on Tuesday and reminded a packed crowd at Queen’s Club in London exactly what they had been missing. The 44-year-old icon made her return to professional tennis in the doubles draw of the HSBC Championships, partnering with 19-year-old Canadian Victoria Mboko, and the two came through a competitive opening set before pulling away to win 7-6 and 6-2 against a respected pair of opponents.
Williams last competed at the 2022 US Open, and the 1,375 days between that appearance and Tuesday’s match had done nothing to diminish the anticipation surrounding her comeback. The sellout crowd at the west London venue made their enthusiasm clear from the opening game, and Williams gave them every reason to stay on their feet throughout the afternoon.
Nerves, then nothing but tennis
Williams acknowledged before the match that she was carrying real nerves into the occasion, something that might surprise anyone who watched her win 23 Grand Slam singles titles across a career that redefined what the sport could look like. But she described releasing that tension in the final moments before walking on court and shifting her focus entirely to enjoyment.
Whatever nerves existed did not survive the opening exchange. Williams and Mboko took immediate control, building a 3-0 lead in the first set and establishing themselves as a functioning team far sooner than the circumstances might have suggested. A tight tiebreak eventually settled the opening set before the pair dominated the second, with Williams closing the match by firing down two aces including the winner itself.
Her trademark characteristics were on full display throughout. Service winners reached speeds of up to 120 miles per hour. Fist pumps followed good points. The occasional groan followed mistakes. She played aggressively without overreaching, staying within the natural rhythms of a doubles match while clearly relishing every moment of being back in competition.
Family in the stands and no shortage of reasons to smile
Williams has been open about what brought her back to tennis at this stage of her life. Her husband Alexis Ohanian and their two daughters Olympia and Adira watched from the stands on Tuesday, and Williams has described playing in front of her family as one of the central motivations for returning. She framed the decision with characteristic lightness, suggesting that with her children out of school for the summer and nothing more pressing on the calendar, stepping back onto a professional court seemed like a perfectly reasonable thing to do.
Queen’s Club holds a specific significance for her as well. The historic venue has traditionally hosted the men’s grass-court warm-up event before Wimbledon, and Williams noted that playing there for the first time felt genuinely special. It sits just a few miles from Wimbledon, where she won seven singles titles, and the proximity was not lost on anyone in attendance.
What comes next
Williams and Mboko are set to play again on Thursday in the quarterfinals, and Williams has confirmed she will travel to Berlin to compete at the German Open the following week. The question that everyone is asking is whether the grass-court swing building through London will eventually lead her back to Wimbledon, the most significant stage of her career and the venue most closely associated with her legend.
She is not committing to anything beyond the immediate future. She is taking it one day at a time. But on Tuesday in London, one day was more than enough.

