Early Life
Serena Jameka Williams was born on September 26, 1981, in Saginaw, Michigan, the youngest of five daughters of Richard Williams and Oracene Price. The family moved to Compton, California, when Serena was a toddler. Her father, a self-taught tennis enthusiast who had read a book on the sport, began coaching both Serena and her older sister Venus on the public courts of Compton when Serena was just three years old.
Growing up in Compton, the Williams sisters practised on cracked public courts surrounded by gang violence, a formative experience that shaped their resilience. Richard Williams famously coached both daughters with an unconventional, DIY approach, keeping them away from the junior circuit to focus on education and physical development. The family later relocated to West Palm Beach, Florida, where Serena and Venus trained at the Rick Macci Tennis Academy.
Professional Career
Serena turned professional in 1995 at age 14. Her breakthrough came at the 1999 US Open, where she won her first Grand Slam title at 17, defeating Martina Hingis in the final. The victory announced the arrival of a dominant force in women’s tennis and launched one of the sport’s most storied careers.
Over the next two decades, Williams amassed 23 Grand Slam singles titles—more than any other player in the Open Era—comprising seven Australian Open, three French Open, seven Wimbledon, and six US Open titles. She held the world No. 1 ranking for 319 weeks across her career, including eight consecutive years of reaching the year-end top ranking from 2009 to 2016.
Playing Style and Impact
Williams is celebrated for her explosive power, dominant serve—among the fastest ever recorded in women’s tennis—and ferocious groundstrokes from both wings. Her athleticism, mental fortitude, and ability to perform under pressure redefined expectations for women’s tennis. She completed a non-calendar “Serena Slam,” holding all four Grand Slam titles simultaneously across 2002–03 and again in 2014–15.
Beyond her statistics, Williams transformed the sport’s visual and cultural landscape. She wore bold, distinctive outfits—including a black catsuit at the 2018 French Open that sparked global debate—and consistently pushed boundaries around race, gender, and body image in professional sport.
Personal Life and Business Ventures
Williams married Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian in November 2017. Their daughter, Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr., was born in September 2017. Williams was open about her near-fatal experience with childbirth, including a pulmonary embolism, helping raise awareness of maternal health disparities affecting Black women in America.
Off the court, Williams is a savvy entrepreneur. She co-founded Serena Ventures, a venture capital firm focused on seed-stage companies and diverse founders, and has invested in over 70 businesses. She also has a fashion line, S by Serena, and has pursued interests in acting and media production.
Retirement and Legacy
Williams announced her “evolution away from tennis” in August 2022 and played her final professional match at the 2022 US Open. She retired as the sport’s dominant figure of her era and a globally recognised cultural icon. Her story—from the cracked courts of Compton to 23 Grand Slam titles—remains one of sport’s most compelling narratives of perseverance, excellence, and trailblazing.