MELBOURNE, Australia â Venus Williams was so close.
Sunday night, the seven-time Grand Slam champion was two games away from becoming the oldest woman to win a match at the Australian Open, when she led Olga DaniloviÄ of Serbia 7-6(5), 3-6, 4-0.
In a three-set battle that lasted more than two hours and had no shortage of twists and turns and ups and downs, DaniloviÄ instead stormed back and to reel off six straight games, yanking away another chance for Williams, 45, to write a new and remarkable chapter in her comeback story.
âIt was such an amazing atmosphere,â the 24-year-old DaniloviÄ said on the court, after dashing the dreams of one of the sportâs legends.
Williams had scraped through a tight first set, staving off a comeback from DaniloviÄ in the tiebreak with the fiercest of forehands down the line to get the early advantage.
In the second set, it appeared that she had expended all her reserves battling for the first.
Then came a topsy-turvy decider. Williams sprinted to a 4-0. It looked like she was going to finish off a woman 21 years younger than she is with some serious Ă©lan. A quarter of an hour later, it was 4-4. Williams couldnât find the court. Danilovic couldnât miss.
Facing a break point that likely would have spelled the end if she lost it, Williams did the thing she has been doing since the mid-1990s. She cracked a big, unreturnable serve to draw even. She did not want this to end, and neither did the 10,000 fans packed into John Cain Arena.
Williams played her first match at the Australian Open three years before Danilovic was born. She has played nearly 1,100 matches and won more than 800. Itâs hard to imagine a situation on a tennis court that she has not seen â but experience could only get her so far. She kept swinging hard, trying to pound the ball through the court and past DaniloviÄ. But the balls wouldnât stop coming back, and Williams couldnât make DaniloviÄ miss before she did.
On match point, tough luck descended, as the ball ticked the top of the net and floated into the doubles alley.
âPlaying against Venus Williams is not something i can take for granted,â Danilovic said. âAt 4-0 I said âjust play.ââ
For Williams, the result will sting. She is one of the great competitors in the sport and is not entering majors to make up the numbers. But what she is doing is showing the naysayers who think she should not get wild cards that there is plenty more tennis left. What started last summer at the D.C. Open in Washington, D.C., when she won her comeback match over then-world No. 35 Peyton Stearns, still appears to have a ways to go.
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
Tennis, Women’s Tennis
2026 The Athletic Media Company
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