Serena to end boycott of Indian Wells event
TOP-RANKED Serena Williams, coming off her 19th grand slam singles title at the Australian Open, said on Wednesday she will end a 14-year boycott of the Indian Wells WTA tournament.
Williams, in a essay written for Time magazine, related happier times at the event, her feelings over racial insults she heard after a controversial 2001 appearance and her hopes for playing the event next month.
“It has been difficult for me to forget spending hours crying in the Indian Wells locker room after winning in 2001, driving back to Los Angeles feeling as if I had lost the biggest game ever — not a mere tennis game but a bigger fight for equality,” Williams wrote.
“I’m fortunate to be at a point in my career where I have nothing to prove. I’m still as driven as ever, but the ride is a little easier. I play for the love of the game. And it is with that love in mind, and a new understanding of the true meaning of forgiveness, that I will proudly return to Indian Wells in 2015.”
Williams has twice won the Indian Wells event, now known as the BNP Paribas Open, first when she was just 17 in 1999 by downing Steffi Graf in the final, and again in 2001, when she beat Kim Clijsters.
But in the final, hecklers booed and taunted Williams following the controversial nature of her semifinal, in which her sister, Venus Williams, withdrew rather than play Serena.
It was a move many felt was orchestrated by their father Richard and deprived them of a semifinal classic to gain an edge for Williams in the final.
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