As we prepare for the 30th edition of Venus Williams vs. Serena Williams, the sixth time they will face each other in Flushing Meadows, USOpen.org looks back on a rivalry like no other:
1998 AUSTRALIAN OPEN, Round of 64: VENUS WILLIAMS, 7-6, 6-1
A singular sibling rivalry is born in Melbourne, with a 17-year-old Venus claiming the somewhat awkward first-time all-in-the-family matchup between loving sisters. “If I had to lose in the second round, no better than to Venus,” says Serena, who was 16 at the time. “I tried to keep thinking of her as someone else, but I guess Venus has a little more experience than me.”
1998 ROME, Quarterfinals: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-4, 6-2
Playing the very first clay-court tournament of her career, Serena struggles to find her footing in a straight-sets loss to V.
1999 MIAMI, Final, VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-1, 4-6, 6-4
Venus remains undefeated in her head-to-heads against little sis, claiming their first-ever meeting in a final in three hard-fought sets. “Serena wanted to win this title. She always wants to win,” said Venus. “That's her personality.”
1999 GRAND SLAM CUP, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3
On the heels of becoming the first Williams to claim a Grand Slam trophy (1999 US Open), Serena gets her first win over Venus, the event’s defending champion. “I've never actually beat Venus,” says a surprised Serena. “I didn't know how it feels. It's actually kind of tough to take this win. I actually have had a win over everyone in the Top 10. I never had a win over Venus.”
2000 WIMBLEDON, Semifinals: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-2, 7-6
Venus upsets her favored sister en route to her first Grand Slam title. They would later team up for the doubles title and, later that summer, Olympic gold. “I know Serena lost,” Venus tells reporters. “She's a real competitor, probably even more than what I am as far as when it comes to losing. She hates to lose. That really hurts her deep.”
2001 US OPEN, Final: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-2, 6-4
The highly-anticipated US Open final — the first major final contested between sisters in the Open Era and the first prime-time women’s final — is a somewhat anticlimactic one, as Venus cruises to an easy win. “This is our first Grand Slam final together, and really that's the way we'd like it to be,” said Venus. “Then both of us win in a way. I just hate to see Serena lose — even against me. I think that's the harder part. If anything, it would be easier for her to beat me. Then I'd maybe be happier.”
2002 MIAMI, Semifinals: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-2, 6-2
Venus came into the semis riding a 22-match win streak, but it was Serena who would walk off with the trophy, her first win over the elder Williams since 1999. “This definitely is a very big milestone for me and all the younger sisters and brothers out there,” quips Serena. “This is just one of many. This just sets us as a great rivalry, for sure.”
2002 FRENCH OPEN, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 7-5, 6-3
Venus and Serena, clinching the Nos. 1-2 spots in the rankings, respectively, just as their father had predicted, face off in the Roland Garros final, with Serena claiming her first Slam crown in three years.
2002 WIMBLEDON, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 7-6, 6-3
In the second of three major finals contested between the Williamses in ’02, Serena raises her first ironically-titled Venus Rosewater Dish and leapfrogs her sore-shouldered sister to claim the world No. 1. “My dad always said that one day we'd be playing in the finals of Wimbledon, in the finals of the US Open, just the big ones,” Serena reflected. “And here we were 10, 15 years later. It's really amazing if you think about it because my dad and my mom, it's hard to get one champion, but now he has two.”
2002 US OPEN, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-4, 6-3
If their first US Open final came off as somewhat of a dud, this one saw a dazzling display of tennis, the Puma catsuit-sporting Serena pulling even in the family head-to-head at 5-all. “If anything, I prefer to play Venus because that means that we have reached our maximum potential and that we'll both go home winners,” says Serena. “I always want to see Venus do well. I never want to see Venus lose. For me, I'm happy to play her in the final.”
2003 AUSTRALIAN OPEN, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 7-6, 3-6, 6-4
Lil' sis puts the finishing touches on the “Serena Slam,” becoming the first player since Steffi Graf in 1995 to hold all four major titles at the same time. “I wouldn't say I'm more mentally tough than Venus,” she says. “Most of my ideas and everything I actually get from her. Most of my fight and courage I've gotten from Venus.”
2003 WIMBLEDON, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2
With her sister nursing an abdominal injury, Serena pulls it out in three in this rematch of the ’02 SW19 final. On the awkwardness of facing her sister, Serena said, “I was just telling myself, "This is Wimbledon. God knows if I would get this opportunity again.' I just kept telling myself that. I think if anything, I fought harder.”
2005 MIAMI, Quarterfinals: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-1, 7-6
In their first meeting outside of a final in three years, Venus gets back on the winning side. “We’ve played some huge matches,” says Venus. “This one definitely is a highlight.” After falling behind 5-0 in the opening set, Serena smashes her racquet. “Her racquet is actually fragile,” adds Venus. “It's powerful but fragile. Mine is not fragile, so I can tap mine a bit harder. But hers goes no matter what. She is definitely a little bit more fiery than I am. I kind of keep an even keel. It's just the way I am.
2005 US OPEN, Round of 16: VENUS WILLIAMS, 7-6, 6-2
Their earliest encounter at a Grand Slam since ’98 sees Venus pull out a tight first-set tiebreak, then cruise to victory. “Probably she just needs to be a little more consistent,” explains Venus. “She has every shot. When she comes to the net, her volleys are quite good. Even in practice, she gets so many volleys. It's pretty deceptive. Like her coverage at the net, you think she's not going to get it, but she does. She definitely is on the verge of more great things.”
2008 BANGALORE, Semifinals: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6
Facing each other for the first time in nearly three years, Serena ekes out a third-set tiebreak.
2008 WIMBLEDON, Final: VENUS WILLIAMS, 7-5, 6-4
Venus claims her fifth title on the grass courts of the All England Club. It remains her last Grand Slam title. “Five titles! Just five titles! It's the first thing that popped into my head,” said Venus. “[But] at no point am I ever able to forget that it's Serena, because I have the ultimate respect for her game and I have a lot of respect for her serve. If I was playing anyone else, I wouldn't have to face what I had to face today, so it's impossible to forget.”
2008 US OPEN, Quarterfinal: SERENA WILLIAMS, 7-6, 7-6
It will be remembered as the most competitive matchup between the sisters in Flushing Meadows, one that sees Serena pull through in a pair of tight tiebreaks. “I think Venus has gotten a lot better with fooling me. She has an incredible second serve that I wasn't expecting at all. It was just really throwing me off, so it took me a while to get used to it,” observes Serena.
2008 WTA CHAMPIONSHIPS, Round-robin: VENUS WILLIAMS, 5-7, 6-1, 6-0
Venus caps her round-robin victory at the year-end championships with a bagel, the first shutout set in their historic head-to-head series. “It wasn't the happiest match,” laments Venus. “There's nothing I can do. I think she just has to go through it, and figure out in her head what went wrong in the match. I think she'll just take some time and come out even stronger.”
2009 DUBAI, Semifinals: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-1, 2-6, 7-6
Venus jumps into 2009 with a thrilling three-setter in Dubaithe second straight time they’ve gone the distance. The quality of the sister-sister rivalry has perhaps never been higher.
2009 MIAMI, Semifinals: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3
Advancing to her seventh Miami final, Serena takes yet another three-set matchup between the Williams sisters, although ankle and quad injuries would cost her in a one-sided final against Victoria Azarenka. “I'm excited because I was thinking that I would love to remain No. 1, so I was really excited about that,” says Serena. “I think I was more happy about that than winning the match.”
2009 WIMBLEDON, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 7-6, 6-2
“I didn't think about Venus at all today,” insists Serena. “I just saw her as an opponent. After the first set, I looked on the side of the court at the stats, and it was, like, ‘Williams, Williams.’ I couldn't figure out which was which.” Claiming her first Wimbledon title in six years, Serena claims the all-American, all-Williams final on the Fourth of July, the 11th Grand Slam title of her career.
2009 WTA CHAMPIONSHIPS, Round-robin: SERENA WILLIAMS, 5-7, 6-4, 7-6
Serena saves a match point in the first of two meetings at the ’09 WTA year-ender. “I just kept saying, ‘I want to end this year No. 1, so I better lift up the level of my game,’” she says.
2009 WTA CHAMPIONSHIPS, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-2, 7-6
Her fourth straight win over Venus gives Serena the 2009 Sony Ericsson Championships title and secures the year-end No. 1 ranking. She now leads the career head-to-head, 13-10. “Venus, she was getting every ball back. I was running down a lot of balls, too. We were just doing the best that we could do. It was high-quality tennis.”
2013 CHARLESTON, Semifinal: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-1, 6-2
Despite coming out on the losing end of their first on-court encounter in four years, Venus says of her sister, “It’s great to see her at No. 1 and just fulfilling every dream.”
2014 CANADIAN MASTERS, Semifinal: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-7, 6-2, 6-3
Venus, 34, scores her first win over her sister in more than five years, returning to the Top 20 after three seasons of injury and illness. “What's so unique about the situation is that we're both very good players. Typically, you may have some siblings, one is quite good, one is not as good, so you kind of know what the result is, or the one that's better knows they're going to win. We both know when we walk out there, it's not like you're guaranteed a win.”
2015 WIMBLEDON, Round of 16: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-4, 6-3
Following a straight-sets decision over Venus, world No. 1 Serena asserts, “It’s never easy to play someone you love and care about. You just play for the competition and enjoy the moment.”
2015 US OPEN, Quarterfinals: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-2, 1-6, 6-3
Streaking toward the calendar-year Grand Slam, Serena prevails in three sets, only to fall to unheralded and unseeded Italian Robert Vinci in the semis. “I will always be the older sister. That's never going to change,” says Venus. “We have always taken care of each other, but that also goes for the rest of my family and other sisters. We have always taken care of each other no matter what.”
2017 AUSTRALIAN OPEN, Final: SERENA WILLIAMS, 6-4, 6-4
Serena surpasses Steffi Graf as the Open Era’s all-time Slam queen, and now holds 23 major titles. “It's such a great feeling to have 23,” says Serena, who also secures the No. 1 ranking. “I've been chasing it for a really long time. When it got on my radar, I knew I had an opportunity to get there, and I'm here. It's a great feeling. My first Grand Slam started here, and getting to 23 here, playing Venus, it's stuff that legends are made of. I couldn't have written a better story.”
2018 INDIAN WELLS, Round of 32: VENUS WILLIAMS, 6-3, 6-4
Playing her first tournament since giving birth to Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Serena falls in straight sets. It’s their earliest confrontation since meeting in the second round of the 1998 Australian Open. “She's going to be speeding back to the seedings and to winning tournaments sooner than later,” says Venus.
