
Williams Sisters Accept Wimbledon Doubles Wildcard, Reuniting After Four-Year Hiatus
Serena and Venus Williams will compete together at the All England Club for the first time since 2022, marking the latest chapter in Serena’s unexpected return to professional tennis.
The All England Club confirmed on Tuesday that Serena and Venus Williams have accepted a wildcard invitation to contest the ladies’ doubles at Wimbledon, reuniting one of the sport’s most decorated partnerships for the first time since the 2022 US Open. The announcement, which came less than a fortnight before the Championships begin on 29 June, ends years of speculation about whether the sisters would ever share a Grand Slam court again. Between them they have collected 14 major doubles titles, six of them on the Wimbledon grass, with their last triumph at SW19 coming in 2016. Viewed from London, the decision to grant the wildcard reflects both the commercial draw of the Williams name and a tournament tradition of honouring former champions, though neither sister appears on the singles wildcard list.
Serena’s path back to the All England Club has been carefully choreographed. The 44-year-old, who had not struck a ball in professional competition since describing herself as “evolving away” from tennis after the 2022 US Open, launched her comeback at the Queen’s Club event earlier this month. Partnering Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko, she won her opening match before Mboko withdrew with a knee injury. This week she is competing at the Berlin Open alongside Karolina Muchova, where on Tuesday the pair fell in straight sets to Giuliana Olmos and Erin Routliffe. Mexican observers celebrated the result as a landmark victory for Olmos, while analysts in continental Europe noted that Serena appeared “more nimble and sturdy” than in her Queen’s outing, suggesting her grass-court sharpness is building incrementally.
The broader wildcard landscape at Wimbledon 2026 underscores the tournament’s blend of nostalgia and competitive calculation. In the men’s singles, former champion Stan Wawrinka and Bulgaria’s Grigor Dimitrov have been granted entry, while the men’s doubles draw will feature the combustible pairing of Alexander Bublik and Nick Kyrgios. Poland’s Maya Chwalińska, a recent Roland Garros finalist, received a women’s singles invitation. Yet it is the Williams sisters who dominate the global conversation, their return framed by Italian and Brazilian outlets as a cultural event as much as a sporting one, with Serena’s stated desire to play in front of her two young daughters adding a personal dimension to the narrative.
Whether the sisters can mount a serious challenge remains an open question. Venus, who turns 46 on Wednesday, has struggled in singles since her own return, losing all seven matches she has contested. Serena’s doubles rhythm is still being calibrated after a 1,375-day absence from the tour. Nevertheless, the prospect of the Williams duo walking onto Centre Court once more has electrified the tennis world, from Indian sports pages to Arabic-language dailies in the Middle East. As one European broadsheet observed, the wildcard is less a competitive calculation than an acknowledgment that some partnerships transcend rankings — and that Wimbledon’s lawns remain the sport’s most evocative stage for a final act.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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The Williams sisters reunite for doubles at Wimbledon after receiving a wild card. Serena, 44, returns after nearly four years away, while Venus, turning 46, still competes sporadically. They have won 14 Grand Slam doubles titles together, including six at Wimbledon.
Serena and Venus Williams return to Wimbledon doubles with a wild card. Serena, a 23-time Grand Slam champion, is back after four years, while Venus made a sensational comeback at Queen's. The sisters have won the Wimbledon doubles title six times, most recently in 2016.
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