Name : Venus
Williams
Birth Name : Venus Ebony Starr Williams
Date of Birth : June 17, 1980
Place of Birth : Lynwood, California, USA
Profession : Tennis Player
Sex : Female
Height : 6' 2" (1.89 m)
Residence : Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, U.S.
Father : Richard Williams
Mother : Oracene (also called Brandy)
Sister : Yetunde Price, Lyndrea Williams, Serena Williams
Plays : Right-handed
Venus Williams Detailed Biography
Venus
Williams defeated Marion Bartoli 6-4, 6-1 to win Wimbledon 2007 title,
London, United Kingdom.
Professional tennis player. Born June 17, 1980, in Lynwood, California.
With her younger sister, Serena, Venus Williams took the tennis world by
storm beginning in the late 1990s. The sisters harnessed their powerful
groundstrokes and booming serves to rise in the rankings in both women?s
singles and women?s doubles competitions. Coached by their outspoken
father, Richard Williams, the Williams sisters have been credited with
raising public awareness of their sport and with bringing the women?s
tennis game to a whole new level of power and athleticism. Growing up in
the Los Angeles suburb of Compton, California, Venus and Serena Williams
were the two youngest of five daughters of Richard and Oracene (Brandi)
Williams. Richard Williams dreamed of raising tennis stars, and Venus
and Serena showed the most aptitude for the game?both began winning
tournaments when they were 10 years old. In 1991, the family moved to
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, where Venus and Serena trained with Rick
Macci, who had worked with such teen stars as Jennifer Capriati, and for
a short time with Nick Bolletieri, the famed former coach of Andre
Agassi and Monica Seles. Soon, however, Richard Williams took over the
coaching (and promotional) duties for both his prodigious daughters,
choosing to withdraw them completely from the junior tennis circuit so
that they could concentrate on their studies. This controversial
decision earned him a mixture of praise and criticism among observers of
tennis.
After 1994, the World Tennis Association (WTA) did not allow
14-year-olds to compete in all tour events, although ?phase-in? clauses
allowed some to play in a limited number of events. Venus Williams
turned pro in October 1994, before the new rule went into effect. Her
first tournament was the Bank of the West Classic in Oakland,
California, where she showed a good deal of promise in a loss to Arantxa
Sanchez-Vicario, then ranked No. 2 in the world. For her first two years
on the pro tour, Venus stayed out of the limelight and kept up with her
high school studies, not making her debut at a Grand Slam until the 1997
French Open. At that year?s U.S. Open, she became the first unseeded
woman ever to reach the tournament?s final, and the first
African-American woman to do so since Althea Gibson won back-to-back
championships in 1957 and 1958. Though Venus lost to Switzerland?s
Martina Hingis, the 17-year-old No. 1-ranked player in the world, in the
finals, she saw her own ranking shoot up from No. 66 to No. 25 in only
one day.
Venus started out the 1998 season well, beating Hingis in a tournament
in Sydney, Australia, and reaching the quarterfinals of the Australian
Open (defeating her younger sister on the way). Though she lost to
Lindsay Davenport in the singles draw, Venus teamed up with Justin
Gimelstob to win the mixed doubles championship. She won her first WTA
singles title at the IGA Tennis Classic in March and went on to score a
big win at the Lipton International, defeating Anna Kournikova of Russia
(another of tennis? highly-touted up-and-comers) and Hingis. The Lipton
win propelled Venus into the top 10. She finished 1998 with a great
record in the Grand Slams, reaching the quarterfinals of the French Open
and Wimbledon and the semifinals of the U.S. Open.
Despite her impressive record and growing confidence, Venus had yet to
achieve the accolade she had dreamed about her whole life: a Grand Slam
victory. Her younger sister, Serena, whom their father had once claimed
would be the better player of the two, reached that goal first, when she
won the 1999 U.S. Open.
In October, Serena beat Venus for the first time, in the finals of the
Grand Slam Cup in Munich, Germany. Both Williamses finished the 1999
season ranked in the top five in the world. Still the higher-ranked
sister, Venus finished off the 1999 season ranked No. 3 in the world and
was the second-highest paid player in terms of prize money (Serena was
the third) with career earnings of nearly $4.6 million.
The next year the glory belonged to Venus, although it didn?t appear
that way in the beginning. Both sisters got off to a slow start in 2000
due to injuries, and in April Richard Williams announced that his older
daughter was contemplating retirement. Just a few months later, however,
Venus began a winning streak that took her all the way to Wimbledon,
where she grabbed a Grand Slam title of her own, beating both Hingis and
Serena (in an emotional semifinal match) before dominating defending
champion Davenport in the finals and making some history of her own.
Just one day later, Venus and Serena teamed up to win the Wimbledon
doubles title.
On September 9, 2000, Venus Williams met Davenport again in the finals
of the U.S. Open, where she won her 26th straight match and became the
first woman since Hingis in 1997 to win two Grand Slam titles in one
year. She and Serena also captured the doubles title.
In the fall of 2000, both Venus and Serena Williams represented the
United States at the Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, alongside
Davenport and Monica Seles. Continuing her amazing winning streak, Venus
became the only other woman besides Helen Wills Moody in 1924 to capture
gold in both singles and doubles (she and Serena won their 22nd straight
doubles match in the finals) in the same Olympiad.
In July 2001, Williams successfully defended her Wimbledon title,
beating Davenport in the semifinal and the Belgian player Justine Henin
in the finals. She had an even more eventful U.S. Open, beating the
resurgent Jennifer Capriati in the semifinals before facing Serena in
the finals, the first meeting of sisters in a Grand Slam final since
1884. Venus' maturity served her well in the all-Williams matchup, as
she beat Serena in two sets to win her second consecutive Open title.
However, 2002 would belong to Serena. Serena defeated Venus in the
finals of the French Open, Wimbeldon, and US Open. The string of
victories catapulted the younger sibling to the top of WTA tour
rankings, with Venus dropping to second in the standings.
Despite the inevitable rivalry, the Williams sisters remain close
friends. Raised as devout Jehovah?s Witnesses, both were home-schooled
by their mother, and have received their high school diplomas. In 1999,
Serena joined her sister at the Art Institute of Florida, where they
studied fashion design.