2016 Serena Williams tennis season

2016 Serena Williams tennis season
Name Serena Jameka Williams
Country  United States
Calendar prize money $
Singles
Season record 6–1 (85.71%)
Current ranking No. 1
Ranking change from previous year Steady No change
Grand Slam results
Australian Open F
Doubles
Season record 0–0
Last updated on: 3 January 2016.
Main article: Serena Williams

The 2016 Serena Williams tennis season officially began on 5 January with the start of the 2016 Hopman Cup. Williams entered the season as the number one ranked player and the defending champion at five tournaments, including the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon.

On the week of February 8, 2016, Williams matched Martina Navratilova for second longest consecutive weeks as World No. 1 at 156 weeks.

Year in detail

Australian Open Series

Hopman Cup

For the second consecutive year and for the fourth time in her career Williams started her season at the Hopman Cup.[1] Williams partnered Jack Sock for the event and was originally set to start her campaign against Ukraine's Elina Svitolina but withdrew before the match citing knee inflammation.[2] The world No.1 took to the court for the first time against Australia Gold's Jarmila Wolfe and, after dropping the first set, retired from the match due to the recurring inflammation in her knee.[3] Despite retiring from her first match Williams remained optimistic that the swelling would go down before the first major of the year.[4] The following day she announced she was pulling out of the tie against the Czech Republic. Williams was replaced by Vicky Duval.[5]

Australian Open

Williams returned to competitive action for the first time in four months at the season's first major. As the defending champion the world No. 1 sought to add a seventh Australian Open title to her haul. In the opening round Williams faced off against the highest ranked unseeded player Camila Giorgi. Williams needed just a single break in each set to secure a straight sets victory and advance to the second round.[6] Her opponent in the second round was former doubles world No.1 Hsieh Su-wei. Williams lost just three games and wrapped up her victory in an hour to set up a third round against Russia's Daria Kasatkina.[7] The world No. 1 overwhelmed her young Russian opponent, for the loss of two games, in 44 minutes to reach the second week of the tournament.[8] Serena would continue her dominant form by dispatching Margarita Gasparyan in a rematch of their 2015 first round Wimbledon encounter. Just as in their previous match, Serena served first and was broken but she responded by reeling in the next four games before breaking for a third time in the eighth game to take the first set. She then won the second set with the drop of one game. In the quarterfinals, Serena faced her long-time rival Maria Sharapova in a rematch of the 2015 Australian Open Final. It was their twenty-first encounter, properly beginning with a very tight first set that began with Serena's slow start. Serena quickly regrouped and managed to break Sharapova in the ninth game, needing 5 break points to do so. She served out the first set and then won the first five games of the second set. She then closed out the match after Maria avoided the bagel with her last service game. Serena faced Agnieszka Radwańska in the semifinals. Serena bagelled her in the first set in 21 minutes with only four unforced errors. The second set was tighter with Serena being broken when serving at 3-2. Serena manged to break back in the ninth game and serve out the match. Serena faced Angelique Kerber in her 26th Grand Slam final as the overwhelming favorite in her efforts to match the Open Era record in Grand Slams, but Serena was defeated in three close sets, her first defeat in the finals of the Australian Open, her first defeat in a three-set Grand Slam Final, and her first defeat in a Grand Slam final since the 2011 U.S. Open. Bearing the weight of history on her shoulders, Serena failed to display the dominant form that helped her reach the final without dropping a set. The match featured Serena committing 46 unforced errors. Throughout the tournament, Serena displayed confident net skills that she lacked in 2015, but they proved to be part of her downfall as she won less than 50% of her points at the net.

All matches

Singles matches

Tournament Match Round Opponent Rank Result Score
Australian Open
Melbourne, Australia
Grand Slam
Hard, outdoor
18 – 31 January 2016
861 1R Italy Camila Giorgi #36 Win 6–4, 7–5
862 2R Chinese Taipei Hsieh Su-wei #90 Win 6–1, 6–2
863 3R Russia Daria Kasatkina #69 Win 6–1, 6–1
864 4R Russia Margarita Gasparyan #58 Win 6–2, 6–1
865 QF Russia Maria Sharapova #5 Win 6–4, 6–1
866 SF Poland Agnieszka Radwańska #4 Win 6–0, 6–4
867 F Germany Angelique Kerber #6 Loss 4–6, 6–3, 4–6

Tournament schedule

Singles schedule

Williams' 2016 singles tournament schedule is as follows:

Date Championship Location Category Surface Points Outcome
18 January –
31 January
Australian Open Melbourne Grand Slam Hard 1300 Final
lost to Germany Angelique Kerber, 4–6, 6–3, 4–6
15 February –
21 February
Dubai Tennis Championships Dubai WTA Premier Hard
21 February –
27 February
Qatar Total Open Doha WTA Premier 5 Hard
7 March –
20 March
Indian Wells Masters Indian Wells WTA Premier Mandatory Hard
21 March –
3 April
Miami Masters Miami WTA Premier Mandatory Hard
Total year-end points

Team events

Hopman Cup

Tournament Round Partner Match Opponents Result Score
Hopman Cup
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Mixed round-robin
Hard, outdoor
3–9 January 2016
RR United States Jack Sock Singles Australia Jarmila Wolfe Loss 5–7, 1–2 ret.

Yearly records

Head-to-head matchups

Ordered by percentage of wins

Finals

Singles: 1 (0–1)

Legend
Grand Slams (0–1)
WTA Tour Championships (0–0)
WTA Premier Mandatory (0–0)
WTA Premier 5 (0–0)
WTA Premier (0–0)
WTA International (0–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–1)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Finals by venue
Outdoors (0–0)
Indoors (0–0)
OutcomeNo.DateChampionshipSurfaceOpponent in the finalScore in the final
Runner-up 18. January 30, 2016 Australian Open, Melbourne, Australia Hard Germany Angelique Kerber 6–4 3–6 6–4

Earnings

# Event Prize money Year-to-date
1 Australian Open $ $
$

See also

References

External links

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