Serena Williams won twenty-three Grand Slam singles titles, more than any other player in the Open Era, and she did it while being policed, penalized, and scrutinized in ways her white competitors never were. From the Compton courts where her father trained her to the Centre Court at Wimbledon, Williams did not just dominate tennis — she forced the sport to confront its own racism, sexism, and double standards.
This episode traces Williams from Richard Williams’s Compton tennis academy through the Grand Slam victories, the blood clots that nearly killed her, the catsuit controversy, and the final years that cemented her as the greatest tennis player of all time.
- The Williams family plan — Richard’s blueprint to raise champions on Compton’s public courts
- The early Grand Slam victories and the Indian Wells incident that scarred the family
- The blood clots, the life-threatening complications after childbirth, and the comeback
- The catsuit ban, the coaching violation controversy, and how Williams exposed tennis’s biases
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