Venus and Serena Williams Reunite for Wimbledon Doubles

Venus and Serena Williams will pair up at Wimbledon 2026 on a doubles wild card, reuniting the sisters on grass for the first time since the 2022 US Open.

A legendary partnership returns
Few duos in the history of tennis carry the resonance of the Williams sisters, and they are about to share a court once more. According to ESPN, Venus and Serena Williams have been granted a doubles wild card for Wimbledon 2026, bringing the pair back together on the grass for the first time in years as the tournament opens June 29. For longtime followers of the sport, the news lands as both a nostalgic jolt and a genuine competitive intrigue.
The reunion has been a long time coming. ESPN reports that the sisters last teamed in doubles at the 2022 US Open, meaning supporters have waited several seasons to see them line up on the same side of the net again. The timing carries its own milestones, too. Venus turned 46 the day after the wild card was confirmed, while Serena, 44, has been working her way back into professional tennis following a hiatus of nearly four years.
A record-laden resume
The achievements behind this partnership are difficult to overstate. Per ESPN, the sisters have collectively claimed 21 trophies and medals at the All England Club across singles, doubles, mixed doubles and Olympic competition, a haul that spans nearly every category the venue offers. As a doubles team specifically, they have lifted six Wimbledon titles together, a tally that matches the record shared by Suzanne Lenglen and Elizabeth Ryan and places them among the most successful pairs the championship has ever seen.
The headline figures around the reunion:
- Six Wimbledon women's doubles titles as a pair.
- 21 combined Wimbledon trophies and medals across all events.
- First match together since the 2022 US Open.
Wimbledon marked the occasion with a characteristically understated note, a simple message that the sisters were "back together, at Wimbledon," ESPN reported, neatly capturing the warmth surrounding the announcement.
What the wild card delivers
For Venus, the wild card hands her a marquee role at the very tournament that helped define her career, even as her recent singles appearances have been limited. Pairing with Serena lets both players step back onto a stage tailored to their legacy rather than chasing form through the grind of singles, and it gives them a shot at a seventh doubles crown at SW19. Wild cards exist for moments like this, allowing organizers to honor history while still serving the competition.
The appearance also fits into Serena's broader comeback narrative, another step in a return that has drawn steady attention since she first signaled a willingness to compete again. Doubles offers a lower-pressure entry point than singles, a chance to rebuild rhythm alongside the partner who knows her game better than anyone.
Why it matters
Beyond the trophies, the reunion is the kind of storyline that transcends the sport. The Williams name remains a powerful draw, capable of pulling casual viewers toward a doubles bracket that often sits in the shadow of the singles draw. ESPN's reporting underscores that their pairing ranks among the most anticipated threads of the fortnight, a rare chance to watch two icons compete together at the venue where so much of their shared history was written. Whatever the result, the sight of the sisters back on Centre Court territory is reward enough for fans who grew up watching them dominate.
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ProfileSerena WilliamsAmerican tennis championRelated

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