Serena Williams Tennis Racket
A heart-pounding turn of events at the US Open Womens Championship final as Serena Williams is defeated by Naomi Osaka and slams her racket to the ground in.
Serena williams tennis racket. Tennis super star Serena Williams with her coach Patrick Mouratoglou during a training session at ASB Tennis Centre Auckland New Zealand. AP Tennis players have long broken rackets in anger but no smashed racket has reverberated more than the Wilson Blade that Serena Williams wrecked during her US. Williams became the worlds number 1 tennis player in 2002 and is considered one of the strongest and most successful tennis players in history.
Ron Rocchi Wilsons advanced innovation manager player insights and tour said The. She previously used a Wilson Blade 104 SW Autograph but switched to the Blade 102 in 2020. If she cannot get herself back to full fitness she may have to hang up her tennis racket for good.
Serena is famed for her intensity competitive spirit and unmatched power on the tennis court. Serena Williams 2021 tennis racket of choice The racket Blade SW102 Autograph has a smaller head than her previous one 102 square inches versus 104 square inches and highlights Williams personal style complete with gold accents. Wilson is committed to achieving Level AA conformance with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines WCAG 20 and achieving compliance with other accessibility standards.
Wilson Blade 104 SW Autograph. Along with Roger Federer Serena is one of the few players that Wilson has chosen to produce Autograph rackets for. Introducing the Serena Williams Autograph Tennis Racket.
With this racquet you will get extended reach momentum as well as a. January 29 2021. Sign-up to receive updates and watch as Serena makes history again.
With 22 Grand Slams under her belt as well as an Olympic title won in 2012 Williams is currently ranked. Wilson Blade 102 SW Autograph. With 23 Grand Slam singles titles 14 Grand Slam doubles titles and two Grand Slam mixed doubles titles Serena Williams is likely to go down in history as one of the greatest female tennis players of all time.