online edition

The Student Newspaper of Hopkins School

    • Serena Williams poses with one of her 21 Grand Slam Trophies. (photo: brightlifego.com)

Serena Williams: Sportswoman of the Year

Claire Abate '18 and Sam Steinberg '17, Sports Editor
In December, Sports Illustrated named tennis star Serena Williams “Sports Person of the Year.”  Williams was the first solo female athlete to earn this accolade since distance runner Mary Decker in 1983.
Williams’ childhood revolved around tennis, starting at age three, when her parents started coaching her. By age nine, she was enrolled in Rick Macci’s prestigious Tennis Academy in Florida. By age ten, she had compiled a 46-3 record with the United States Tennis Association junior tour, and was ranked number one among players ten and younger in Florida.

Williams went on to have an extraordinary professional tennis career. She has twenty one Grand Slam titles, one away from Steffi Graf’s Open Era Grand Slam Record, which she has the possibility of breaking this year. 

In addition, Williams has captured four gold medals, 74 million dollars, and countless other awards. She is an exceptional athlete. Kyle Burton ’18 said, “I think Serena Williams is a really strong tennis player. She almost always comes out on top because she’s always mentally stronger than her opponents.” Elizabeth Halas ’18 said, “She’s a good player. I don’t follow tennis but I know she’s number one.”
2015 was an especially good year for Williams’ career. Throughout the year she was ranked number one in the country; she gained twice as many points as the  player ranked second, Angelique Kerber. Besides sheer talent, though, Williams stands out because she is so fun to watch. Mira Arbonnies ’18 said, “I was watching her in the US Open a lot this past September. She kept diving for the ball and at one point did a full split. It was remarkable.”

Williams is also distinguished by her social awareness and activity. John Sandberg ’17 said, “She experienced racism at Indian wells in 2001, and boycotted the tournament for many years. However, she went back this year, and it sent a really big message. She does not support racism, but she doesn’t feel that it should hold anyone back in their athletic careers.” Alexandra McCraven ’17 said, “She is an inspiration to feminists in herself; it is really cool to see a female athlete generate so much fame and money. Also, she funds high schools in Kenya to give education opportunities to as many girls as possible, which is really cool.”

Ben Collier ’17 said, “She is by and far the most dominant athlete in women’s tennis. She almost had a perfect season. She consistently shows why she deserves the Sports Person of the Year award and seems poised to win it again this year.”
Back
Editor in Chief 
Liliana Dumas 

Managing Editor 
Miri Levin 

News
Sarah Solazzo 
Rose Porosoff
Anvi Pathak 
Lena Wang
Sonali Bedi 
Features
Abby Rakotomavo
Elona Spiewak
Becky Li
Ashley Deng
Aurelia Wen
 
Arts
Aerin O’Brien
Saisha Ghai
Veena Scholand
Ellie Luo
Isha Seth
Op/Ed
Rain Zheng
Winter Szarabajka
Anjali van Bladel
Gitanjali Navaratnam-Tomayko
Bea Lundberg

Sports
Samantha Bernstein
Hana Beauregard
Elaina Paktuka
Beckett Ehrlich
Lukas Roberts
Content
Amelia Hudonogov-Foster
Edel Lee
Micah Betts
Ari Mehta
Olivia Yu
Karolina Jasaitis 

Cartoonists
Susie Becker 
Faculty Advisers
Stephen May
Elizabeth Gleason
Shanti Madison
The Razor's Edge reflects the opinion of 4/5 of the editorial board and will not be signed. The Razor welcomes letters to the editor but reserves the right to decide which letters to publish, and to edit letters for space reasons. Unsigned letters will not be published, but names may be withheld on request. Letters are subject to the same libel laws as articles. The views expressed in letters are not necessarily those of the editorial board.
     
The Razor,
 an open forum publication, is published monthly during the school year by students of: 
Hopkins School
986 Forest Road
New Haven, CT 06515

Phone: 203.397.1001 x628
Email: smay@hopkins.edu