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	<title>Olga Danilovic &#8211; THE SPORTS ROOM</title>
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	<title>Olga Danilovic &#8211; THE SPORTS ROOM</title>
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		<title>45 and Thriving: Venus Williams&#8217; Australian Open Return Redefines Tennis Legacy</title>
		<link>https://www.thesportsroom.org/45-and-thriving-venus-williams-australian-open-return-redefines-tennis-legacy/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Will Sutton]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Jan 2026 23:00:32 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Tennis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AO age 45 record]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Australian Open 2026]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Olga Danilovic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venus vs Danilovic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venus wildcard entry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venus Williams]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[The 2026 Australian Open curtain rises on January 18 with a story transcending brackets and rankings: Venus Williams, at 45, steps back into Melbourne Park&#8217;s main draw via wildcard, becoming the oldest woman ever to compete there. Her first-round clash against 25-year-old Olga Danilovic spans not just 20 years but generations of racket sports evolution, [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">The 2026 Australian Open curtain rises on January 18 with a story transcending brackets and rankings: Venus Williams, at 45, steps back into Melbourne Park&#8217;s main draw via wildcard, becoming the oldest woman ever to compete there. Her first-round clash against 25-year-old Olga Danilovic spans not just 20 years but generations of racket sports evolution, turning Court 6 into a living timeline. This isn&#8217;t about hoisting another Venus Rosewater—it&#8217;s a defiant celebration of endurance, where showing up outshines scorelines in sport&#8217;s relentless youth cult.</p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">Few athletes dare mid-40s elite competition, making Venus&#8217; comeback rarer than a golden set. Tom Brady slung Super Bowl passes at 45 for the Buccaneers&#8217; 2021 triumph, defying arm clocks through film-room obsession. LeBron James, 41, still dunks for the Lakers, logging 40-minute nights via hyperbaric chambers and cryotherapy. Venus mirrors their blueprint: selective scheduling post-2021 autoimmune struggles, cherry-picking warmups like Auckland and Hobart to sharpen serves minus grind. Her 2025 DC Open upset—a 6-3, 6-4 dissection of 23-years-younger Peyton Stearns—proved the serve-volley blueprint endures, even if hip mobility trades baseline wars for net rushes.</p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">Danilovic, Serbia&#8217;s world No. 52, embodies the opponent gap. The 2020 French Open quarterfinalist packs two-handed backhand pop and flat groundstrokes suited to Melbourne&#8217;s pace, fresh off a Hobart semifinal. At 25, she&#8217;s chased Venus since junior circuits, idolizing Williams&#8217; 2000s dominance—seven Slams, Olympic golds, that 128-mph serve topping charts. Expect Olga&#8217;s aggression to test Venus early: deep returns forcing neutral rallies, where age saps endless defense. Venus counters with experience—54-21 AO record, two finals lost to Serena (2003, 2017)—using slice backhands to disrupt rhythm and upstairs serves exploiting Danilovic&#8217;s second-serve return woes.</p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">This return prioritizes legacy over leaderboard leaps. Venus, post-November wedding to model Andrea Preti, frames Melbourne as &#8220;homecoming,&#8221; evoking 1998&#8217;s sister-slaying second-round upset en route to quarters. Beyond wins, she pioneers: EleVen apparel empire, advocacy for equal prize money (that $23.5 million AO payout she helped secure), and inspiring Black women in a circuit whitening post-Serena. Competing at 45 shatters Kimiko Date&#8217;s 44-year-old record, signaling tennis welcomes elders—not as novelties, but architects whose wisdom outlasts primes.</p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">Fan fervor amplifies impact. Melbourne&#8217;s &#8220;Happy Slam&#8221; vibe suits sentimentality; expect standing ovations rivaling Federer&#8217;s farewells. Young guns like Coco Gauff cite Venus&#8217; power game as blueprint, while retirees ponder &#8220;what if&#8221; longevity regimens. Danilovic wins probable—youth&#8217;s 75% edge in five-set equivalents—but Venus stealing a set scripts magic, echoing 2025 US Open doubles quarters with Leylah Fernandez.</p>
<p class="my-2 [&amp;+p]:mt-4 [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:inline-block [&amp;_strong:has(+br)]:pb-2">In tennis&#8217; churn—where 18-year-old phenoms debut weekly—Venus&#8217; stride embodies defiance. No trophy chase, just presence: proving 45 isn&#8217;t finale, but encore. As aces fly Sunday, Melbourne honors not points won, but battles waged across decades. Legacy isn&#8217;t etched in hardware; it&#8217;s living legend, serve by serve.</p>
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