The possibility of a Serena Williams return no longer feels like a distant fantasy. As her eligibility to compete quietly falls back into place, former pro Andrea Petkovic has offered a blunt take on what it means.
In Petkovic’s view, elite players do not sign back into tennis’ demanding anti-doping system without serious competitive intent; if Williams has taken that step, Petkovic believes it signals something real.
Serena Williams’ Eligibility Update Rekindles Comeback Speculation
Williams, a 23-time Grand Slam singles champion, has not played since the 2022 US Open. That September, she defeated Danka Kovinic in the first round, stunned second seed Anett Kontaveit in a primetime showcase at Arthur Ashe Stadium, and then bowed out in the third round to Ajla Tomljanović.
In the years since, her focus has shifted toward family life and business ventures, including her investment firm Serena Ventures. Notably, she has preferred the term “evolution” over “retirement” in interviews. Now, with her six-month reentry period in the anti-doping testing pool set to expire on Feb. 22, she is eligible to compete again.
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The administrative update alone has fueled speculation about potential appearances at upcoming events such as Indian Wells or Miami. Tennis journalist Ben Rothenberg reported that Williams is expected to be reinstated before the end of February, further intensifying the conversation.
Why Does Andrea Petkovic See This Step as Proof of Competitive Intent?
During a Tennis Channel segment, Petkovic leaned on her own experience to explain why she believes this step matters.
“I have been in the doping protocols for 16 years,” she said. “Nobody signs up for a 5 a.m. warning call to pee in a cup in front of a person with you in the bathroom for doubles. I’m sorry. With all due respect to everybody that is playing doubles, nobody does that voluntarily.”
Serena Williams NOW ELIGIBLE for WTA return ‼️
The latest on when she might comeback 👇 pic.twitter.com/5a0VqBztlv
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) February 22, 2026
Reentering the testing pool means submitting to unannounced, early-morning testing and year-round monitoring. Petkovic argued that no accomplished player would endure that grind without a concrete plan to compete.
She doubled down on her belief in Williams’ competitive instinct.
“So I bet my money and my house on Serena coming back and playing at least one match,” Petkovic said. “And I think she has earned the right to do whatever she wants. If after one match she decides it’s not for me, she can do whatever she wants.
“And if she decides, ‘Oh, maybe I do have a shot here to go for something bigger,’ it springs to my mind Lindsey Vonn and how she decided to, despite her ACL, a week later race in the Winter Olympics. It didn’t go well, but the decision is what counts. These GOATs, they have a different kind of mindset. And without them, we wouldn’t be where we are as humanity. And so I’m saying more power to her. I hope she comes back.”
Williams’ résumé supports that view. Along with her 23 major singles titles, she owns 14 Grand Slam doubles titles with her sister Venus, four Olympic gold medals, and a 319-week run as World No. 1.
History shows that she has repeatedly defied expectations about age, injury, and time away from the game. As of now, Williams herself has not issued a public statement addressing her reinstatement.
