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NEW YORK – Venus Williams showed flashes of vintage form under the lights at Arthur Ashe Stadium but despite pushing Karolina Muchova to a deciding set the 45-year-old American fell 6-3 2-6 6-1 in a thrilling US Open first-round battle.

The seven-times Grand Slam champion was making a record-extending 25th main draw appearance in New York, where she won the title in 2000 and 2001, and delivered a spirited performance before a packed and partisan crowd.

“I was stressed,” Muchova said in her on-court interview. “You guys make me stressed, it was an unbelievable atmosphere. She’s such a legend so it’s nice to share the court with her. I’m so happy I was able to win today.

“I just tried to block the noise, and be focused on myself.”

Muchova took the opening set with a pair of well-timed breaks but Williams responded well, using sharp net play and powerful groundstrokes to break early in the second before a blistering backhand winner earned her a double break and a 5-2 lead.

She needed three set points but finally clinched the set when Muchova sent a forehand long, marking her first set won at Flushing Meadows since 2020.

But the Czech, a US Open semi-finalist in each of the last two years, hit back hard in the decider as Williams’ energy faded, racing through the set to seal victory and end the American’s latest comeback bid in two hours.

Williams, whose last US Open appearance ended in a 6-1 6-1 defeat by Greet Minnen in 2023, enjoyed thunderous applause with every point she won and left the court to a warm ovation from fans.

Arthur Ashe Stadium

Arthur Ashe Stadium is the main venue of the US Open tennis tournament, located in Flushing Meadows, New York. It was constructed in 1997 and is named in honor of Arthur Ashe, the pioneering African-American tennis player who won the inaugural US Open in 1968. With a capacity of over 23,000, it is the largest tennis-specific stadium in the world.

US Open

The US Open is one of the four major Grand Slam tennis tournaments, held annually in New York City. It was first contested in 1881 and has been played on its current hard court surfaces at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center since 1978. The event is renowned for its high-energy atmosphere and iconic night sessions.

Flushing Meadows

Flushing Meadows is a public park in Queens, New York, most famously known as the site of two 20th-century World’s Fairs (1939-40 and 1964-65). Its iconic Unisphere globe remains as a monument from the 1964 fair, and the park is also home to major cultural institutions like the Queens Museum and the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.