Net Worth & Wealth · Richard Pemberton · 30 June 2026

What time does Serena Williams play at Wimbledon today?

What time does Serena Williams play at Wimbledon today?

If you are searching what time Serena Williams plays at Wimbledon, she faces Australia's Maya Joint on Tuesday, 30 June, as the third and final match on Centre Court. Wimbledon has not set a fixed start time—her slot follows earlier Centre Court matches, so the exact court time will shift with how long those contests run.

Serena Williams, 44, returns to Wimbledon singles 1,396 days after her last appearance, telling BBC TV that "it's been a very easy retransition" ahead of one of the sport's most watched comebacks. For a player Forbes ranks as the richest female athlete of all time, the moment blends sporting drama with serious wealth stakes.

Key Takeaways

What time will Serena Williams play at Wimbledon?

The clearest scheduling detail from BBC Sport is timing by slot, not clock. Williams meets Joint, 24 years her junior according to the BBC, in the third match on Centre Court on Tuesday.

Forbes confirms the opponent as 20-year-old Maya Joint, ranked 53rd in the world. Because Williams is not first on court, fans asking what time Serena Williams will appear should expect a rolling start. The BBC article points readers to its day-two live coverage across TV, iPlayer and the Sport website, but does not list a specific hour for Williams herself.

Why does Serena Williams call her return an easy retransition?

Williams told Clare Balding for BBC TV that being back in the house she stayed in for several years has made the shift smoother. "It's nothing too new, and at the same time it's everything new. Change is good," she said.

Since evolving away and returning, she has had a second daughter, co-founded a National Women's Soccer League team, and danced at the Super Bowl. She is not the same player who lost to Harmony Tan on Centre Court four years ago, yet Wimbledon still feels like home—even if she briefly got lost walking to the media centre.

Her definition of success is modest and personal. "Success [for me] is just walking out there. I never expected to be here," she said, adding that she wants to enjoy herself and stick to her coach's gameplan.

Is Serena's singles comeback too soon at 44?

Sky Sports frames the move as brave but risky. Monica Puig said she was surprised Williams took a singles wildcard so soon after suggesting she would ease in gradually. Doubles at 44 is one thing; heading into a Grand Slam without a competitive singles match in nearly four years is another.

Puig believes Williams would not accept the wildcard unless she felt fully fit, and her serve hit 120mph at Queen's. Former champions Lindsay Davenport and Marion Bartoli offered mixed views—impressed by her shape, but wary of grass's quick, low, physically demanding nature at her age.

How wealthy is Serena Williams ahead of Wimbledon?

Money is not the driver. Forbes reports Williams has $94.8 million in career prize money—with No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka having won barely half as much—and estimates her net worth at $400 million, making her the richest woman who built her fortune primarily through sport.

She earned roughly $50 million off court in the past 12 months, pushing lifetime earnings to about $620 million. A Wimbledon title would add a $4.8 million winner's check, but as Forbes notes, it seems safe to assume that is not her motivation. For more on athlete fortunes, see our Net Worth & Wealth coverage.

Williams and sister Venus, with a combined age of 90, are also contesting doubles at SW19. Win or lose on Tuesday, her return already ranks among the year's biggest stories in tennis and in sports business.

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