Venus Williams continues to defy the passage of time. At 45, the American has been granted a wildcard for the Mutua Madrid Open 2026, a WTA 1000 event starting on April 21. It marks her seventh invitation of the season and her return to clay for the first time since Roland Garros 2021 — nearly five years away from the surface.
The announcement was confirmed by the Madrid tournament organizers, who also granted wildcards to Paula Badosa, young Spanish talent Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, and promising Carlos Taberner on the men's side (via tennisworldusa.org). But it was Venus's name that captured all the attention.
Williams's 2026 record does not inspire results-based optimism. The former world No. 1 has gone 0-6 this season with nine consecutive losses across all surfaces. Her WTA ranking has dropped beyond 470th in the world, a number that stands in stark contrast to her seven Grand Slam titles and 49 career trophies.
But reducing Venus Williams's presence to her recent results would miss the point entirely. At every tournament, she draws attention, fills stands, and reminds the tennis world what longevity at the highest level truly means. Her mere presence in Madrid, on a surface that has always been her Achilles' heel, speaks to an undiminished passion for competition.
Clay has never been Venus's preferred surface. Unlike her sister Serena, who won Roland Garros three times, Venus has never claimed a WTA 1000 title on clay. Her best results on the red dirt remain quarterfinal appearances at Roland Garros, the last of which came in 2006. Twenty years later, she returns to the terre battue.
In Madrid, she will face a stacked field. Aryna Sabalenka, Elena Rybakina, Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, and Jessica Pegula are all entered. For Venus, every match won would be an achievement. But in a career built on defying expectations, who would dare count her out?


