Serena Williams travels with "like 50 masks" and has been a little bit of a recluse since early March and the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.
"I don't have full lung capacity, so I'm not sure what would happen to me," Williams said Saturday, two days before the start of the WTA's Top Seed Open in Lexington, Ky., her first tournament since playing Fed Cup in early February. "I'm sure I'll be OK, but I don't want to find out."
Williams, 38, has a history of blood clots and pulmonary embolisms. She faced life-threatening complications following her Sept. 1, 2017, childbirth that confined her to a bed for six weeks. She said her daily routine was surgery and that she lost count after the first four.
More recently, Williams enjoyed "every part" of the last six months at home in Florida, her longest time grounded since her teens.
"I've been a little neurotic, to an extent," on health and safety, she said. "Everyone in the Serena bubble is really protected."
Williams is entered to play next week in Lexington and at consecutive tournaments in New York City later this month — the Western & Southern Open and U.S. Open, the latter starting Aug. 31.
Williams is the highest-ranked player in the Lexington field at No. 9. Others include 2017 U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens, older sister Venus Williams and 16-year-old Coco Gauff.
She has been bidding ever since having daughter Olympia to tie Margaret Court's record 24 Grand Slam singles titles, albeit many of Court's crowns came before the Open Era and, notably at the Australian Open, against small fields lacking the world's best players. Williams reached the last two Wimbledon and U.S. Open finals, losing all of them.
She showed her seriousness in committing early to this year's U.S. Open by installing a court at home with the same surface. Three of the top 10 female singles players already said they will skip the U.S. Open due to travel and/or virus concerns, including No. 1 Ash Barty.
"Tennis is naturally a socially distanced sport, so it was kind of easy to go back and just walk on my side of the court and have my hitter walk on his side of the court," Williams said.
The French Open starts two weeks after the U.S. Open ends. Williams was asked if she will fly to Europe for tournaments this autumn.
"I see myself doing it all, if it happens," she said.
The Tokyo Olympics are too far away to make plans.
"We'll have to kind of wait to see what happens in the fall," she said. "One thing I have learned with this pandemic is don't plan."
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