Culture, Arts & IdentitySport & Entertainment

Serena Williams Is A Mother & Champion In Her Rule-Breaking French Open Look

If you thought Serena Williams was going to let the catsuit controversy of last year’s French Open cramp her style this year, you thought wrong.

Williams walked on the court for her match against Vitalia Diatchenko (which Williams won) in a Virgil Abloh-designed Nike outfit. The look, by Abloh’s Off-White label, consisted of a black and white pattern of text on a series of pieces. According to Footwear News, the words “Mother, Champion, Queen, Goddess” are printed all over the floor-length high-slit tiered skirt, fitted top, and jacket in French. The version of the skirt the three-time French Open champion actually played in was much shorter.

 

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Let the Roland Garros begin. Here is my French Open look designed by @virgilabloh and @nike.

A post shared by Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) on

Williams’ all black catsuit from last year — which served a medical purpose, BTW — was seen as inappropriate and disrespectful by the French Tennis Federation, leading them to change the dress code, specifically singling out Williams’ look. The federation’s chief, Bernard Giudicelli, called for a dress code where players will wear mostly white — with no wiggle room for off-white or cream.

Williams’ 2019 French Open look obviously doesn’t follow those rules, and neither did her jumpsuit from a match earlier this year or her Abloh-designed 2018 U.S. Open ballet-inspired tulle skirt.

While every look Williams rocks on the court should be seen as her expressing her personal style (it’s called fashion, people — look it up!) or just the best choice for performance, what she, a Black woman, plays to wear tennis, a very white sport, always means much more than that.

Black female athletes and women across sports have all been ridiculed for their outfits, hair, and nail choices throughout the years in the way men and many white female athletes are not. They are over-sexualized and over-criticized for their style choices when it really should be just about the game. So when Williams hits the court in a mostly black outfit, by a Black designer for a brand called Off-White, like the colour Giudicelli has deemed unacceptable, it is her graceful way of flipping off the system trying to keep one of the greatest athletes of our time down.

Source: Refinery29

Ujamaa Team

The UjamaaLive Editorial Team is a collective of pan-African storytellers, journalists, and cultural curators committed to amplifying authentic African narratives. We specialize in publishing fact-checked, visually compelling stories that celebrate African excellence, innovation, heritage, and everyday life across the continent and diaspora. Our team blends editorial strategy with deep cultural insight, ensuring every feature reflects the diversity, dignity, and creative spirit of Africa. From food diplomacy and indigenous superfoods to tech innovation, public history, and urban culture — we craft stories that connect communities and reframe the global conversation about Africa.

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