Women’s tennis and men’s tennis represent two distinct facets of the sporting world. Tennis veteran Martina Navratilova, who is well-known, has brought attention to the differences between women’s and men’s tennis. Drawing on an interview with Serena Williams, she highlighted the unique characteristics that differentiate the women’s and men’s games.

The 59-time Grand Slam champion took to her Twitter handle to share a video of the 23-time Grand Slam champion from 2013, just to prove her point that both sides of the sport are quite different.

In that video, Williams said, “Men’s tennis & women’s tennis are almost two separate sports. If I were to play Andy Murray I would lose 6-0 6-0 in 5 to 6 minutes. The men are a lot faster, they serve harder, they hit harder.”

Along with that, the Czech-American former tennis player wrote “Yup,” to agree with the thoughts on how strong, the serve and every saying between men’s and women’s tennis differ from each other. She further asserted that a woman could never aspire to compete against a male player like Andy Murray because men and women play distinct kinds of games.

Williams’ remarks emphasize the unique qualities of women’s tennis and emphasize how important it is to recognize these differences. The 23-time Grand Slam champion made clear her stance by emphasizing how humiliating it would be for her and other female competitors to face males.

But Navratilova has become well-known for her strong advocacy of equity in women’s sports, particularly in relation to transgender athletes competing in female competitions. Over the past few months, she has been bringing up concerns about equity and integrity in women’s athletics, spurring discussions and debates. Let’s examine her opinion on the matter of transgender athletes playing women’s tennis.

Martina Navratilova wants to ‘keep women’s sports female’

Navratilova vented her annoyance on social media a few months ago over transgender people playing soccer in an Australian league. The squad in question, the Flying Bats FC, won the Beryl Ackroyd Cup and received a $1,000 Australian cash award. She criticized the injustice she saw in the circumstances, reiterating her long-held conviction that only people allocated to the feminine gender should participate in women’s sports.

She wrote on X, “Been angry for years now- the unfairness is off the charts. I will say it again- keep women’s sports female. It is not the place for any (failed) male athletes.” The 59-time Grand Slam champion Navratilova has always argued in favor of barring transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports. Following that, she has also proved her point that both men and women are on different sides of sports.