INDIAN WELLS, Calif.—Near the end of the first set of Venus Williams’ 6-3, 6-2 quarterfinal win over Carla Suarez Navarro at the BNP Paribas Open, a sound could be heard from the food court area located northeast of Stadium 1. A band was playing an instrumental version of the 1978 Rolling Stones song, “Miss You.”

The tune fit occasion and venue. A Southern California native, literally conceived with the intention of becoming a champion, Williams had been familiar with this tournament her entire life. She’d first played it in 1996 as a 15-year-old qualifier. Two years later, Williams reached the semis.

“This is just the beginning for me, my first years,” she said that day in 1998.  “I'm going to move on, get better, and I'll talk to y'all later.”

Little did attendees at this event know the twist the word “later” would take. Over the course of wins and losses, illness and resurgence, Williams had long enjoyed a dialogue with the world. But Indian Wells had been marked by a long pause, the result of her not playing the tournament for 15 years.

Now, 20 years after that final four run of ’98, Williams once again stood one victory away from reaching the finals in the desert. She’d done so against a tricky opponent, one plucky and dangerous enough to have won three of their prior eight matches.

Match point from Williams vs. Suarez Navarro:

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In slightly breezy conditions, though, Suarez Navarro was never able to put a dent in Williams. Serving at 2-3, the Spaniard played a rather aimless game, from 15-30 down whipping a long backhand and, at break point, making a similar mistake off the forehand. From there, Williams dropped just one point in her next two service games to close out the first set, 6-3.  Set two was even easier, two games at 2-2 telling the story. Serving at 2-2, ad out, Suarez Navarro double-faulted. In the next game, Williams overcame a love-40 deficit to take a 4-2 lead and in time, run out the set, 6-2.

Said Williams, “You kind of hope for this kind of scoreline, but you never know if you're actually going to get it. I was happy with the play.”

Williams’ next opponent will be an ascending WTA star, Daria Kasatkina.  Your generational nugget: The last time Williams played a semifinal here, Kasatkina was not even a year old.

Six years ago, at the 2011 US Open, Williams announced she had Sjogren’s Syndrome, an immune system disorder. No one would have been surprised if Williams had opted to leave tennis. Here at Indian Wells, she surely was missed. But like the band that sang “Miss You,” Williams has earned significant marks in the longevity department.

Others may look to the past, but as Williams noted this evening, “I'm about tomorrow. I'm a tomorrow person. If you can learn from the past, that's great to be better in the future.”

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