‘Tennis players never really thought about winning the Olympics, you grew up thinking about winning Grand Slams’
Having played just one tournament since mid-September due to various injuries and a recent bout of flu, Serena Williams is now itching to get back into competition with the Rio Olympics among her top priorities for the year.
The American World No 1 has not competed since her stunning loss to Germany's Angelique Kerber in the Australian Open final in January, and says she has learnt lessons from that defeat which she will use to her advantage.
"Whenever I lose, it definitely motivates me to do better," Williams, 34, said on a conference call on Thursday to promote her exhibition match with good friend Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark in New York next week.
"There's a lot from that match (in Australia) that I feel like I can improve on and do a lot better. Hopefully I will achieve that this year."
Asked if she felt fully rested after her limited playing time since mid-September, Williams replied: "Oh yeah. I was ready to go in Australia and I will be ready to go today and tomorrow, and I'll definitely be ready to go on Tuesday."
Williams, who will face Wozniacki in the BNP Paribas Showdown at Madison Square Garden in New York on Tuesday, has already won Olympic gold four times, once in the singles and on three occasions in the doubles.
Success in Rio counts among her biggest goals for this year.
"Tennis players never really thought about winning the Olympics, you grew up thinking about winning Grand Slams but now, with tennis in the Olympics, of course you think about it," Williams said.
"The Olympics have had such a big impact on everyone. It (the August Games) will probably affect my schedule a little bit and I probably won't be playing as much because I will be in Rio. I am really looking forward to it."
A growing number of international athletes in recent weeks have said they are concerned about Zika, a virus that has been linked in Brazil to more than 4,000 suspected cases of microcephaly, a rare condition that causes abnormally small heads in infants and can lead to developmental problems.
Asked what she thought about the Zika threat, Williams replied: "I have read a few articles about it, but I haven't been following it a great deal.
"I'm going to have to read a little more about it before I can give a proper answer. I definitely think it's something that you want to be careful about and we will see what happens."
No scientific proof exists that Zika causes microcephaly or other suspected complications, but traces of the virus have been found in the bodily fluids and tissues of mothers and babies affected by it.
The link has led the World Health Organisation to declare the Zika outbreak a global emergency.
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