<p>Serena Williams made a winning comeback after a year on the sidelines as the American legend teamed with Ons Jabeur to beat Sara Sorribes Tormo and Marie Bouzkova 2-6, 6-3, 13-11 in the Eastbourne International doubles on Tuesday.</p>.<p>Williams, a 23-time Grand Slam singles champion, was back in action for the first time since she made a tearful exit from Wimbledon last year.</p>.<p>The 40-year-old suffered a leg injury during her Wimbledon first-round match against Aliaksandra Sasnovich and had not been seen on court since.</p>.<p>Before Williams made the surprise announcement of her return last week, rumours of retirement had swirled around her for several months.</p>.<p>But, with Wimbledon starting on June 27, Williams finally resumed her career, playing with Jabeur at the Wimbledon warm-up event by the Sussex seaside.</p>.<p>Williams and Tunisia's Jabeur, who is third in the WTA singles rankings, saw off Spain's Sorribes Tormo and Bouzkova of the Czech Republic in the last-16 tie.</p>.<p>Although Williams was far from her vintage best, she will be encouraged by her first outing for 12 months.</p>.<p>She and Jabeur will face Japan's Shuko Aoyama and Taiwan's Chan Hao-ching in the quarter-finals.</p>.<p>"It was so fun to play with Ons. We had a lot of fun and our opponents played amazing. We were happy to stay in there," Williams said.</p>.<p>"I called Ons, she has been playing so well and I knew I needed to play some matches and she has always been so nice to me on tour.</p>.<p>"Yeah, I caught some fire behind me, it was good."</p>.<p>Serena has been given a wildcard to play in the singles at Wimbledon as she restarts her history bid.</p>.<p>Williams is one Grand Slam crown away from equalling Australian Margaret Court's record of 24 singles titles at the majors.</p>.<p>The last of Williams' 23 Grand Slam singles titles came at the Australian Open in 2017.</p>.<p>Since then she has lost four Grand Slam finals, including at Wimbledon in 2018 and 2019.</p>.<p>Williams won the seventh and most recent of her seven Wimbledon singles titles in 2016.</p>.<p>Serena, who became a mother in 2017, has plummeted to 1,204th in the WTA rankings due to her period out of action.</p>.<p>Wimbledon is widely considered Williams' best chance of winning another Grand Slam and this was her first step towards that goal.</p>.<p>After so long away, Serena soaked up the applause during a raucous reception from the crowd when she walked onto court in the early evening sunshine.</p>.<p>Williams' husband Alexis Ohanian was watching from the stands as his wife made an understandably rusty start.</p>.<p>With Williams' groundstrokes initially lacking their usual precision, the first set quickly slipped away.</p>.<p>Serena was appearing in doubles competition on grass for the first time since 2016, when she won Wimbledon with her sister Venus.</p>.<p>The 14-time Grand Slam doubles champion was well short of peak form and Bouzkova and Sorribes Tormo twice led by a break at the start of the second set.</p>.<p>But Williams showed the tenacious spirit that has defined her career, striking the ball cleaner and crisper as she and Jabeur hit back to level the match at one-set all.</p>.<p>In the match-deciding tie-break, Serena squandered a match point on her serve with a wayward forehand at 9-8 and Jabeur wasted another at 10-9.</p>.<p>But the pair saved a match point from Bouzkova and Sorribes Tormo at 10-11, reeling off the last three points to clinch a dramatic victory in the dusk.</p>.<p>In the Eastbourne women's singles, last year's Wimbledon runner-up Karolina Pliskova lost 6-1, 4-6, 4-6 against Britain's Katie Boulter.</p>.<p>Spanish top seed Paula Badosa was beaten 6-4, 6-3 by British wildcard Jodie Burrage.</p>.<p>In the men's singles, Ryan Peniston also enjoyed an impressive victory on home turf, beating French Open quarter-finalist Holger Rune 4-6, 7-6, (7/5), 6-1.</p>
<p>Serena Williams made a winning comeback after a year on the sidelines as the American legend teamed with Ons Jabeur to beat Sara Sorribes Tormo and Marie Bouzkova 2-6, 6-3, 13-11 in the Eastbourne International doubles on Tuesday.</p>.<p>Williams, a 23-time Grand Slam singles champion, was back in action for the first time since she made a tearful exit from Wimbledon last year.</p>.<p>The 40-year-old suffered a leg injury during her Wimbledon first-round match against Aliaksandra Sasnovich and had not been seen on court since.</p>.<p>Before Williams made the surprise announcement of her return last week, rumours of retirement had swirled around her for several months.</p>.<p>But, with Wimbledon starting on June 27, Williams finally resumed her career, playing with Jabeur at the Wimbledon warm-up event by the Sussex seaside.</p>.<p>Williams and Tunisia's Jabeur, who is third in the WTA singles rankings, saw off Spain's Sorribes Tormo and Bouzkova of the Czech Republic in the last-16 tie.</p>.<p>Although Williams was far from her vintage best, she will be encouraged by her first outing for 12 months.</p>.<p>She and Jabeur will face Japan's Shuko Aoyama and Taiwan's Chan Hao-ching in the quarter-finals.</p>.<p>"It was so fun to play with Ons. We had a lot of fun and our opponents played amazing. We were happy to stay in there," Williams said.</p>.<p>"I called Ons, she has been playing so well and I knew I needed to play some matches and she has always been so nice to me on tour.</p>.<p>"Yeah, I caught some fire behind me, it was good."</p>.<p>Serena has been given a wildcard to play in the singles at Wimbledon as she restarts her history bid.</p>.<p>Williams is one Grand Slam crown away from equalling Australian Margaret Court's record of 24 singles titles at the majors.</p>.<p>The last of Williams' 23 Grand Slam singles titles came at the Australian Open in 2017.</p>.<p>Since then she has lost four Grand Slam finals, including at Wimbledon in 2018 and 2019.</p>.<p>Williams won the seventh and most recent of her seven Wimbledon singles titles in 2016.</p>.<p>Serena, who became a mother in 2017, has plummeted to 1,204th in the WTA rankings due to her period out of action.</p>.<p>Wimbledon is widely considered Williams' best chance of winning another Grand Slam and this was her first step towards that goal.</p>.<p>After so long away, Serena soaked up the applause during a raucous reception from the crowd when she walked onto court in the early evening sunshine.</p>.<p>Williams' husband Alexis Ohanian was watching from the stands as his wife made an understandably rusty start.</p>.<p>With Williams' groundstrokes initially lacking their usual precision, the first set quickly slipped away.</p>.<p>Serena was appearing in doubles competition on grass for the first time since 2016, when she won Wimbledon with her sister Venus.</p>.<p>The 14-time Grand Slam doubles champion was well short of peak form and Bouzkova and Sorribes Tormo twice led by a break at the start of the second set.</p>.<p>But Williams showed the tenacious spirit that has defined her career, striking the ball cleaner and crisper as she and Jabeur hit back to level the match at one-set all.</p>.<p>In the match-deciding tie-break, Serena squandered a match point on her serve with a wayward forehand at 9-8 and Jabeur wasted another at 10-9.</p>.<p>But the pair saved a match point from Bouzkova and Sorribes Tormo at 10-11, reeling off the last three points to clinch a dramatic victory in the dusk.</p>.<p>In the Eastbourne women's singles, last year's Wimbledon runner-up Karolina Pliskova lost 6-1, 4-6, 4-6 against Britain's Katie Boulter.</p>.<p>Spanish top seed Paula Badosa was beaten 6-4, 6-3 by British wildcard Jodie Burrage.</p>.<p>In the men's singles, Ryan Peniston also enjoyed an impressive victory on home turf, beating French Open quarter-finalist Holger Rune 4-6, 7-6, (7/5), 6-1.</p>