Forget any frontier-breaking and ethically-dicey cloning methods to produce super athletes - the answer to endless hours of breathtaking sport played by incredible human specimens is staring us in the face. All it would take would be the introduction of two sporting siblings by two driven fathers and the world would have a ready-made assembly line for a generation of winners. If Richard, patriarch of the tennis playing Williams family, picked up the phone to Earl, daddy of golfing tree-topper Woods, and arranged a meeting between one of his daughters and the Tiger, things could become hot and spicy. If the sparks flew, and those athletic limbs became entwined after a suitable romantic interlude, what progeny they would produce. Major tournaments in golf and the Grand Slam of tennis would be at the mercy of kids with that sort of pedigree. The celebrations would be as compelling as the sport. Venus Williams has the widest of smiles and it lit up Wimbledon's Centre Court after her win over Lindsay Davenport last Saturday. And Woods, whose mother is from Thailand - 'The Land of Smiles' - can beam brightly when the occasion suits. So just think of the mega-watt smile that would greet a victory by a son or daughter of a Woods-Williams mixed double act. Even if such a delicious union does not occur, the future of sport has been revealed in the past year or so and it is black. It's no secret that black athletes possess a purity of movement that has virtually cornered them the market in track and field, boxing and basketball. In the last century, Jesse Owens, Carl Lewis, Muhammad Ali, Michael Jordan and Hank Aaron stood head and shoulders above the rest in their sports. But Woods and the Williams sisters are different. They are set to dominate sports, golf and tennis respectively, which have never been a preserve of black athletes and that can only encourage more participation from youngsters with similar ancestry. Woods' 15-stroke victory in the US Open was arguably the greatest ever individual performance in sport and you can be sure that hundreds, if not thousands, of black kids are dreaming of emulating him. And Williams' Wimbledon win will energise whole communities from the downtrodden areas of Los Angeles where she and sister Serena were raised. There have been black Wimbledon champions before, Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe spring to mind, but they did not have the same athleticism as the Williams girls and their victories did not generate mass coverage from the media. Of course, both Woods and the Williams sisters were pushed along the glory path by ambitious and goal-oriented fathers but Richard Williams and Earl Woods are not the only parents out there who want the best for their kids and are willing to drive them to the edge to achieve it. Which is another reason why the heavenly cubs from a Tiger-Venus liaison would be so awesome. Mum and dad, thanks to the assertive genes passed on to them by their fathers, would have them swinging clubs and racquets fresh out of the cradle.