The 27-year-old from Tunisia called her friend Tatjana Maria 'an inspiration' after defeating the mother of two 6-2, 3-6, 6-1 in their semi-final.
At one set all, the match looked finely poised, but here was the moment for Jabeur to show her mettle, recover the poise she has shown throughout this tournament, and the 27-year-old duly did so. Maria was happy for Jabeur, at least as far as is possible in such circumstances, describing her friend as an “amazing role model” who is “such a great person, and really deserves it”. As for her own journey, she said: “I’m 34 years old with two kids and playing my first time semi-final in Wimbledon … I think everything is possible. But with one game apiece and at 15-40 down thanks to a double fault, the world No 103 looked inside herself and found intense resolve. “Tatjana deserves a lot of respect,” said Jabeur. “The way she plays, the way she fights. Tennis fever is now endemic in her home country, with Jabeur known as “the minister for happiness”. The final also coincides with the celebration of Eid al-Adha, and Jabeur said: “It’s always about Tunisia somehow, but I want to go bigger, inspire many more generations. Maria, 34, has been celebrated for the way she has returned from the birth of her second child last year to attack the courts of SW19 this past fortnight.
Tunisia's Ons Jabeur is the first Arab and first African woman to reach the Wimbledon final.
I love the game and I want to share the experience with them.” I want to see more Arab and African players on the tour. “Physically, Tatjana is a beast, she doesn’t give up, I thought she would give up – her touch, her serve and everything on the court is impressive.
Ons Jabeur reached her first grand slam final with a 6-2 3-6 6-1 victory against Tatjana Maria at Wimbledon on Thursday.
As the crowd applauded the two players, Jabeur dragged Maria back onto the court and gestured for the crowd to cheer her opponent. Coming back after having two babies -- I can't believe how she did it." I want to see more and more, not just Tunisian, but Arab and African players on tour.
Tunisia's Ons Jabeur, right, gestures to Tatjana Maria to receive applause from the crowd after beating her in a Wimbledon women's singles semifinal match. ( ...
“I didn’t expect that I’m going to be here in the second week, especially in the final,” said Rybakina, 23. “But today I feel like I went back to my normal one. Last year, she was the first Arab player — woman or man — to crack the top 10 in rankings, first to win a WTA title and to make a quarterfinal appearance at Wimbledon. Before this, she had never advanced past the second round in any major championship. I just love the game and I want to share this experience with them.” I just try to inspire, really, as much as I can.
Ons Jabeur is the first Arab woman and first African woman to make a Grand Slam final.
“I talk a lot about it’s nice to get out the feelings, all the stress,” she said. (The French Open, you know.) Then Thursday she got to a decisive set in a semifinal and roared to 5-0 with only one game going to deuce. “She’s number two in the world,” Maria said, “and she’s still the same person that she was many years ago.” Then the friendship and sportswomanship carried on because Jabeur got going about Maria: “If I didn’t see her two kids, I would say she never had the kids. “Yeah, I mean, it’s nice of them to call me that,” she said Thursday. “It’s really unbelievable. “It’s very important.” She spoke Thursday of childhood heroes Kim Clijsters, Serena Williams, Venus Williams and Andy Roddick and of recent adviser Billie Jean King. I’m 34 years old with two kids and playing my first time semifinal in Wimbledon … Even with family, you can have a career and you can keep going.” “Yeah, I hope that I can send this message out,” Maria said, “that I have two kids and I’m on this stage. Jabeur joined that pantheon with a clever game that boasts the full toolbox of shots (all on display Thursday) and with an essence that made her something else: beloved. By age 9, Jabeur had moved an hour away with her family to Sousse, also on the coast, and the girl was telling people she aimed to win the French Open someday. “Tunisia is connected to the Arab world, is connected to the African continent. I want to see more players from my country, from the Middle East, from Africa. I think we didn’t believe enough at certain point that we can do it.
Jabeur, the first Arab or African woman to reach a Grand Slam singles final in the Open era, will face Elena Rybakina in Saturday's women's final.
Though her all-around athletic talent had coaches in other sports like soccer and team handball trying to lure her away, she stuck with tennis and left to train and study at a sports school in Tunis, the capital, at age 13. I feel for the players who couldn’t come here, but I’m just enjoying playing here on the biggest stage, enjoying my time and doing my best.” Rybakina, born in Moscow and long considered a promising Russian junior, began representing Kazakhstan four years ago while continuing to train regularly in Moscow. “Now tennis is like soccer in Tunisia, people are following my matches,” Jabeur said in a recent interview. She is very open in spirit and has a family who support her a lot. She remains deeply connected to the country. She clasped Maria by the wrist and pulled her back onto the court despite her protestations and pointed appreciatively in her direction to acknowledge Maria’s own unexpected journey to this semifinal as an unseeded 34-year-old mother of two young children. Maillard was not at this year’s French Open, where Jabeur, one of the favorites, was upset in the first round. She matured through effort and by questioning herself and searching constantly for better approaches and solutions. We did a great job, and we’ve come a long way.” “We see ourselves in Ons,” she continued. Let a tennis ball land near her feet, and her soccer juggling skills quickly become apparent, too.
The Tunisian third seed becomes the first Arab woman to reach a grand slam decider, while her opponent is the first player from Kazakhstan to make it this ...
And then, just as suddenly, Jabeur switched back to her best self, pulling out to a 5-0 edge in the third in 20 minutes. After a strong first set, Jabeur was far less effective in the second. On the second point of the match, Jabeur won a point by using a drop shot on a return of serve. After a surprising first-round loss at the French Open in May, Jabeur is on quite a run: She has won 11 consecutive matches, all on grass courts, and 22 of her past 24. Maria loves to hit slice forehands; Jabeur, quite capable of powerful groundstrokes, joined in on that occasionally. Halep had won her past 12 matches at the All England Club, a streak that began with her title run three years ago. Last year produced all sorts of milestones: first Arab player to break into the top 10 of the men’s or women’s rankings; first Arab to win a WTA title; a quarterfinal at Wimbledon. When their semifinal ended, she and Maria – a 34-year-old mother of two from Germany who is ranked 103th – met at the net for an extended hug. Neither had been to a grand slam semifinal previously. ... I want to see more players from my country, from the Middle East, from Africa,” said Jabeur, who sat on her sideline chair and threw her head back after the biggest victory of her career. Then, after depositing her racket on the sideline, Jabeur returned to the middle of the court for the usual victor's wave to the crowd – except, instead of going alone, she playfully tugged Maria along with her, an uncommon gesture, and encouraged the spectators to salute the player on the wrong end of the scoreline. “Coming back after having two babies – I still can’t believe how she did it.”
Ons Jabeur ended the run of 103rd-ranked Tatjana Maria to reach her maiden Grand Slam final at Wimbledon on Friday.
Defeat for Maria ended her remarkable run to the last four at Wimbledon and she said: "I hope that I can send this message out that I have two kids and I'm on this stage. Available to download now on - iPhone & iPad and Android I'm 34 years old with two kids and playing my first semi-final in Wimbledon. The area, we want to see more players. I am really happy it pays off and I continue for one more match now," said the Tunisian, who next faces Elena Rybakina from Kazakhstan in Saturday's final. I still can't believe how she did it."
Ons Jabeur plays Elena Rybakina in the Wimbeldon final in a matchup of women who had never been to a Grand Slam semifinal.
Rybakina didn’t take a similar leap in 2021, though she did beat Serena Williams during a French Open quarterfinal run. I just try to inspire as much as I can.” “I know in Tunisia they’re going crazy right now. She was a rising star before the pandemic, reaching four finals in her first five WTA tournaments of 2020 and getting up to No. 17 in the rankings. “I’m really happy it’s paying off. Jabeur defeated German Tatjana Maria in Thursday’s semifinals to become the first African woman, and first Arab or North African man or woman, to reach a Grand Slam singles final in the Open Era.
Whenever Ons Jabeur steps onto a tennis court, she never plays solely for herself, but for the future generations she hopes to inspire.
"But for me, I had to remind myself why I started playing tennis, what kind of joy tennis brings to me. I know I can do it." I want to see more players from my country, from the Middle East, from Africa." "I've played her a couple of times. "I did all of it. "In the area, we want to see more players.
During Ons Jabeur's historic run to the Wimbledon final, the Tunisian has been a firm crowd favourite. We talk to three fans about what she means for her ...
"I absolutely love Ons' skill with the drop shots and the variation," she said. Now she has fans from all over the world, not just Tunisia and the Arab world." And now getting the furthest she's ever got is just amazing for Tunisian women, Arab women but also all women everywhere. But this is the best tournament in the world, and she's putting Tunisia on the map. "When I met her the first time, I took a walk with her before she became famous. "I've been a fan since the first time she came to Wimbledon [in 2017]," he said.
The first African player to reach a major tennis final, she has set Wimbledon – and Tunisian hearts – ablaze.
In the process she gives visibility to Tunisia and a whole continent with it. Thanks to Jabeur, there is a growing interest in women’s sport and women athletes in Tunisia and across the Arab world. In May 2022 her win at the Madrid Open made her the first Tunisian, Arab and African player to win a WTA 1000 tournament. Jabeur had won, but her only concern was to hurry over and comfort Bencic and help prepare a cooler of ice cubes for her injury. In Tunisia, young and old, men and women, are increasingly tuning in to TV broadcasts to follow her matches live. The tennis star was born on 28 August 1994 in Ksar Hellal, a small town in Tunisia. She comes from a middle class family and has two brothers and a sister.
Not long after Wimbledon began this year, it became clear that the greatest obstacle between Ons Jabeur and a first grand slam final was likely to be ...
Against such a great server, the challenge for Jabeur will also be to take care of her own service games. The contrast between the two is stark and Jabeur, 27, will bring her deep toolbox of shots and unpredictable patterns in order to disrupt her opponent’s rigid offence however she can. Even though Rybakina is facing a completely different type of opponent in Jabeur, she will approach the final no differently, looking to attack, shorten points and impose herself. Rybakina wants rallies over as quickly as possible and on her way through the tournament she has done an excellent job of executing her full-power tennis. As she stands at 6ft, the challenge for her opponents is to absorb her first strike and exploit her relative lack of athleticism, whether by forcing her to move or lengthening the points. If she is to lift her first grand slam title, Jabeur will have to unpick a completely different style compared with anything she has faced so far and it will be a formidable challenge.
The women's Wimbledon final match is set. Ons Jabeur of Tunisia will face Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan after both were victorious Thursday.
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There will be a new name on the women's trophy and a first-time grand slam champ on Saturday. The question is, will it be Ons Jabeur or Elena Rybakina?
It's more likely, though, that Jabeur finds a solution, soaks up the power and finds a way to win. As she said on the eve of Wimbledon: "I'm on a mission." It's entirely possible that Rybakina will come out firing, serving rockets, and blast Jabeur off the court. In fact, she has won a higher percentage of points on her second serve (63%) than any other woman these two weeks. Though Rybakina will bring the heat in terms of pure power, it appears Jabeur will have the skills to deal with it. The question is: Who will handle the occasion the best?
Ons Jabeur is the first Arab woman to reach a Grand Slam tennis final and a star in her homeland of Tunisia.
“The state should have commitments to a person like Ons, given the services rendered to the homeland and her contribution to giving a shining image of Tunisia,” he said. He said the symbolic title of “Minister of Happiness” used to describe Jabeur “is well deserved.” But he wants the government to give her a real title: He said Jabeur should be designated an official ambassador of Tunisia. TUNIS, Tunisia — Ons Jabeur — the first Arab woman to reach a Grand Slam tennis final — is such a star in her homeland that her father calls her “the daughter of all Tunisia” and the government wants to make her a special ambassador.
Rybakina is one match away from winning a Grand Slam tournament for the first time, in her first major final. And so is her opponent, Ons Jabeur – the first ...
... I want to see more players from my country, from the Middle East, from Africa.” The names and faces of the star players at Wimbledon didn't matter to Elena Rybakina when she was a child. Rybakina is one match away from winning a Grand Slam tournament for the first time, in her first major final. Rybakina has also had to deal with several questions about her nationality. “I want to go bigger, inspire many more generation(s),” Jabeur said. “As a kid, I don’t remember exactly who was playing, but when Wimbledon was on TV, it was always traditional white.
History was made at Wimbledon on Thursday, as Ons Jabeur became the first Arab player to reach a Grand Slam singles final.
She now goes into the final as the favorite for the title and will face off against Elena Rybakina, who will also be making history as the first Kazakhstani tennis player to make a major final. On Thursday, history was made at the Wimbledon Tennis Championship in England as the Tunisian tennis star Ons Jabeur became the first Arab woman — and first African woman in the Open Era — to make a grand slam final. Tunisia's Ons Jabeur becomes first Arab woman to make Wimbledon Final
Ons Jabeur faces Elena Rybakina in Saturday's Wimbledon women's singles final, meaning a new champion will be crowned this year at the All England Club.
Ons Jabeur said the seeds of her history-making charge to the Wimbledon final were sown 12 months ago when she told her coaching team: "I'm coming back for ...
"I had to remind myself why did I start playing tennis, what kind of joy that tennis brings to me. I played Olympics, Fed Cup." "She was like, 'You will'. She knows that if I put something in my mind, I do it. Usually it was the first and second round. "I have a great team behind me, even though sometimes – I'm not going to lie to you – I maybe thought I was never going to make it or never going to make a Grand Slam title or a Grand Slam final," said Jabeur. "Not to lie to you, the dream kind of started last year when I enjoyed playing here, enjoyed the crowd," said the world number two.