Elena Rybakina Iga Swiatek Garbine Muguruza Ons Jabeur Venus Williams Marie Bouzkova Tatjana Maria France Paris Kazakhstan tennis Wimbledon Elena Rybakina Iga Swiatek Garbine Muguruza Ons Jabeur Venus Williams Marie Bouzkova Tatjana Maria France Paris Kazakhstan

Wimbledon trailblazer Jabeur: 'Coming for the title'

beinsports.com

Ons Jabeur said that 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 the title."Jabeur became the first African woman to reach a Grand Slam final in the modern era when she beat close friend Tatjana Maria, 6-2, 3-6, 6-1 in the semi-finals.She will face Russian-born Elena Rybakina, now representing Kazakhstan, for the title on Saturday.Twelve months ago, Jabeur, 27, made the quarter-finals for the first time, losing to Aryna Sabalenka.But on the way she knocked out five-time champion Venus Williams, 2017 winner Garbine Muguruza, as well as current number one Iga Swiatek.Having never previously got past the second round at the All England Club, that run gave her the taste for more."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."I didn't play so many Wimbledons before.

Usually it was the first and second round. It's tricky on grass but I knew I was playing good on grass because of my game and everything."Melanie (Maillard), my mental coach, reminded me when I lost in the quarter-finals I told her like, 'I'm coming back next year for the title'."Maillard did not need convincing."She was like, 'You will'.

She knows that if I put something in my mind, I do it. I'm one step away from achieving it," said Jabeur. "I hope it's going to happen."Jabeur coasted through the first four rounds at Wimbledon this year before needing three sets to defeat Marie Bouzkova and then three more to see off Maria.Her run to the final came after a dispiriting first-round exit at the French Open in May.Jabeur had been one of the favourites for the title in Paris having won the

Related News
Ons Jabeur may have missed out on the Wimbledon title but the trailblazing Tunisian was accorded a champion's reception on Friday as a crowd of hundreds celebrated the country's sporting pioneer.
Ons Jabeur became the first African woman in the Open era to reach a Grand Slam final on Thursday when she defeated Germany's Tatjana Maria in the Wimbledon semi-finals.
Six-time champion Novak Djokovic targets an 11th Wimbledon semi-final on Tuesday as Ons Jabeur, the last top 15 women's seed standing, eyes an Arab landmark performance. Top seed Djokovic will reach his 43rd Slam semi-final if he can defeat Jannik Sinner. The odds are stacked in Djokovic's favour with the Italian 20-year-old yet to get past the quarter-finals of a major. "I kind of see a little bit of myself in his game from the back of the court, playing flat backhand, constantly staying on the back of the line, trying to put pressure on opponents," said Djokovic.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.