In a real three-sentence thriller, Tatjana Maria won the German duel against Jule Niemeier in the quarterfinals. The 34-year-old is only two wins away from the sensational triumph. But first she thinks of her family.
Tatjana Maria clapped her hands in front of her face in disbelief and hugged Jule Niemeier with a heartfelt hug. Thanks to her impressive nerves of steel, 34-year-old Maria continued her fabulous Wimbledon run in the German quarter-finals and ended the big dream of her opponent, who was twelve years younger. The mother of two won a thriller 4: 6, 6: 2, 7: 5 in 2:17 hours on Tuesday and reached the semifinals of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time in her long career. She is only missing two wins for the sensational title.
“I have goosebumps everywhere. It was such a difficult match against Jule,” enthused Maria to the cheers of the spectators. “Today we made Germany really proud.” After the greatest success of her career, Niemeier proudly said goodbye and formed a heart with her hands.
Tatjana Maria is only the sixth German semi-finalist
Maria collects the equivalent of 622,000 euros for her success and now meets the winner of the match between world number two Ons Jabeur from Tunisia and Marie Bouzkova from the Czech Republic. After the previous winners Steffi Graf and Angelique Kerber as well as Sabine Lisicki, Julia Görges and Bettina Bunge, she is only the sixth German semi-finalist in the history of professional tennis at Wimbledon. “It’s a dream to live with my family and my two little daughters,” said Maria, recalling Cecilia’s birth in early April 2021. “I gave birth a good year ago. It’s crazy.”
A few steps behind her Bundesliga colleague from TC Bredeney from Essen, Maria walked onto court 1 before the game started, both with a concentrated look. They posed smiling while taking a photo together on the web. On the last sip from the water bottle on the bench, Niemeier patted the towels at her side, grinned at her appendage and got off to a dream start.
With her powerful forehand, she put Maria under pressure early on and immediately took the serve from her opponent. As the best return player of the tournament so far, Niemeier had already managed a break in more than half of the cases.
Maria also attacked the net with aggressiveness and slowly fought her way into the game. The 34-year-old had also put on her normal Wimbledon routine before the match: At half past eight, training for her eight-year-old daughter Charlotte was due before Maria warmed up with her husband and trainer Charles-Edouard. “I have my two children, this distraction is good for me. Everything is normal with us, nothing has changed,” she said shortly before the game on Sky and reported on a relaxed relationship with her opponent: “We go on the pitch, Both want to win and will give everything. And after that it’s okay again.”
Match develops into a thriller
Both players remained stable in the further course of the first round with their own serve. Niemeier secured the opening set after just 43 minutes due to a return error from Maria.
Niemeier stayed tuned. The Borussia Dortmund fan earned four breakballs in Maria’s first service game – and made it 1-0 with a perfectly placed backhand pass. Endurance runner Maria had repeatedly freed herself from hopeless situations in this tournament and once again showed her fighting spirit. She equalized with a kneeling volley, and her husband in the stands cheered. Also supported by several double faults and slight mistakes by Niemeier, Maria took over the command and quickly led 4:1. The set ball was spectacular: Niemeier hit the ball through his legs while running backwards, Maria converted an ice-cold volley.
It became a thriller. Niemeier broke in the decisive set to make it 3:2, but remained too passive and had to accept the 4:4 after a slight volley error. Suddenly Maria was on top again, two points were missing to win the match, Niemeier kept his nerve and drove the audience on. After an incredibly hard-fought ball at a score of 5:5 with a better end for Maria, numerous fans rose – and a little later cheered the winner.
Source: Stern

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