Queen’s Final: Tatjana Maria Shocks Amanda Anisimova

Maria, who turned 38 in two months, is the WTA Tour champion since Serena Williams won the Auckland championship in 2020.
She said she wanted to keep moving forward until she played doubles with her eldest daughter, Charlotte, who often played ball with her during games.
Maria was surprised in 2022 at Wimbledon semifinals, where Maria made a game for the pastures – but even she couldn’t think her week would be flooding like this.
She reached West London with a nine-game winning streak. She became the champion and entered the top 50 in the world from 86th in the field rankings.
After her opponents, especially large batsmen Anisimova, Keys and Elena Rybakina, her game style, accurate play and ability to conceal her shooting abilities make her opponent angry.
Maria broke out in the first set, making mistakes from the Americans, and then Anisimova’s backhand champion returned it to normal.
However, Maria continued to move forward, obviously frustrating her, while a net forehand put Maria back on her rest time, and then she served with ease.
The number tells the story, with Anisimova making 10 uncompulsory mistakes in the opener, while momentum stays unchanged with the Germans on their first chance in the second set.
The Mammoth’s fourth game saw seven Deuces and Maria retain two breakout points in 3-1 before hitting the ball on the next great snow, which gave her two breakups.
Anisimova, who won the WTA 1,000 title in Qatar earlier this year, broke, broke the shooting to save the break and stay in touch.
But Maria, supported by a crowded crowd, kept her neurosed service to 30 years old and secured her place in the Queen’s history.



