Morning Sun

Jabeur 1st woman from Africa in pro Slam final

- By Howard Fendrich

WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND » Ons Jabeur’s steady progress from year to year — up the tennis rankings, through the draws of various tournament­s and, now, at Wimbledon — has carried her to a Grand Slam singles final, the first African woman and Arab woman to make it that far in the profession­al era.

The No. 3-seeded Jabeur, a 27-year-old from Tunisia, got past her good friend Tatjana Maria 6-2, 3-6, 6-1 in an up-and-down semifinal at a sun-splashed Centre Court on Thursday.

“I want to go bigger, inspire many more generation­s. 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,” said Jabeur, who sat on her sideline chair and threw her head back after the biggest victory of her career. “We didn’t believe enough, at a certain point, that we can do it. Now I’m just trying to show (we can). Hopefully people are getting inspired.”

On Saturday, she will face another player making her major final debut, No. 17 seed Elena Rybakina, for the championsh­ip. Rybakina, a 23-year-old who was born in Moscow but began representi­ng Kazakhstan four years ago, overpowere­d 2019 Wimbledon champion Simona Halep 6-3, 6-3 in the second semifinal.

“I already did a lot,” Rybakina said, “and it’s just time to enjoy.”

This is the first Wimbledon final since 1962 featuring two women both appearing in their initial Grand Slam title match.

After a surprising firstround 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. Since pro players were first admitted to major tennis tournament­s in 1968, never had an African woman or Arab woman been to a Slam final.

There were supposed to be two men’s semifinals today, but now there will be just one, because 22-time Grand Slam winner Rafael Nadal pulled out of the tournament with a torn abdominal muscle. Nadal announced his withdrawal Thursday, which put unseeded Nick Kyrgios into his first major final. Kyrgios will face either No. 1 seed Novak Djokovic or No. 9 Cameron Norrie of Britain, who play each other today.

Jabeur has been rising in the tennis world in recent seasons. In 2020, at the Australian Open, she became the first Arab woman to reach the quarterfin­als at a major. 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.

Now she’s done that two

steps better.

“I really don’t know what to say. It’s a dream coming true from years and years of work and sacrifice. I’m really happy it’s paying off,” Jabeur said through a wide smile. “One more match now.”

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. Jabeur whispered something in her pal’s ear. 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.

“I definitely wanted to share the moment with her at the end, because she’s such an inspiratio­n for so many players, including me,” Jabeur said. “Coming back after having two babies — I still can’t believe how she did it.”

Rybakina, who upset Serena Williams in the 2021 French Open’s fourth round, drew several questions from reporters about her Russian background. Players from Russia and Belarus were banned by the All England Club from competing this year because of the war in Ukraine.

“I feel for the players who couldn’t come here,” Rybakina said, “but I’m just enjoying playing here on the biggest stage, enjoying my time and trying to do my best.”

Rybakina, never beyond a major quarterfin­al until now, leads the tour in aces this year and added five to her total Thursday. More surprising was the way Halep never got going, especially on her serve, doublefaul­ting nine times.

Halep had won her past 12 matches at the All England Club, a streak that began with her title run three years ago. Wimbledon was canceled in 2020 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Halep was unable to compete a year ago because she tore her left calf muscle.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tunisia’s Ons Jabeur returns to Germany’s Tatjana Maria in a women’s singles semifinal match on day eleven of the Wimbledon tennis championsh­ips in London on Thursday.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tunisia’s Ons Jabeur returns to Germany’s Tatjana Maria in a women’s singles semifinal match on day eleven of the Wimbledon tennis championsh­ips in London on Thursday.

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