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Amanda Anisimova v Tatjana Maria: Queen's Club women's singles final

Amanda Anisimova v Tatjana Maria: Queen's Club women's singles final

The Guardian15-06-2025
Update:
Date: 2025-06-15T12:00:17.000Z
Title: Preamble
Content: So we got there in the end. It's taken us 52 years, but finally, we're here: a women's final at Queen's Club, and what a joy that is. Though it barely needs saying, it's worth saying anyway: equality and visibility matter; we must never be blasé about either.
Really, it feels banal to eulogise a brilliant tournament, because what else did we think would happen but this? What else could possibly happen but this? Yet conversely, it's also fair to say that none of us predicted a final between Amanda Anisimova and Tatjana Maria – itself part of the beauty we're extolling.
Anisimova was outed herself as a potential champion in 2019, reaching the semis at Roland Garros aged just 17. But the slog of the tour ground her down and eventually she acted, taking off the second half of 2023 to protect her mental health and returning a more realised, fulfilled human being – with the same divine ball-striking.
And what a week she's had here. The portents were there – earlier in the year she won her first WTA 1000 title, then made round four in Paris before losing in two tight sets to Aryna Sabalenka. But even so, there can't have been many who expected that, after seeing off Jodie Burrage and Sonay Kartal, she'd then despatch Emma Navarro and Qinwen Zheng, seeded 3 and 1 respectively. She is at it.
So, though, is Maria – another who evidences the restorative powers of a career break, having twice taken time off to have and look after her children. Following the birth of her second, in 2021, she reached the last four of Wimbledon the next year and now, aged 38 having relied on athletic prowess, is using her command of spins and angles to discomfit younger, faster and more powerful rivals.
Her run this week has been nothing short of sensational. First, she completed qualifying, then she ejected Laylah Fernandez, Karolína Muchová, Elena Rybakina and Madison Keys for the loss of only one set. Which is to say shes playing as well as she can – and so is Anisimova. One of them is about to enjoy the greatest day of their career, and it is our privilege to experience the battle as they work out which.
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