Tatjana Maria Tops Venus In Hobart In The Oldest WTA Match Ever
Experience beat experience in Hobart, where Tatjana Maria edged Venus Williams 6-4, 6-3 in a first-round match that felt like tennis history with a smile and a dash of family gossip.
The win was notable for more than the scoreline; the match combined the ages of both players into WTA trivia, served as a final tuneup before the Australian Open, and gave fans a reminder of how good veteran tennis can be.
Match Of Generations And Records
Photo: Getty
“Everybody loves Venus—I love her too!”
Tatjana Maria
That quote landed with a warm clap from the crowd and a small personal note about Maria’s life in Florida, near the Williams family, which made the postmatch moment feel both professional and neighborly in tone.
The match set a striking WTA marker because the players’ combined age topped what the tour has seen since its founding, and tennis historians will now reference Hobart when they talk about longevity in the women’s game.
Scorelines were tidy but the story was broader: Maria, age 38, used experience, timing and short-court guile to close points, while Venus, age 45, flashed the power that has carried her to seven Grand Slam titles over an extraordinary career.
Maria’s victory came in straight sets but was far from routine, with the German breaking serve repeatedly and claiming the match in just under an hour-and-a-half, a tempo that punished inconsistency and rewarded clean offense.
How The Match Played Out
Venus started by breaking Maria’s serve in the opening set, showing she still commands points early, but Maria broke back and then broke again to take the opener 6-4, capitalizing on two service losses from Williams.
In the second set Maria needed only a single break to seal the win, and she converted that chance with cool shot selection and fewer unforced errors, a classic veteran plan executed under pressure.
Match statistics reflected Maria’s control; she broke serve a total of five times and secured the critical points near the end of games, while Williams’ unfinished rallies highlighted the thin margin between past peak and present excellence.
The contest also provided context for rankings: Venus entered the event ranked 576th in the world, while Maria sits at 42nd on the WTA list, a tidy numerical snapshot of where form sits heading into the Australian Open.
For Maria the win was also personal; she joked that her daughters count Venus among their favorites, which turned a postmatch interview into a family moment, and gave the crowd a humanizing snapshot of life beyond the tour.
Implications For Melbourne And Beyond
The result matters for both players in different ways: Venus gets another match under her belt before Melbourne Park and the chance to become the oldest player in the Australian Open draw, rewriting a bit of the event’s history if she plays in full.
Maria’s resume gains momentum; a win in Hobart is more than a warmup because it shows she can cut through matches with savvy rather than raw power, and she might carry that sharpness into the early rounds in Melbourne.
Looking at the broader field, Hobart offered a reminder that the tour’s veteran contingent remains dangerous, and that ranking numbers do not always predict outcomes when experience and match rhythm come into play.
Other results in Hobart underscored the tournament’s unpredictability, like Barbora Krejcikova’s loss to Peyton Stearns, which reinforced that form this week will be a noisy but useful indicator of who is ready for the first Grand Slam of the year.
History will note this Hobart fixture as the oldest combined-age match since the WTA began in 1973, a stat that tennis trivia players will enjoy and that underscores how the sport keeps evolving without losing its veterans.
As Maria and Venus swap planes for Melbourne, fans should expect more stories, competitive matches and the occasional odd statline, because Grand Slam week tends to amplify both form and folklore in equal measure.
My Tennis Expert believes the match was the perfect headline for a week that blends nostalgia and competitive urgency, delivering drama without needing a third set to make a memorable point about longevity in tennis.
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