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Yanina Wickmayer (Tennis Star) Partner: Meet Jérôme van der Zijl (Belgium Professional Footballer)

Yanina Wickmayer (Tennis Star) Partner: Meet Jérôme van der Zijl (Belgium Professional Footballer)

Jérôme van der Zijla and Yanina Wickmayer have been married since 2017. Yanina, a tennis player, and her footballer husband were in a love relationship for six years before they chose to marry.

When it comes to sports and their careers, the two are on the same page. Meanwhile, their love and concern for one another has never caused them any problems in their work lives.

During the lockdown, the couple announced the birth of their first child, a daughter, due in April 2021. Wickmayer stated that she has always wanted to be a mother since she was a child.

Yanina continues to play tennis after becoming a mother, and she currently represents Belgium at W25 Petange 02A. Jérôme, on the other hand, retired a long time ago in order to support the family and seek more flexible alternatives for raising their child.

Yanina Wickmayer
Yanina Wickmayer

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Yanina Wickmayer Partner Jérôme van der Zijl Is A Former Footballer

Jérôme van der Zijl’s partner, Yanina Wickmayer, is a former professional Belgian footballer who played as a defender. He played for four different Belgian clubs during his career, including the UEFA Champions League club Lierse S.K.

Jérôme grew up in Brussels, Belgium, and began playing football with his college team. He met Yanina during his time in Sweden, and after several years of dating, they decided to marry in 2017.

Jérôme is a former footballer, but he frequently shows up on tennis courts to watch his wife’s matches and to enjoy his parents’ time. Yanina, his wife, returned to professional tennis after a successful marriage and becoming a mother.

WTA Single Tennis 13th-ranked Yanina, on the other hand, appears to be of colour, as her current ranking is 331. She is, nonetheless, devoted to tennis and working hard to restore her legacy.

Aside from that, the couple enjoys travelling and spending time together, which they frequently document on Instagram. They continue to go on dates, sometimes with their daughter, sometimes without.

Yanina and Jérôme Married In June 2017

Jérôme and Yanina had a long relationship before marrying in July 2017. Both parties keep the promises they made at the beginning of their partnership. Yanina captioned her newlywed shot, “A dream come true.”

They decided to hold their wedding ceremony in Hasselt, Belgium. Because Yanina was certain she would not be in the finals, the date was set on the same day as the women’s singles Wimbledon final. That was true because she didn’t make it past the quarterfinals.

Coworkers and acquaintances of the couple attended the wedding ceremony. Yanina invited some of her most well-known tennis players, including Kristina Maldenovic, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, and Kim Clijsters.

Yanina admirers assumed this was her ultimate farewell to tennis, but she responded that she wanted to achieve even more from her career. The pair is currently preoccupied with the care of their daughter Launa, who was born in April 2021.

Yanina Wickmayer Partner Jérôme van der Zijl
Yanina Wickmayer Partner Jérôme van der Zijl

Yanina and Jérôme Daughter Luana Daniëlla Van der Zijl

Luana Danilla Van der Zijl, the daughter of Yanina Wickmayer and Jérôme van der Zijl, is one and a half years old.

Luana is a gift to her parents, particularly to her mother Yanina. Yanina’s mother died while she was only nine years old. She didn’t have a mother, so she pretended to be an idol mother for her future child, Luana, whom she wished for.

Luana is already well-known for her adorable Instagram photos. She is fortunate to have popular yet supportive parents like Yanina and Jérôme who will be by her side throughout her life.

 

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A post shared by Yanina Wickmayer (@yaninawickmayer)

Career Stats

Tournament 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2020 2021 W–L
Australian Open A 1R 2R 1R A 2R 1R 1R 1R 1R A A 2–8
French Open 1R 1R A A 1R A 1R 1R 1R 2R 1R A 1–8
Wimbledon A 2R 1R A 1R 2R 2R A 2R A NH A 4–6
US Open 1R 1R 1R A A 1R 1R A 1R A A A 0–6
Win–loss 0–2 1–4 1–3 0–1 0–2 2–3 1–4 0–2 1–4 1–2 0–1 0–0 7–28

Timeline

2020

This table is valid until the 2020 Australian Open.

2018

Wickmayer’s 2018 season was cut short at the start of the Asian swing due to injuries. She was ranked 113 at the end of the season.

2016

Wickmayer competed in the St. Petersburg Ladies’ Trophy in Russia in February. In the first round, she defeated Jeena Ostapenko. In the next round, she was defeated by second seed and eventual champion Roberta Vinci.

Wickmayer reached the semifinals of the Abierto Mexicano Telcel after being seeded eighth. She lost to second seed Sloane Stephens. Wickmayer was defeated in the second round of the Monterrey Open by fourth seed Johanna Konta. Wickmayer lost in the second round of the BNP Paribas Open to twenty-sixth seed Sam Stosur.

She then competed in the San Antonio Open, one of the WTA 125K series tournaments in 2016. She was seeded fourth and was defeated in the first round by Lauren Davis. Wickmayer defeated Karin Knapp in the first round of the Miami Open. She defeated eleventh seed Lucie afáová in the second round. Heather Watson, a wild card, defeated her in the third round.

2014

Wickmayer’s 2014 season began with the ASB Classic. Despite reaching the final last year, Wickmayer was eliminated in the first round by qualifier Kristna Plková. Wickmayer then competed in the Hobart International.

Laura Robson was her opponent in the first round. Despite losing the first set, Wickmayer was leading in the second set when Robson quit due to a left wrist injury. She faced qualifier Garbie Muguruza in the second round.

When Wickmayer retired due to a viral ailment, Muguruza led 4-1 in the first set. Wickmayer, ranked 63 in the Australian Open, defeated Dinah Pfizenmaier in the first round. She was defeated in the second round by Alison Riske.

2013

Wickmayer began the year by losing in the first round of both the Brisbane and Australian Opens. She defeated Magdaléna Rybáriková 6-3, 6-2 in her opening WTA Tour match of the year in Indian Wells. Despite having two match points, she was defeated in the second round by Daniela Hantuchová. She then fell in the first round in both Miami and Charleston.

Wickmayer was defeated in the quarterfinals of the Aegon Classic in Birmingham by a resurrected Maria Sharapova, 1-6, 6-2, 3-6. Wickmayer reached both the singles and doubles finals at the Ordina Open, losing to Tamarine Tanasugarn in the singles final. In the doubles final, she was defeated in three sets by an Italian combination. She was defeated in the first round of Wimbledon by Elena Vesnina.

2012

Wickmayer started her 2012 season in the ASB Classic. She was seeded seventh and fell in the second round against Sara Errani. Wickmayer reached the final of the Moorilla Hobart International as the top seed, defeating Marina Erakovic, Australian wildcard Casey Dellacqua, Simona Halep, and sixth seed Shahar Pe’er.

She was eliminated in the final by qualifier Mona Barthel. Wickmayer, seeded twenty-eighth at the Australian Open, the season’s opening major, was eliminated in the first round by Galina Voskoboeva.

Wickmayer competed in the Gastein Ladies, a clay-court event, following the French Open. She reached the final as the second seed, defeating Mariana Duque-Mario, Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Yvonne Meusburger, and Mandy Minella. Wickmayer was defeated in the final by seventh seed Alizé Cornet. This was her second WTA final of the season.

2010

Wickmayer returned to Auckland to defend her title from 2010. She reached the finals for the second time, defeating Dinara Safina, qualifier Sabine Lisicki, Simona Halep, and Peng Shuai. Wickmayer was defeated in the final by Gréta Arn, 3-6, 3-6. She was defeated in the first round of the Medibank International Sydney by fourth seed Samantha Stosur, 7-5, 6-4. Wickmayer, seeded 21st in the Australian Open, was defeated in the second round by Latvian Anastasija Sevastova, 4-6, 2-6.

Wickmayer began the season at the ASB Classic. She was eliminated in the first round by wild card Taylor Townsend. Wickmayer lost in the first round of qualifying at the Apia International Sydney against Tmea Babos. Wickmayer upset twenty-third seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the first round of the Australian Open in Melbourne. She defeated Lara Arruabarrena in the second round. Wickmayer defeated fourteenth seed Sara Errani in the third round to get to the fourth round for the first time since 2010. She was eliminated in the fourth round by third seed Simona Halep.

2009

Wickmayer’s final tournament of the year was in the Bali year-end championships. She was drawn into Group C and won her first match in straight sets over Kimiko Date-Krumm. She was scheduled to face Anabel Medina Garrigues in the next round, however she was excluded from the event due to doping suspicions. This was her final competition of the year.

Wickmayer and fellow Belgian tennis star Xavier Malisse were to defend themselves before the Flemish anti-doping tribunal on October 1, 2009, for failing to correctly fill out their whereabouts. Wickmayer responded in a press release saying the failure to follow process was due to her inability to go on to the proper website, contact the appropriate individuals when necessary, and being out of the country when written admonitions from the Flemish anti-doping authority arrived via mail.

The prosecution did not ask for a suspension at the tribunal on 22 October 2009, but rather for a “primary restraint” of the facts that they were accused of, and as such it was envisaged that this would not present any problems for either athlete. However, on November 5, 2009, the tribunal’s verdict was announced: a one-year ban for both players. Wickmayer and Malisse both filed an appeal (in Brussels), which was initially reversed on December 16, 2009, after the appeal was granted.

2008

Wickmayer stunned reigning Australian Open women’s doubles champion Kateryna Bondarenko in the 2008 Fed Cup clash against Ukraine. Wickmayer qualified for the French Open in singles but lost in the first round to Akgul Amanmuradova.

She reached the final of the DFS Classic but lost to Kateryna Bondarenko, 6-7, 6-3, 6-7.

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2007

During the fall season, she continued her dominance on the ITF circuit by winning many tournaments in Asia (see external links). Wickmayer surpassed Caroline Maes as the No. 2 Belgian female tennis player at this period. She was ranked 534th in the world at the start of the year, but by November 2007, she had risen to roughly 170th.

Wickmayer has previously won eight singles and seven doubles titles on the circuit. She was also chosen by team captain Sabine Appelmans to represent Belgium in the Fed Cup. In her World Group match, she was defeated by Venus Williams, 1-6, 2-6, before winning one rubber and losing the other against Chinese opponents.

1989

Yanina Wickmayer (born 20 October 1989) is a professional tennis player from Belgium. She advanced to the semifinals of the 2009 US Open and achieved a career-high WTA ranking of world No. 12 on April 19, 2010. On February 15, 2010, she set a career high of world No. 71 in doubles. In 2009, she was named “WTA Most Improved Player.” Time magazine named her one of the “30 Legends of Women’s Tennis: Past, Present, and Future” in June 2011.

Marc Wickmayer and Daniella Dannevoye had Wickmayer on October 20, 1989. Friends introduced her to tennis at the age of nine on neighbourhood courts. Her mother died at a young age not long after. Gianinna Maradona, Diego Maradona’s youngest daughter, inspired her name. Her surname ‘Wickmayer’ comes from Austria, thanks to her father Marc.

Wickmayer, who speaks Dutch, English, and French fluently, admires former Belgian tennis player Kim Clijsters the most. Clijsters would be working with her for the 2017 Wimbledon Championships, she confirmed in 2017. Wickmayer married long-term partner and former professional football player Jérôme van der Zijl on July 16, 2017.

Yanina Wickmayer
Yanina Wickmayer

Quick Facts

Real Name Yanina Wickmayer
Occupation tennis player
Nationality Belgium
Date of Birth 1989/10/20
Birth Year 1989
Birth Month 10
Birth day 20
Age 31
First Name Yanina
Last Name NA
Gender female
Place of Birth Lier
Facebook details YaninaWickmayer
IMDB details nm3614488
Twitter details wickytennis
Awards Receieved
Childrens
Sports Country Belgium
Height 182
Languages spoke and written
Weight 68
Sports team Belgium Fed Cup team
Official website http://yaninawickmayer.com/
Residence Hasselt
Sport tennis

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs):

Why is Yanina Wickmayer famous?

She is famous for being a successful Tennis Player.

Where is she from?

She is from Belgium.

How tall is she?

Her height is 6′ 0″.

How much does she earn?

Between $1 Million – $5 Million.

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Arpita
Arpita

Hi there! My name is Arpita Jain and I'm a passionate author with a love for storytelling. I've written several books across different genres including fiction, non-fiction, and children's literature.

My journey as an author started when I was a child and discovered my love for writing and creating stories. Over time, I've developed my writing skills and found my unique voice and perspective.

I strive to create characters that are vivid and compelling, settings that are immersive, and storylines that are thought-provoking. I explore complex themes such as love, loss, identity, and social issues in my writing, hoping to inspire readers to think deeply about the world around them.

Overall, writing is my true passion, and I'm grateful for the opportunity to share my stories with the world.

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