The Wimbledon tournament, designated as "THE CHAMPIONSHIPS" by the British tennis enthusiasts and by the tournament officials themselves, is one of the four grand slam tournaments in tennis during a calendar year. It is held in London, UK, and starts on the last Monday in June unless the first day of July is a Monday. For the women's event, 128 players compete in a knockout elimination rounds format. If you win your match you advance to the next round. If you lose you are eliminated from the tournament. Thus, after the sixth round there are only two players left in the tournament to compete in the final match to capture the championship title.
To make up the 128 players field of competition, the highest 100 ranked players on the WTA tour receive automatic entry into the main draw. The player ranked 101st would only gain entry if a player ranked higher withdraws because of injury or for any other reason does not intend to compete. That process applies then down the line to as many of the actual Top 100 players who do not play.
The Wimbledon tournament officials award what's known as wildcards to twelve players, which under their sole discretion, they deem worthy to have direct entry to the main draw despite not being ranked in the Top 100. Usually, four British players are invariably selected for those twelve spots. Incidentally, the other grand slam tournaments act in the same manner. For example, the USO tournament will invariably select four American players not ranked in the Top 100; ditto for the French Open selecting French players and the Australian Open selecting Australian players. The other wildcard recipients are made up of players considered worthy but for one reason or another, usually because of prolonged injuries or illnesses missed achieving the Top 100 ranking to gain direct entry automatically.
The remaining sixteen spots for the competition, are filled by players who compete in the qualifying rounds conducted during the preceding week prior of the start of the tournament. There are 128 players entered in the qualifying rounds which also is determined by a knockout elimination format. Accordingly, after three rounds of matches played, there emerge only sixteen players who would have won their three consecutive matches, and thus are entitled to play in the main draw.
Technically speaking, players ranked from 101 to 228 ought to be the ones most entitled to compete in the qualifying rounds, but there are other factors in consideration. For one thing there are two WTA tournaments scheduled during that week which offer more ranking points and higher prize money than the results of the qualifying rounds. Some players who are allowed to play in those tournaments will opt to play there instead of competing to see if they could qualify to play at Wimbledon.
That said, it allows the Wimbledon tournament officials greater latitude in selecting the players to compete in the qualifying rounds. Hence, Maia who was ranked as low as No 318, based on her performances at the Tallinn Open the past September and at the American tournaments in March was selected even though she couldn't have competed in those other two lesser tournaments of that week. As we had previously noted the fact that she had won the Wimbledon's Junior Girls title two years previously bolstered her appeal to be invited to play at Wimbledon.
The three qualifying round matches for the women's event are held on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of the last full week in June. On Friday the tournament conducts the draw to set up the matchups for the championship competition to commence on the ensuing Monday, which in that current year happened to have fallen on the penultimate day of June.
After returning from the March tournaments and the impromptu visits to her relatives in the United States, Maia did not do anything in tennis that week. On the next week after returning from the orgy in Prague, she started daily two hour practice sessions on the tennis courts provided for her by the Estonian Tennis Association. After she was finished with her high school classes, Maia upped her practice schedule to two, two hour workouts daily in the morning and in the afternoon. Her former coach, Toomas Tamala, was instrumental in persuading the retired greatest Estonian tennis star, Anett Kontaveit, to take over on a temporary basis to coach Maia including her appearance at Wimbledon.
Anett was a very beautiful woman standing at a height of 175 cm (5'9") with a winsome female body. Her pulchritude was highlighted when she shared a photo of herself on social media wearing a really cool outfit, made of a light blue linen suit, consisting of shorts and a blazer. And under the jacket, she wore nothing at all; as a tantalizing glimpse of her bare cleavage was visible!
Anett was forced to retire from professional tennis and the WTA tour, at a premature age of twenty-seven years. She suffered from a lumbar disc degeneration in her back. That chronic painful back condition did not allow for full-scale training or continued competition. Therefore, it was impossible for her to continue at the top level in such a highly competitive field.
Anett and Maia in conjunction with Vivian worked out a mutually satisfactory financial arrangement for Anett's coaching assignment to assist Maia's preparation as well as accompanying her to the Wimbledon tournament. This agreement included a PR position with Vivian's craft beer company. Since Vivian's company was a subsidiary to Baxter & Sons, the international business conglomerate headquartered in Chicago, Anett would act as a goodwill ambassador for Baxter & Sons in enhancing its corporate image.
Vivian and Jed Baxter were involved as periodical lovers in an ongoing sexual relationship for many years. As a result, under Jed's direction, Baxter & Sons incorporated Vivian's beer enterprise as a subsidiary company into its corporate holdings installing in the process Vivian as a vice president in the European division. Both Felicia Baxter, the wife of Jed, and Raimond Kruuse, common law husband to Vivian were aware of the affair but were in essence forced to tolerate it.
As far as Raimond was concerned he knew of the affair when he first became acquainted with Vivian but viewed the situation as it being part and parcel of who Vivian Laaning was. As he put it, she was a woman with a healthy appetite for sex. In any case Raimond was quite confident of her love and true devotion to him. He was comforted with the absolute certainty that he was having more frequent sex with Vivian than Jed Baxter.
As for Felicia Baxter she had been frigid in sex and absolutely detested the act. Her aversion to sex stemmed from the fact that she had been continuously sexually abused by her own father for some seven years after the death of her mother. Her father justified his pedophilia by suggesting to Felicia it was her duty to replace her mother's role in the family. To add to her woes after her father had died and she was living with her aunt, she was raped by three classmates from her high school. She pressed charges of rape against them, but in the subsequent trial the jury believed the allegation that the sex was consensual and thus rendered a not guilty verdict.