Friday 8 June 2012

Wendy Turnbull

Wendy Turnbull Biography
Wendy Turnbull, MBE, (born 26 November 1952 in Brisbane, Australia) is a retired Australian professional tennis player. During her career, she won 9 Grand Slam titles, 4 of them in women's doubles and 5 of them in mixed doubles. She also was a 3-time Grand Slam singles runner-up and won 13 singles titles and 55 doubles titles.
Contents
 [hide]
    * 1 Career
    * 2 Major finals
          o 2.1 Grand Slam finals
                + 2.1.1 Singles: 3 finals (0 titles, 3 runner-ups)
                + 2.1.2 Women's doubles: 15 finals (4 titles, 11 runner-ups)
                + 2.1.3 Mixed doubles: 6 finals (5 titles, 1 runner-up)
          o 2.2 Year-End Championships finals
                + 2.2.1 Doubles: 2 finals (1 title, 1 runner-up)
    * 3 Titles (68)
          o 3.1 Singles (13)
          o 3.2 Doubles (55)
    * 4 Singles runner-ups (21)
    * 5 Grand Slam singles tournament timeline
    * 6 See also
    * 7 Sources
    * 8 External links
[edit] Career
Turnbull turned professional in 1975. Her career high rankings were third in singles and fifth in doubles. She was ranked in the year-end world top 20 for ten consecutive years (1977 through 1986) and in the year-end world top 10 for eight consecutive years from 1977 to 1984. She was nicknamed "Rabbit" by her peers because of her foot speed around the court.
Turnbull was a singles runner-up at the 1977 US Open, the 1979 French Open, and the 1980 Australian Open. She won four women's doubles titles and five mixed doubles titles at Grand Slam events.
She was a 12-time runner-up in Grand Slam doubles events: eleven times in women's doubles and one time in mixed doubles. Nine of her eleven women's doubles losses were to teams that included Martina Navratilova.
Turnbull teamed with Elizabeth Smylie to win the bronze medal in women's doubles at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul. She is one of very few players to have a winning record against Steffi Graf and leads 2–1 in head-to-head matches.
Turnbull was a member of Australia's Fed Cup team from 1977 through 1988, compiling a 46–16 overall win–loss record (17–8 in singles and 29–8 in doubles). She was the captain or coach of the team from 1985 through 1993.
Turnbull was appointed to the International Tennis Federation (ITF) Olympic Committee in 1991, the only player appointed to the committee. She also serves on the ITF's Fed Cup Committee.
In December 1993, Turnbull was honored by the city of Brisbane with the dedication of a public park in her honor. She was made a member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 1984. She was inducted into the Australian Tennis Hall of Fame in 2009.
 Wendy Turnbull
 Wendy Turnbull
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Chris Evert d. Wendy Turnbull - 1977 US Open final (Maureen Connolly featured)

Rosie Casals-Wendy Turnbull vs Barbara Potter-Sharon Walsh 1982 US Open Women's Doubles final

Iroda Tulyaganova Biography

Kim Clijsters v Iroda Tulyaganova WTA Hopman Cup HighlightsIroda Tulyaganova
Iroda Tulyaganova (Uzbek: Iroda To'laganova, Ирода Тўлаганова) (born 7 January 1982) is a professional tennis player who comes from Uzbekistan.
She has been ranked as high as No.16 on the WTA Tour and has won three WTA singles titles in her career. She returned to the main Tour in 2006 after a long injury absence, and in Kolkata in September 2006, she reached the semi-finals as a qualifier, leaping more than 120 places in the rankings to No. 222 after her success. The following week, she reached the final of her home event in Tashkent, beating a string of players including Top 60-ranked Olga Poutchkova. She also won the women's singles gold medal in the 2002 Asian Games in Busan by defeating Tamarine Tanasugarn of Thailand.
Iroda Tulyaganova
 Iroda Tulyaganova
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 Iroda Tulyaganova
 Iroda Tulyaganova
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Iroda Tulyaganova v Lindsay Davenport French Open HIghlights
Iroda Tulyaganova & Jelena Dokic

Thursday 7 June 2012

Sanja Ančić

Sanja Ančić Biography
Sanja Ančić (born 18 July 1988) is a Croatian tennis player. She has won a total of eight ITF tournaments in singles and one in doubles. Her highest singles ranking is world no. 159 which she reached on 11 September 2006, while on 5 March 2007 she reached her highest doubles ranking, world no. 240.
Contents
 [hide]
    * 1 Biography
    * 2 ITF titles (4)
          o 2.1 Singles (8)
          o 2.2 Doubles (1)
    * 3 External links
[edit] Biography
Ančić was born in Split to Stipe and Nilda Ančić. She plays right-handed, has a two-handed backhand and is the sister of professional tennis players Ivica and Mario Ančić. She played alongside her brother in the 2007 Hopman Cup.
Sanja Ančić
Sanja Ančić
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Sanja Ančić
Sanja Ančić
Sanja Ančić
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Sanja Ančić 
Fed Cup 2006 - Dementieva vs Ancic Part 8     

Sunday 13 May 2012

Anne Gaelle Sidot

Anne Gaelle Sidot Biography
Anne-Gaëlle Sidot (born on July 24, 1979 in Enghien-Les-Bains, France) is a former professional tennis player from France.
Sidot turned professional in 1994. She has never the reached the singles final of a WTA Tour tournament, although she did reach the semi-final stage on 6 occasions and the quarter-final stage on 13 occasions. Her best Grand Slam singles performances were reaching the third round exactly once in each of the four Grand Slam tournaments. She won two WTA Tour doubles titles in Leipzig in 2000 and Nice in 2001, and was the runner-up in Los Angeles and Zürich in 2000. She also reached the 1999 Wimbledon women's doubles quarter-final with Kristie Boogert of the Netherlands. She represented her country in the Fed Cup in 1997. She retired from the WTA Tour circuit in 2002.
Height: 1.72m (2002)
Weight: 56kg (2002)
Left-handed
Highest WTA Tour singles ranking: 24
Highest WTA Tour doubles ranking: 15
Career prize money: $1,236,925
@Overall singles record: @215-174
@overall doubles record: @112-125
WTA Tour doubles finals WTA(WITA) Tour doubles finals (2-2 record) and Grand Slam quarter finals and beyond
1999 Wimbledon QF with Kristie Boogert(Hol); 2000: W – Leipzig(Germany) with Arantxa Sánchez Vicario(Spn); RU – Los Angeles(California), Zürich(Switzerland) with Kimberly Po(US); 2001: W – Nice(France) with Émile Loit(Fra); US Open Mixed Doubles QF with Sandon Stolle(Aust)
WTA(WITA) Tour doubles semi-finalist on 10 occasions, excluding Grand Slams
1998(1), 1999(4), 2000(2), 2001(3)
ITF Women's (formerly Futures) Circuit singles titles(7)
Casablanca(Morocco) '94, Nottingham(England) '94, Flensburg(Germany) '95, Cardiff(Wales) '96, Cergy-Pontoise(France) '96, Würzsburg(Germany) '96, Southampton(England) '98
Grand Slam records
Grand Slam singles record (excluding qualifying matches): A - 3-5; F - 4-8; W - 3-6; US - 3-6 ; overall - 13-25
Grand Slam women's doubles record (QF or better): Wimbledon – QF('99)
Grand Slam mixed doubles record (QF or better): US Open – QF(’01)
Federation/Fed Cup and Olympic Games
Federation Cup record: 1997 - (1-0); overall singles and doubles record: 1-0; overall singles record: 0-0; overall doubles record: 1-0
Olympic Games: did not participate
Career summary
Year singles ranking win-lose Prize money in US$ A F W US SF QF
1993 NR 0-0/0 - - - - - 0 0
1994 299 0-0/0 c.8,000 - - - - 0 0
1995 164 0-1/0 c.23,000 - 1 Q1 - 0 0
1996 55 6-6/50 e.87,878 - 1 2 3 1 0
1997 33 22-24/48 e.173,371 2 1 1 1 3 2
1998 54 13-24/35 e.154,698(47) 3 2 1 1 0 3
1999 33 17-26/40 e.246,935(35) 1 1 1 2 1 1
2000 36 25-27/48 e.312,537(29) 1 3 3 1 1 5
2001 120 9-19/32 e.207,061(48) 1 1 1 1 0 2
2002 242 1-2/33 c.25,000 - 2 - - 0 0
Notes: WTA singles ranking was as of end of the WTA Tour season
"win-lose" record includes only WTA Tour singles matches and excludes qualifying matches, Federation Cup, Olympic Games tournaments before 2004 and other team competition matches. The singles match winning percentage is indicated after the slash
overall "win-lose" record: 93-129; overall winning percentage: 42%
A: Australian Open, F: French Open, W: Wimbledon, US: US Open - indicate the Grand Slam singles performance for each year; '-' means did not play, 'X' event not held in that year, Q1/Q2/Q3 means lost in the 1st/2nd/3rd qualifying round
"SF" and "QF" mean the number semi-final and quarter-final defeats respectively for each year and involve only WTA Tour non-Grand Slam events (excludes ITF Tour, Satellite events, Grand Slam tournaments and Olympic Games tournaments before 2004)
overall no. of SF defeats - 6
overall no. of QF defeats - 13
Anne Gaelle Sidot
Anne Gaelle Sidot
Anne Gaelle Sidot
Anne Gaelle Sidot
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Anne Gaelle Sidot
Steffi Graf Hannover 1999 Bits & Pieces 1/2
Nathalie Krebs Fragile S

Saturday 12 May 2012

Martina Sucha

Martina Sucha Biography
Currently being coached by M.Mihal; physical trainer is Tomas Kampmiller
Father, Henrich Suchy and mother, Margita Sucha are both doctors; brother, Marek Suchy, is student of economics and plays ice hockey
In her spare time likes shopping and reading (favorite author is Michal Viewegh)
Favorite movies are Trainspotting and American Beauty; favorite TV show is The Simpsons.
 Martina Sucha
Martina Sucha
Martina Sucha
Martina Sucha
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Martina Sucha rally
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Severine Bremond

Severine Bremond Biography
French professional female tennis player Séverine Brémond was born on August 14, 1979 in Montpellier, France. She started her professional tennis career in 2002 and represent France in WTA and ITF. She has played in all the major Grand Slam Events but failed to won any one of those. By far her best performance came in Wimbledon where she reached to the Quarterfinal in 2006. She has won 5 ITF singles titles up till now and as also played in doubles as well where she has won 4 ITF doubles titles. Severine currently ranks world no. 74 in singles and world no. 138 in doubles.
Severine Bremond
Severine Bremond
Severine Bremond
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Severine Bremond
Severine Bremond
Severine Bremond
Severine Bremond

Serena Williams vs Severine Bremond | 2008 US Open 4th Round highlights
Séverine Brémond in Paris Indoors 2007 1

Friday 11 May 2012

Amanda Coetzer

Amanda Coetzer Biography
As a biography, Amanda Coetzer, nicknamed The Little Assassin, was born on October 22, 1971 in Hoopstad, South Africa. Coetzer began playing tennis at the young age of six. Gavin Hopper served as her coach when she lived in Hilton Head, South Carolina.
Amanda Coetzer began her professional tennis career in 1988. She has competed at the Canadian Open in 1995 where she successfully beat Steffi Graf, Jana Novotná and Mary Pierce before losing to Monica Seles.
In 1996 Amanda attended the Australian Open where she made it to the Grand Slam semi-final before losing to Anke Huber. The following year, the best season of her career, Amanda went on to the French Open and the Australian Open.
In 1997 and 1998 Coetzer successfully beat Steffi Graf, Martina Hingis and Lindsay Davenport, all were ranked at No.1. In the remainder of her tennis career Coetzer competed at the Fed Cup, the Hopman Cup and attended the Olympic Games three times to represent her homeland.
In 2004 Amanda Coetzer retired from the world of professional tennis with an estimated $5,594,821 inprize money! She is currently married to film producer Arnon Milchan.
Amanda Coetzer
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Amanda Coetzer v Barbara Schett Us Open Highlights 2003
Martina Hingis vs Amanda Coetzer 2002 US Open Highlights

Wednesday 9 May 2012

Angela Haynes

Angela Haynes Biography
Angela Haynes is a female professional tennis player from United States. She was born on September 27, 1984 in Bellflower, California, U.S. She started to play tennis professionally when she was a teenager and later she has won two titles in singles category and both are ITF titles. In doubles, her victories include Seven ITF titles. Her career best ranking in singles circuit was No. 95 which she achieved on August 22, 2005. In doubles, her highest career ranking was No. 86 and she achieved that on September 15, 2008.
Angela Haynes
Angela Haynes
Angela Haynes
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Angela Haynes
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angela haynes at Indian Wells 3.12.09
Tennis Tips from Angela Haynes, Murphy Jensen and Victoria Azarenka -- Washington Kastles
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