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Monday, October 14, 2019

Wk.41- Call Her Champ

With every outing, Coco Gauff is giving more and more signs that she is indeed "the real thing."




It's hard to imagine that Coke won't eventually come calling for some sort of "Coco-Cola" tie-in at some point, right?



[And, yes, because "Call Her Champ/Champion" *is* almost the most stupidly obvious headline of the year it almost feels like a cheat to use it. But sometimes even the most obscenely obvious choice is *so* good it'd feel even worse to *not* use it, you know? So...]


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*WEEK 41 CHAMPIONS*
LINZ, AUSTRIA (Int'l/Hard Court Indoor)
S: Coco Gauff/USA def. Alona Ostapenko/LAT 6-3/1-6/6-2
D: Barbora Krejcikova/Katerina Siniakova (CZE/CZE) def. Barbara Haas/Xenia Knoll (AUT/SUI) 6-4/6-3
TIANJIN, CHINA (Int'l/Hard Court Outdoor)
S: Rebecca Peterson/SWE def. Heather Watson/GBR 6-4/6-4
D: Shuko Aoyama/Ena Shibahara (JPN/JPN) def. Nao Hibino/Miyu Kato (JPN/JPN) 6-3/7-5


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PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Coco Gauff/USA
...what would Gauff's breakout season have been without a singles title to remember it by? Well, she'll never have to know, because the 15-year old got hers in Linz and can now place it next to the doubles crown she won in Washington this summer, then take a few moments to look at them both while remembering all she's done *this* year and will likely do next season and well beyond.



A little lost in the story of Gauff (at 15 years and 7 months) becoming the youngest tour singles champion in fifteen years (Nicole Vaidisova, three months younger, in 2004 -- though the most recent 15-year old was Austrian Tamira Paszek in '06) is that she did it as a *lucky loser,* becoming just the second in tour history to pull off the feat after Olga Danilovic became the first to go down the path just last season.

Gauff lost in the final round of qualifying to Tamara Korpatsch, but entered the MD as a LL (along w/ Ysaline Bonaventure) after the withdrawals of Anastasija Sevastova and Maria Sakkari. After a win ovet Stefanie Voegele, Gauff outlasted Kateryna Kozlova (ret. down 2-0 in 3rd) before notching her first career Top 10 victory over top-seeded Kiki Bertens in the QF, a stage in a tour-level event at which Gauff had never before advanced in her previous five career appearances. From there, Andrea Petkovic fell in straights and then Alona Ostapenko in a three-set final, won by the Bannerette by a 6-3/1-6/6-2 score as Gauff became the sixth different U.S. player to win a tour title this season. None of them, it should be noted, are named Williams or Stephens. It's the most non-Venus/Serena Bannerettes to lift titles in a single season in nearly two decades, since 2000.

IMPROMPTU QUIZ: Can you name the six U.S women other than the Williams Sisters to win singles titles that season?

Gauff will make her Top 100 debut this week, jumping from #110 to #71 with the title run.
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RISERS: Rebecca Peterson/SWE and Ekaterina Alexandrova/RUS
...Sweden's Peterson has become one of the tour movers and shakers this final quarter of 2019, picking up her second title during the Asian swing (w/ Nanchang) this weekend in Tianjin. The 24-year old opened big, defeating Venus Williams in three sets, the first of three matches during the week that went the distance. Wins over Wang Xinyu, Wang Yafan (in 3) and Ons Jabeur (3) advanced her into her second WTA final, which she eventually won 4 & 4 over Heather Watson after rain forced the final onto the indoor (stands-less) practice courts. While few were able to witness the final act first-hand, Peterson's second pro title lifts her to a new career high of #44 this week.



In Linz, 24-year old Alexandrova nearly followed up the career-best result she had in the event a year ago with a second straight trip to the final. In 2018, the Russian lost in her maiden tour final to Camila Giorgi, and she returned to Austria last week having put together some modest momentum during the 4th Quarter of the WTA schedule. Alexandrova notched her first career Top 5 win over Simona Halep in Beijing, and this week added victories over Kristyna Pliskova, Laura Siegemund and Kristina Mladenovic to reach the semis. She held three MP vs. Alona Ostapenko, but wasn't able to convert any of them. Still, she's put together an 8-4 4Q mark and enters Week 42 finding herself in the mix for the title of 2019's top-ranked Hordette along with a handful of her countrywomen as a slew of Russians (they'll fill at least 8 of 28 MD spots) gather in Moscow for the Kremlin Cup.


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SURPRISE: Shuka Aoyama/Ena Shibahara, JPN/JPN
...in a Tianjin field that originally included former slam winners Stosur/Sh.Zhang (who withdrew), Nicole Melichar (not with regular partner Peschke, but w/ '19 Wimbledon WD finalist Xu Yifan -- they lost in the 1st Rd.) and ex-#1 Peng Shuai (SF w/ Duan Yingying), the champions turned out to be Shuko Aoyama & Ena Shibahara, who teamed to reach their second '19 final (San Jose) and win for a first time as a duo. The pair took three straight match TB to reach the final, where they defeated Nao Hibino & Miyu Kato 6-3/7-5.



The title is the tenth for 31-year old vet Aoyama, who previously won at Rosmalen this season w/ Aleks Krunic, while it's the maiden win for 21-year old former UCLA Bruin Shibahara, a Rancho Palos Verdes (California) native who just started representing Japan this past July.
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VETERANS: Heather Watson/GBR and Andrea Petkovic/GER
...Watson's late-season run hasn't exactly been an expected occurrence. After a 14-18 start, the Brit has put together a 13-5 stretch in recent months, culminating in an appearance in this weekend's Tianjin final after posting wins over Kateryna Bondarenko, Wang Qiang, Magda Linette (saving 4 MP) and Veronika Kudermetova. Having not reached a tour SF since January '18, Watson's last appearance in a final was in Monterrey in March 2016, when she won her third career WTA title in her third final. She didn't maintain her perfect record in Tianjin, losing to Rebecca Peterson in straight sets in a match forced indoors due to rain and played in front of just a handful of people.

Watson jumps from #125 to #88 with the result, pretty much assuring herself of her seventh Top 100 finish in nine years, which amounts to a return for her from a season ago when she just missed out by winding up at #101.

Of course, don't think of this as some sort of swan song (the non-Katie kind) for Watson. As the 27-year old winningly noted on her IG, she's "not that old ya cheeky f**k**s !"

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Finishing the season on a high note this year. It’s not the trophy I wanted but it’s been a great week reaching another WTA final. It’s not been a great last couple years for me, but I feel like the tides are turning even if it took me a while to get here. I like to think that I’ve been resilient through the downs & I always keep going and keep fighting through. 10 years on tour baby ????! And plenty more to come... I’m not that old ya cheeky f**k**s !! Right now, I’m the happiest I’ve ever been off the court and on court I ended up playing some of the best tennis I’ve ever played this week, which really says something about where I’m at ?? with that being said.. I can’t wait for what 2020 holds!!

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In Linz, 32-year old Petkovic recorded straight sets wins over Jil Teichmann, Julia Goerges and Viktoria Kuzmova to reach her first tour SF since the same event a year ago.



Her loss to Coco Gauff prevented her from advancing to her first final since Antwerp in February '15, an event which concluded with a walkover win granted her by Carla Suarez-Navarro. *That* was the event in which tournament director, a then-retired Kim Clijsters, played and defeated the German in an exhibition set to give the fans *something* for their money. So, in a sense, Petkovic might be the player "most familiar" with whatever version of the Belgian we'll see in 2020.


Petko's most recently *played* final was in the old Tournament of Champions event in '14, where she defeated Flavia Pennetta in the Italian's last final before her '15 U.S. Open triumph.
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COMEBACK: Alona Ostapenko/LAT
...whether recent weeks turn out to be significant or not, the tendency is to at least *hope* that Ostapenko has turned some kind of corner. A week ago, the Latvian upset Karolina Pliskova (despite a week's... err, month's worth of DF) and reached the Beijing doubles final. This week in Linz, after bringing in Marion Bartoli to offer a coaching eye, Ostapenko reached her final in more than year and a half (Miami '18), but only after saving three MP in the semifinals against Ekaterina Alexandrova.

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Final feeling for @jelena.ostapenko ??????

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After having opened her week with a win over Tamara Korpatsch, who'd reached the MD with a qualifying win over Coco Gauff, Ostapenko coasted past Alize Cornet and Elena Rybakina en route to the final, where she met the aforementioned lucky loser Gauff. She fell in three to the teenager, but will get one more shot this year (in Luxembourg) to get her first tour title since Seoul in the closing weeks of her breakout '17 campaign, or (you know) at least maybe wrap up a fourth straight Top 50 season. She begins the week at #63.
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FRESH FACES: Veronika Kudermetova/RUS and Ons Jabeur/TUN
...while Kudermetova was a successful junior, most notably on the team level as she led the Hordettes to the Junior Fed Cup crown in 2013, it has taken until her 22nd year to come into her own as a pro. This season the Russian made her MD debut at all four majors, reaching the 3rd Round at Roland Garros, won a 125 Series singles crown and the Wuhan doubles, and posted her first Top 10 singles victory (over Belinda Bencic) in that same event in China. Last week in Tianjin, Kudermetova reached her third tour-level semi (second this 4Q) with wins over Ajla Tomljanovic, Zheng Saisai (ret.) and Dayana Yastremska (by an impressive 4 & love score) before falling to Heather Watson.



Kudermetova enters this week as the fourth-ranked Russian, but with a legitimate chance in Moscow to take over the top spot for '19, as she stands at a career-best #42, just 119 points behind #37 Kasatkina (the defending champ) and less than 80 from #38 Alexandrova and #40 Pavlyuchenkova.



In the same Tianjin event, Jabeur reached her second semifinal of the season (Eastbourne) with wins over Jennifer Brady, Wang Xiyu and Yulia Putintseva. The 25-year old Tunisian moves up eight spots to #53 in the new rankings, just two off the career-high standing she reached in September. She'll be defending runner-up points this week from her run at last year's Kremlin Cup, where she lost in the final to Kasatkina.


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DOWN: Wang Qiang/CHN
...while Kiki Bertens (lost Tianjin QF vs. Gauff) and Belinda Bencic (lost 1st Rd. to Friedsam in Linz) both failed to put up a result that qualified either for the WTA Finals (they're in Moscow this week for a do-over), Wang's entire 4th Quarter this season has taken a huge step back from her breakout run last fall.

A year ago, the then 26-year old strung together a SF-W-SF-SF-RU finishing stretch during the tour's 4Q Asian swing, going 21-6 after the U.S. Open (w/ three Top 10 wins). This year, after reaching her first career major QF at Flushing Meadows (and getting her only Top 10 win of '19), she's gone 2-4. She fell in the 2nd Round in Tianjin to Heather Watson, 6-3/6-0. Wang rose from #44 to #20 last fall and currently stands at #22 with her points from her '18 Elite Trophy "runner-up" result (remember, she was eliminated in the round robin, then got another "live" chance in the final just so the event didn't end w/ a walkover win for Ash Barty) still to fall off.

Although, as China's top ranked player (and #26 in the points race), Wang still might get a wild card spot into the Zhuhai event and be given still another chance to subvert the competitive process.
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ITF PLAYERS: Oceane Dodin/FRA and Nadia Podoroska/ARG
...22-year old Pastry Dodin picked up her first title since winning the $100K Poitiers challenger three years ago (which had come a month after her only tour-level title in Quebec City). In Cherbourg-en-Cotentin, Dodin defeated countrywoman Harmony Tan 6-4/6-2 in the final to claim her ninth career ITF crown in her third appearance in a final since the start of this summer.



In Pula, Italy it was Argentina's Podoroska, recently seen this summer staging a massive comeback to take the Pan American Games Gold from Caroline Dolehide (a $60K champ a week ago), winning her first challenger since 2016. Victories over Simona Waltert, Angelica Moratelli and Elisabetta Cocciaretto -- all without dropping a set -- preceded another straight sets victory in the final over Martina Trevisan, 7-6(5)/6-1.

The win moves the 22-year old Podoroska to the cusp of a return to the Top 300 (#301), after having nearly reached the Top 150 in the spring of 2017 before her season was cut short due to injury later that summer.
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JUNIOR STAR: Robin Montgomery/USA
...15-year old Washington D.C. native Montgomery won her first career Grade 1 singles crown at the Grade B1 Pan American Closed Championships in Nicholasville, Kentucky.



The #3 seed, Montgomery took out top seed Alexandra Yepifanova in the semis, coming back to win an almost three-hour, 4-6/7-6(5)/7-6(3) match against the increasingly emotional U.S. Open girls runner-up. She then dispatched Isabelle Kouzmanov in the final, 6-2/6-2. Montgomery added the doubles title (w/ Kouzmanov) to the Grade 1 doubles win she picked up this summer in College Park, Maryland alongside Kamilla Bartone.
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DOUBLES: Barbora Krejcikova/Katerina Siniakova, CZE/CZE
...the former #1-ranked Czechs returned to the winner's circle in Linz, taking their second title in three months (w/ Toronto) after previously going more than a full year without one. After getting a 1st Round walkover, the two-time slam champs won a 10-4 match tie-break in the QF over Geuer/Lechemia and ultimately claimed the crown with a 6-4/6-3 win over Barbara Haas & Xenia Knoll in the final. The result evens their career tour-level final record as a duo at 4-4, while giving Siniakova a third 2019 title (she won Sydney w/ Aleks Krunic).

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@wtalinz ?? @bkrejcikova #1 ????? here we go ??

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WHEELCHAIR: ---
...while there weren't any big wheelchair events held this past week, that doesn't mean there wasn't news.

No, Jiske Griffioen didn't announce any sort of re-thinking of her comeback after getting her doors (wheels?) blown off by Yui Kamiji for two weeks running, but she did have an IG post that referenced "the comeback," so it would seem everything is still a go...



Additionally, the fields were announced for the Wheelchair Masters events (the tour's equivalent to the WTA Finals), which this November 19-26 will be held simultaneously in the same city (Orlando) for the first time since 2013.

The singles field:

#1 DE GROOT, Diede (NED) 5155
#2 KAMIJI, Yui (JPN) 3540
#3 VAN KOOT, Aniek (NED) 3293
#4 BUIS, Marjolein (NED) 2426
#5 WHILEY, Jordanne (GBR) 1712
#6 ZHU, Zhenzhen (CHN) 1698
#7 MONTJANE, Kgothatso (RSA) 1625
#9 ELLERBROCK, Sabine (GER) 1370

NOTE: #8 Giulia Capocci hasn't played since the U.S. Open, so one suspects she must be out due to injury

And doubles:

#1 VAN KOOT, Aniek (1) / DE GROOT, Diede (2) [NED/NED]
#2 BUIS, Marjolein (3) / MATHEWSON, Dana (4) [NED/USA]
#3 SHUKER, Lucy (6) / WHILEY, Jordanne (11) [GBR/GBR]
#4 MONTJANE, Kgothatso (8) / KRUGER, Katharina (10) [RSA/NED]
#5 ZHU, Zhenzhen (14) / FAMIN, Charlotte (20) [CHN/FRA]
#6 BERNAL, Angelica (18) / MORENO, Maria Florencia (21) [COL/ARG]
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IMPROMPTU QUIZ ANSWERS:
...the six U.S. women other than Serena and Venus to win titles in 2000 were Jennifer Capriati, Lindsay Davenport, Lisa Raymond, Chandra Rubin, Monica Seles and Meghann Shaughnessy


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There have been a lot of exciting moments during my 2019 season. I am proud to have made a career high ranking of 23 in the world and the semi finals of the Australian Open, earlier this season. There have also been tough moments, but I am grateful for another year of growth. Today is a tough day for me as I announce my recent diagnosis with Rheumatoid arthritis. I have not been feeling all that great for quite some time, but it has been somewhat of a relief and completely validating to understand the cause behind my pain. I am certainly not the first person who has been diagnosed with a chronic illness, and I really feel for all of the people out there who are struggling. As I have started treatment, I am looking forward to embracing this next challenge in life. Without a doubt, every healthy day is a gift and I am one hundred percent committed to keeping strong and continuing to battle on and off the tennis court. ?????? #rheumatoidarthritis #autoimmunedisease #ivegotthis #adversity

A post shared by Danielle Collins (@danimalcollins) on




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1. Linz Final - Coco Gauff def. Alona Ostapenko
...6-1/1-6/6-2.
Gauff is the ninth-youngest singles champ in tour history, and the 15th first-time winner this season.


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2. Linz SF - Alona Ostapenko def. Ekaterina Alexandrova
...1-6/7-6(5)/7-5.
Ostapenko saved three MP in all, two as a returner at 5-6 in the 2nd and another serving at 4-5 in the 3rd.


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3. Tianjin Final - Rebecca Peterson def. Heather Watson
...6-4/6-4.
A tour-level final, or a virtual practice session with benefits?


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4. Tianjin QF - Heather Watson def. Magda Linette
...7-5/6-7(4)/7-6(6).
Watson saved four MP en route to her first final in years, all coming when serving to stay in the match down 4-5 in the final set. She went on to win a tight 8-6 TB to advance.
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5. Tianjin QF - Ons Jabeur def. Yulia Putintseva
...7-6(5)/7-6(4).
Sure, Putintseva won her 1st Round match over Astra Sharma after saving a MP, but isn't it far more "interesting" to see the Kazakh after a loss? I mean, no one ends closes out a losing effort quite like Putintseva, right?


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6. $25K Claremont, CAL USA - Katie Swan def. Thaisa Grana Pedretti
...6-1/6-3.
The 20-year old Brit, ranked #263, is making her way back from injury. She recorded wins over Leylah Annie Fernandez (QF) and Giuliana Olmos (SF) on her way to her first title since April of last year.

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Extra proud of this one ???? #webackbaby #25k

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7. $25K Riba-Roja de Turia ESP Final - Lara Arruabarrena/Sara Errani def. Marie Benoit/Ioana Loredana Rosca
...3-6/6-4 [10-8].
32-year old Errani is working her way back from that double-shot suspension, and this weekend posted her first title run since winning a $60K singles crown in Rome in June. Ranked #240 in singles, Errani was well outside the Top 1000 in doubles went the Career Doubles Slam winner picked up her first ITF WD title since 2007.
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8. $25K Hua Hin THA Final - Patcharin Cheapchandej/Punnin Kovapitukted def. Kang Jiaqi/Tamarine Tanasugarn
...6-3/6-4.
The now 42-year old Tanasugarn retired in the summer of '16 after having not played since the spring of '15, but the Thai vet returned this past December. In her seventh doubles event of the season, she reached her first final of any kind since tour-level Pattaya in 2015.
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9. Luxembourg Q1 - Kaja Juvan def. Tatiana Golovin
...6-3/6-1.
For the first time since 2008 (when Juvan was 7)...


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10. Linz Q2 - Tamara Korpatsch def. Coco Gauff
...6-4/6-2.
*Officially* a footnote to history.


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1. Tianjin 1st Rd. - Rebecca Peterson def. VENUS WILLIAMS
6-3/4-6/6-3.
The third time proved to be the charm for Peterson, as far as the Williams family is concerned. The Swede had lost a pair of matches against Serena this year, falling in Miami (2nd Rd.) and Rome (1st), though she did show well and win a set in the former match-up.


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2. $25K Hilton Head, SC USA QF - Marina Melnikova def. MARI OSAKA
...6-1/1-6/6-3.
While it hardly justifies that wild card she was given into the Miami MD back in March, Naomi's older sister hasn't drifted away since. In fact, her QF run at Hilton Head, her seventh QF+ result (w/ 3 SF) in a succession of challenger events over the last seven months, gives her a 27-19 all-level Q/MD record since she lost her sixth straight match (to Whitney Osuigwe) in the 1st Round of the Miami Open. She'll be at #302 in the rankings this week, 299 spots behind her sister.
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26???

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Hope everyone had a good weekend ????????

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*WTA FIRST-TIME CHAMPIONS in 2019*
Hobart - Sonya Kenin, USA (20/#56)
Acapulco - Wang Yafan, CHN (24/#65)
Indian Wells - Bianca Andreescu, CAN (18/#60)
Bogota - Amanda Anisimova, USA (17/#76)
Istanbul - Petra Martic, CRO (28/#40)
Prague - Jil Teichmann, SUI (21/#146)
Rabat - Maria Sakkari, GRE (23/#51)
Nuremberg - Yulia Putintseva, KAZ (24/#39)
Bucharest - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (20/#106)
Lausanne - Fiona Ferro, FRA (22/#98)
Washington - Jessica Pegula, USA (25/#79)
Bronx - Magda Linette, POL (27/#80)
Nanchang - Rebecca Peterson, SWE (24/#78)
Seoul - Karolina Muchova, CZE (23/#45)
LINZ - COCO GAUFF, USA (15/#110)

*LUCKY LOSERS IN WTA FINALS*
2005 Canberra - Melinda Czink, HUN
2012 Stanford - CoCo Vandeweghe, USA
2018 Moscow River Cup - Olga Danilovic, SRB (W)
2018 Elite Trophy [elim.in RR] - Wang Qiang, CHN
2019 LINZ - COCO GAUFF, USA (W)

*YOUNGEST WTA CHAMPIONS*
Tracy Austin: 14 years, 0 months, 28 days (1977 Portland)
Kathy Rinaldi: 14 years, 6 months, 24 days (1981 Kyoto)
Jennifer Capriati:14 years, 6 months, 29 days (1990 Puerto Rico)
Andrea Jaeger: 14 years, 7 months, 14 days (1980 Las Vegas)
Andrea Jaeger: 14 years, 363 days (1980 Beckenham)
[15-year olds]
1997 Mirjana Lucic, CRO (Bol)
1989 Monica Seles, YUG (Houston)
1990 Anke Huber, GER (Schenectady)
2004 Nicole Vaidišová, CZE (Vancouver)
2006 Tamira Paszek, AUT (Portorož)
2019 COCO GAUFF, USA (LINZ)

*2019 WTA SINGLES TITLES*
4 - Karolina Pliskova, CZE
3 - Bianca Andreescu, CAN
3 - Ash Barty, AUS
3 - Sofia Kenin, USA
3 - Naomi Osaka, JPN
2 - Kiki Bertens, NED
2 - Madison Keys, USA
2 - Petra Kvitova, CZE
2 - REBECCA PETERSON, SWE
2 - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR
2 - Jil Teichmann, SUI
2 - Alison Van Uytvanck, BEL
2 - Dayana Yastremska, UKR

*2019 WTA CHAMPIONS BY AGE*
30 - Goerges
29 - Kvitova,Sevastova
28 - Hercog,Kvitova,Martic,Riske
27 - Bertens (2),Ka.Pliskova (3),Halep,Linette
26 - Ka.Pliskova
25 - Garcia,Muguruza,Pegula,Van Uytvanck,Sai.Zheng
24 - Hibino,PETERSON (2),Putintseva,Van Uytvanck,Wang Yafan,Keys (2)
23 - Barty (2),Mertens,Muchova,Sakkari
22 - Barty,Ferro,Teichmann
21 - Bencic,Osaka (3),Sabalenka,Teichmann
20 - Kenin (3),Rybakina,Sabalenka
19 - Yastremska,Andreescu (2)
18 - Andreescu,Yastremska
17 - Anisimova
15 - GAUFF

*RECENT EARLY-CAREER BREAKOUTS*
2015: Nao Hibino wins Tashkent (2nd WTA MD, age 20)
2016: Rebeka Masarova to Gstaad SF (WTA MD debut, age 16)
2017: Jana Fett to Hobart SF (WTA MD debut, age 20)
2017: Marketa Vondrousova wins Biel (2nd WTA MD, age 17)
2017: Mihaela Buzarnescu to Linz SF (2nd WTA MD, age 29)
2018: Anastasia Potapova to Moscow River Cup F (3rd WTA MD, age 17)
2018: Tamara Zidansek to Moscow River Cup SF (3rd WTA MD, age 18)
2019: Bianca Andreescu to Auckland F (4th WTA MD, age 18)
2019: Iga Swiatek to Lugano F (3rd WTA MD, age 17)
2019: Astra Sharma to Bogota F (3rd WTA MD, age 23)
2019: Martina Di Giuseppe to Bucharest SF (1st WTA MD, age 28)
2019: Katarzyna Kawa to Jurmala Final (1st WTA MD, age 26)
2019: Liudmila Samsonova to Palermo SF (4th WTA MD, age 20)
2019: Coco Gauff wins Linz (5th WTA MD, age 15)
[slams]
2014: Genie Bouchard to Australian Open semis (4th career GS MD, age 19)
2014: Genie Bouchard to Wimbledon Final (6th career GS MD, age 20)
2017: Alona Ostapeno wins Roland Garros (8th career GS MD, age 20)
2018: Naomi Osaka wins U.S. Open (11th career GS MD, age 20)
2019: Danielle Collins to Australian Open SF (6th career GS MD, age 25)
2019: Amanda Anisimova to Roland Garros SF (4th career GS MD, age 17)
2019: Marketa Vondrousova to Roland Garros SF (9th career GS MD, age 20)
2019: Bianca Andreescu wins U.S. Open (4th career GS MD, age 19)

*2019 WTA TITLES - U.S.*
3 - Sonya Kenin (Hobart,Mallorca,Guangzhou)
2 - Madison Keys (Charleston,Cincinnati)
1 - Amanda Anisimova (Bogota)
1 - COCO GAUFF (LINZ)
1 - Jessica Pegula (Washington)
1 - Alison Riske ('s-Hertogenbosch)

*WHEELCHAIR TENNIS MASTERS CHAMPIONS*
[singles]
1994 Monique Kalkman, NED
1995 Monique Kalkman, NED
1996 Chantal Vandierendonck, NED
1997 Maaike Smit, NED
1998 Esther Vergeer, NED
1999 Esther Vergeer, NED
2000 Esther Vergeer, NED
2001 Esther Vergeer, NED
2002 Esther Vergeer, NED
2003 Esther Vergeer, NED
2004 Esther Vergeer, NED
2005 Esther Vergeer, NED
2006 Esther Vergeer, NED
2007 Esther Vergeer, NED
2008 Esther Vergeer, NED
2009 Esther Vergeer, NED
2010 Esther Vergeer, NED
2011 Esther Vergeer, NED
2012 Jiske Griffioen, NED
2013 Yui Kamiji, JPN
2014 Aniek van Koot, NED
2015 Jiske Griffioen, NED
2016 Jiske Griffioen, NED
2017 Diede de Groot, NED
2018 Diede de Groot, NED
2019
[doubles]
2000 Daniela di Toro/Maaike Smit (AUS/NED)
2001 Maaike Smit/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2002 Maaike Smit/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2003 Maaike Smit/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2004 Jiske Griffioen/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2005 Jiske Griffioen/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2006 Jiske Griffioen/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2007 Jiske Griffioen/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2008 Jiske Griffioen/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2009 Korie Homan/Esther Vergeer (NED/NED)
2010 Aniek van Koot/Sharon Walraven (NED/NED)
2011 Esther Vergeer/Sharon Walraven (NED/NED)
2012 Jiske Griffioen/Aniek van Koot (NED/NED)
2013 Yui Kamiji/Jordanne Whiley (JPN/GBR)
2014 Yui Kamiji/Jordanne Whiley (JPN/GBR)
2015 Jiske Griffioen/Aniek van Koot (NED/NED)
2016 Diede de Groot/Lucy Shuker (NED/GBR)
2017 Marjolein Buis/Diede de Groot (NED/NED)
2018 Marjolein Buis/Aniek Van Koot (NED/NED)
2019





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All for now.