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Steffi Graf

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Steffi Graf
File:Steffi.JPG
Country (sports)Germany (formerly West Germany)
ResidenceLas Vegas, Nevada
Height1.76 m (5 ft 9 in)
Turned pro1982
Retired1999
PlaysRight; One-handed backhand
Prize money$21,895,277 (1st in all-time rankings)
Singles
Career record902-115
Career titles107
Highest rankingNo. 1 (August 17, 1987)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenW (1988, 1989, 1990, 1994)
French OpenW (1987, 1988, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1999)
WimbledonW (1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996)
US OpenW (1988, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1996)
Doubles
Career record173-72
Career titles11
Highest rankingNo. 5 (November 21, 1988)
Last updated on: N/A.

Stefanie Maria Graf (born June 14, 1969, in Mannheim, West Germany) is a former World No. 1 ranked female tennis player from Germany. She is generally considered to be one of the greatest female tennis players of all time. Graf won 22 Grand Slam singles titles, more than any other player – male or female – has won since the start of the open era. (Margaret Court won the most (24) but only 11 of them were in the open era.)

In 1988, Graf became the only player, male or female, to win the "Golden Slam" – capturing all four Grand Slam singles titles and an Olympic gold medal in the same year. She was ranked the Women's Tennis Association's No. 1 player for a record 377 weeks – the longest of any player, male or female, since rankings began – and is the only player to have won all four Grand Slam singles tournaments (Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, the French Open and the Australian Open) at least four times each. Graf also holds the record (eight) for most years as year end number one.

A notable feature of Graf's game was her versatility across all playing surfaces, exemplified by her winning six French Open singles titles (second to Chris Evert) and seven Wimbledon singles titles (third behind Martina Navratilova and Helen Wills Moody). She is the only singles player, male or female, to have achieved a true Grand Slam across all three types of tennis courts, as the other five true singles Grand Slams occurred when the Australian and U.S. Opens were still played on grass. Graf reached thirteen consecutive Grand Slam singles finals, from the French Open in 1987 through the French Open in 1990, winning nine of them. She played in 36 Grand Slam singles tournaments from the 1987 French Open through the 1996 U.S. Open, reaching the finals 29 times and winning 21 titles. Her French Open title in 1999 left her with a career total of 22 Grand Slam singles titles

Graf retired in 1999, giving her the distinction of being the highest ranked player to retire.

Graf is married to the former World No. 1 men's tennis player Andre Agassi.

Playing style

The main weapon in Graf's game was her powerful forehand, which earned her the nickname "Fräulein Forehand". Over time, Graf also developed a very effective slice backhand, as well as a consistent volley. She built her powerful and accurate serve up to 180 km/h, and at one point, hers would be the fastest serve in the tournaments she would play. She was also very fast and athletic, chasing down balls that seemed unplayable. Her footwork was unique and instantly recognizable. Her powerful strokes, along with those of Monica Seles, are thought by some to have started the current trend of power baseline tennis that is common among women tennis players today.

Biography

Early career

Steffi was introduced to tennis by her father Peter Graf, a car and insurance salesman and aspiring tennis coach, who taught his three-year-old daughter how to swing a wooden racket in the family's living room. She began practicing on a court at the age of four and played in her first tournament at five. She soon began winning junior tournaments with regularity, and in 1982 she won the European Championships 12s and 18s.

Graf played in her first professional tournament in October 1982 at Stuttgart, Germany. She lost her first round match 6-4, 6-0 to Tracy Austin, a two-time U.S. Open champion and former World No. 1 player. Austin remarked of the then-thirteen year old Graf that "there are hundreds of girls like her in America." Twelve years later, Graf defeated Austin 6-0, 6-0 during a second round match in Indian Wells, California, which was their second and last match against each other.

At the start of her first full professional season in 1983, the 13-year-old Graf was ranked No. 124. She won no titles in the next three years, but her game improved consistently and her ranking steadily climbed: to No. 98 in 1983, No. 22 in 1984, and No. 6 in 1985. In 1984, she represented West Germany in the tennis demonstration event at the Olympic Games in Los Angeles and won the gold medal. Her schedule was closely controlled by her father, who limited her play so that she would not burn out as many young tennis stars had. In 1985, for instance, she played only 10 events leading up to the U.S. Open, whereas another up-and-coming star, Gabriela Sabatini of Argentina, who was a year younger than Graf, played 21. Peter Graf also kept a tight rein on Graf's personal life. Social invitations on the tour were often declined as Graf's focus was kept very much on practicing and match play. Working with her father and then-coach Pavel Slozil, Graf typically practiced for up to four hours a day, often heading straight from airports to practice courts. This narrow focus meant that Graf, already shy and retiring by nature, made few friends on the tour in her early years, but it led to a steady improvement in her play.

Graf finally won her first tour title in April 1986 at Hilton Head, South Carolina, defeating Chris Evert in the final. She followed this up with seven additional tournament victories in 1986 and finished the year ranked No. 3.

Breakthrough year

Graf's Grand Slam breakthrough came in 1987. She started the year strongly, with six tournament victories heading into the French Open. In the final, she defeated the World No. 1 Martina Navratilova in an epic battle, 6-4, 4-6, 8-6. Graf lost to Navratilova in the finals at Wimbledon and the US Open later that year. But she won four more tournaments after the French Open, including the season-ending Virginia Slims Championships at Madison Square Garden, and did enough to claim the World No. 1 ranking from Navratilova in August 1987, finishing the year with a 75-2 match record. She also helped West Germany win the Fed Cup that year.

Olympic medal record
Women's Tennis
Gold medal – first place 1988 Seoul Singles
Bronze medal – third place 1988 Seoul Doubles
Silver medal – second place 1992 Barcelona Singles

"Golden Slam"

1988 is widely considered to be the pinnacle of Graf's career. She started out the year by winning the Australian Open, beating Evert in straight sets (6-1, 7-6) in the final. Then at the French Open, she successfully defended her title by routing Natalia Zvereva 6-0, 6-0 in a 32-minute championship match. Next came Wimbledon, where Navratilova had won six straight titles. After a tight start to the final, Graf took control in the second set and beat Navratilova 5-7, 6-2, 6-1, taking 12 of the last 13 games. She then beat Sabatini in three sets in the US Open final to duplicate the feat of winning all four Grand Slam singles titles in one year, previously achieved by only two women – Maureen Connolly (in 1953) and Margaret Court (in 1970). With tennis becoming a full medal sport at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, Graf defeated Sabatini 6-3, 6-3 in the Olympic final to win the gold medal and achieve what the media had dubbed the "Golden Slam." Graf also won her only Grand Slam doubles title that year – at Wimbledon partnering Sabatini – and picked up a women's doubles Olympic bronze medal. She was named the 1988 BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year.

New challengers and personal challenges

Graf extended her Grand Slam winning streak to five events at the Australian Open in 1989, where she easily defeated Helena Sukova in the final. The winning streak ended at the 1989 French Open, where 17-year-old Spaniard Arantxa Sánchez Vicario beat Graf in three sets. Graf, however, defeated Martina Navratilova in three-set finals at both Wimbledon and the U.S. Open and in four sets in the final of the season-ending Virginia Slims Championships.

In 1990, most believed Graf would dominate the women's game for years to come when she beat Mary Joe Fernández in the final of the 1990 Australian Open, making it her eighth Grand Slam championship in the last nine she contested. Major personal issues arose, however, when Graf's father Peter was the subject of a fraudulent paternity suit brought by a former Playboy model. The difficulty of answering questions about the matter came to a head at a press conference early in the tournament at Wimbledon, where Graf broke down in tears. Wimbledon authorities then threatened to immediately shut down any subsequent press conferences where questions about the issue were asked. The blackmail scheme eventually failed when DNA tests proved Peter was not the baby's father. In the same year at the French Open, 16-year-old Monica Seles beat Graf in straight sets. At Wimbledon, Graf was unexpectedly beaten in the semifinals by Zina Garrison. She then reached the U.S. Open final, but lost in straight sets to Gabriela Sabatini. Graf remained the top ranked player at the end of 1990, even though she did not win a Grand Slam event after the blackmail scandal broke.

A mixture of injury problems, personal difficulties, and loss of form made 1991 a tough year for Graf. Seles established herself as the new dominant player on the women's tour, winning the Australian Open, French Open, and U.S. Open, and ending Graf's reign as World No. 1 in March. Seles did not play at Wimbledon, where Graf won her only Grand Slam final of the year.

Still struggling with injuries, in 1992 Graf won only one Grand Slam event, Wimbledon. Because of injuries, she did not compete at the Australian Open. Seles and Graf met in the French Open final, which Seles won in a very close battle, taking the third set 10-8. Seles and she met again in the Wimbledon final, with Graf winning 6-2, 6-1, a record for the most lop-sided defeat in Wimbledon history of the number one ranked player. Graf won all five of her Fed Cup matches, helping Germany defeat Spain in the final by defeating Sánchez Vicario 6-4, 6-2. At the Olympic Games in Barcelona, Graf lost to Jennifer Capriati in the final and claimed the silver medal. At the U.S. Open, Graf was upset in a quarterfinal by Sánchez Vicario 7-6(5), 6-3.

In 1993, Seles beat Graf in three sets in the final of the Australian Open. The burgeoning rivalry between them was then cut short. During a quarterfinal match between Seles and Magdalena Maleeva in Hamburg, Seles was stabbed between the shoulder blades by a mentally ill Günter Parche He claimed that he committed the attack to help Graf reclaim the number one ranking. Graf later visited Seles at the hospital. Almost two years elapsed before Seles competed again.

Some wonder whether Seles would have remained number one had she not been attacked. Conversely, some wonder whether Seles would have become the top ranked player if Graf not been plagued by the blackmail scandal and injuries from 1990 through 1992. Head-to-head, Graf never had a losing record versus Seles at any point in her career, and prior to the year the black mail scandal first broke, Graf was undefeated versus Seles in three encounters. Seles, however, won four of the seven matches they played from 1990 through 1993, including a 3-1 advantage over Graf in Grand Slam tournaments. Graf retired with a 10-5 lifetime record over Seles, including a 6-4 winning record versus Seles in Grand Slam singles tournaments.

Second period of dominance

Graf won three of four Grand Slam events in 1993, and in the beginning of 1994, Graf beat Arantxa Sánchez Vicario in the final of the Australian Open. For the second time in her career, Graf was the holder of all four Grand Slam titles simultaneously. She lost, however, to Mary Pierce in the semifinals of the French Open and then was surprisingly eliminated in the first round at Wimbledon by the American Lori McNeil. Graf reached the final of the U.S. Open, where she lost to Sánchez Vicario in three sets.

Injury kept Graf out of the Australian Open in 1995. She came back to beat Sánchez Vicario in the finals of both the French Open and Wimbledon. The U.S. Open was Seles' first Grand Slam event after the 1993 attack. Seles and Graf met in the final, with Graf winning 7-6, 0-6, 6-3. Graf then capped the year by beating countrywoman Anke Huber in a five-set final at the season-ending WTA Tour Championships.

In personal terms, 1995 was a difficult year for Graf as she was accused by German authorities of tax evasion in the early years of her career. In her defense, she stated that her father Peter was her financial manager, and all financial matters relating to her earnings at the time had been under his control. As a result, Peter was sentenced to 45 months in jail. He was eventually released after serving 25 months. Prosecutors dropped their case against Steffi in 1997, when she agreed to pay a fine of 1.3 million Deutsche Marks to the government and an unspecified charity.

In 1996, Graf again missed the Australian Open due to injury and then successfully defended the three Grand Slam titles she won the year before. In a close French Open final, Graf again overcame Sánchez Vicario, taking the third-set 10-8. Graf then had straight-sets wins against Sánchez Vicario in the Wimbledon final and Seles in the U.S. Open final. Graf also won her fifth and final WTA Tour Championships title with a five set win over Martina Hingis.

Final years on the tour

The last few years of Graf's career were beset by injuries, particularly to her knees and back. These injuries caused Graf to miss much of the tour in 1997. She lost the world No. 1 ranking to Martina Hingis and failed to win a Grand Slam title for the first time in ten years. After missing almost half the tour in 1998, she finished that year ranked ninth, her lowest ranking since 1984.

At the 1999 French Open, Graf reached her first Grand Slam final in three years and fought back from a set and two breaks down in the second set to defeat the top ranked Hingis in three sets. Graf also became the first player in the open era to defeat the first, second, and third ranked players in the same Grand Slam tournament by defeating second ranked Lindsay Davenport in the quarterfinals and third ranked Monica Seles in the semifinals.

Graf continued her success after the French Open when she reached her ninth Wimbledon singles final, where she lost in straight sets to Davenport.

Graf announced her retirement from the tour in August 1999. She was ranked third in the world at the time of her retirement.

During her career, Graf won 107 singles titles and 11 doubles titles. Her 22 Grand Slam singles titles are second only to Margaret Court, who won 24. Graf won 7 singles titles at Wimbledon, 6 singles titles at the French Open, 5 singles titles at the U.S. Open, and 4 singles titles at the Australian Open. She is the only person to have won at least four singles titles at each Grand Slam event. Her overall record in 56 Grand Slam events was 282-34 (89 percent) (87-10 at the French Open, 75-8 at Wimbledon, 73-10 at the US Open, and 47-6 at the Australian Open). Her career prize-money earnings totalled U.S. $21,895,277. Her singles win-loss record was 902-115 (89 percent). She was ranked No. 1 for 377 weeks (non-consecutive), including a record 186 consecutive weeks (from August 1987-March 1991) – longer than any other man or woman player.

Accolades

In an interview with ESPN Classic's SportsCentury series, Chris Evert said, "Steffi Graf's the best all-around player. Martina won more on fast courts and I won more on slow courts, but Steffi came along and won more titles on both surfaces." Evert also has said that Graf's forehand was "the best in women's tennis". Billie Jean King said in 1999 that she considered Graf to be the greatest female tennis player ever. Navratilova said in 1996, "Steffi is the best all-around player of all time, regardless of the surface.”

Personal life

With her father reining in her personal life until the Graf tax scandal in 1995, Graf often declined social invitations and made few friends on tour. Soon after retiring she made headlines off the court for dating Andre Agassi. They married in October 2001 with only their mothers as witnesses. Four days later Steffi gave birth, six weeks prematurely, to their son Jaden Gil (named for Andre's longtime trainer Gil Reyes). Their daughter, Jaz Elle, was born in October 2003.

Grand Slam singles finals

Wins (22)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
1987 French Open United States Martina Navratilova 6-4, 4-6, 8-6
1988 Australian Open United States Chris Evert 6-1, 7-6
1988 French Open (2) Soviet Union Natalia Zvereva 6-0, 6-0
1988 Wimbledon United States Martina Navratilova 5-7, 6-2, 6-1
1988 U.S. Open Argentina Gabriela Sabatini 6-3, 3-6, 6-1
1989 Australian Open (2) Czechoslovakia Helena Suková 6-4, 6-4
1989 Wimbledon (2) United States Martina Navratilova 6-2, 6-7, 6-1
1989 U.S. Open (2) United States Martina Navratilova 3-6, 7-5, 6-1
1990 Australian Open (3) United States Mary Joe Fernández 6-3, 6-4
1991 Wimbledon (3) Argentina Gabriela Sabatini 6-4, 3-6, 8-6
1992 Wimbledon (4) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Monica Seles 6-2, 6-1
1993 French Open (3) United States Mary Joe Fernández 4-6, 6-2, 6-4
1993 Wimbledon (5) Czechoslovakia Jana Novotná 7-6, 1-6, 6-4
1993 U.S. Open (3) Czechoslovakia Helena Suková 6-3, 6-3
1994 Australian Open (4) Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 6-0, 6-2
1995 French Open (4) Spain Arantxa Sánchez-Vicario 7-5, 4-6, 6-0
1995 Wimbledon (6) Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 4-6, 6-1, 7-5
1995 U.S. Open (4) United States Monica Seles 7-6, 0-6, 6-3
1996 French Open (5) Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 6-3, 6-7, 10-8
1996 Wimbledon (7) Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 6-3, 7-5
1996 U.S. Open (5) United States Monica Seles 7-5, 6-4
1999 French Open (6) Switzerland Martina Hingis 4-6, 7-5, 6-2

Runner-ups (9)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
1987 Wimbledon United States Martina Navratilova 7-5, 6-3
1987 U.S. Open United States Martina Navratilova 7-6, 6-1
1989 French Open Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 7-6, 3-6, 7-5
1990 French Open (2) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Monica Seles 7-6, 6-4
1990 U.S. Open (2) Argentina Gabriela Sabatini 6-2, 7-6
1992 French Open (3) Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Monica Seles 6-2, 3-6, 10-8
1993 Australian Open Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Monica Seles 4-6, 6-3, 6-2
1994 U.S. Open (3) Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 1-6, 7-6, 6-4
1999 Wimbledon (2) United States Lindsay Davenport 6-4, 7-5

Major tournament singles performance timeline

Tournament 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Career SR Career Win-Loss
Australian Open 1R 3R A NH A W W W QF A F W A A 4R A QF 4 / 10 47-6
French Open 2R 3R 4R QF W W F F SF F W SF W W QF A W 6 / 16 84-10
Wimbledon A 4R 4R A F W W SF W W W 1R W W A 3R F 7 / 14 74-7
U.S. Open A 1R SF SF F W W F SF QF W F W W A 4R A 5 / 14 75-9
Grand Slam SR 0 / 2 0 / 4 0 / 3 0 / 2 1 / 3 4 / 4 3 / 4 1 / 4 1 / 4 1 / 3 3 / 4 1 / 4 3 / 3 3 / 3 0 / 2 0 / 2 1 / 3 22 / 54 N/A
Grand Slam Win-Loss 1-2 7-4 11-3 9-2 19-2 28-0 27-1 24-3 21-3 17-2 27-1 18-3 21-0 21-0 7-2 5-2 17-2 N/A 280-32
WTA Tour Championships A A A F W SF W SF QF 4R W QF W W A SF A 5 / 12 31-7
Olympic Games NH W NH NH NH W NH NH NH F NH NH NH A NH NH NH 2 / 3 15-1

NH = tournament not held

A = did not participate in the tournament

SR = the ratio of the number of tournaments won to the number of those tournaments played

Tennis was a demonstration sport during the 1984 Olympic Games.

Awards

1986 "Most Improved Player" WTA TOUR
1987-90 "Player of the Year" WTA TOUR
1993-96 "Player of the Year" WTA TOUR
1996, 98-99 "Most Exciting Player of the Year" WTA TOUR
1987-90 "World Champion" ITF award.
1993, 95-96 "World Champion" ITF award
1988 "BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year"
1989 "Associated press female athlete of the year"
1999 "Prince of Asturias Award" one of the most important awards of Spain named after the apparent heir of Spain, Prince Felipe
1999 "Germany Television Award"
1999 "Athlete of the Century" for the category "female athlete in ballsports" by IOC panel
1999 "Female Athlete of the Year" by German TV broadcaster ARD
1999 "Female Sports Award of the last Decade" by ESPY, Las Vegas
1999 "Olympic Medal of Honor" granted by Dr. Antonio Samaranch, President of the IOC, Lausanne
2002 "Medal of Honor" decorated by the Prime Minister of Graf's home state Baden-Württemberg, Mr. Erwin Teufel

Steffi Graf was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2004.

Special honours

  • Steffi is the only female to be selected for Forbes Top-30 "Most recognizable and marketable athletes" list in 1995.
  • Selected for "European Heroes" in 2004 by TIME Magazine.
  • Voted "Germans greatest role model" by TV14 magazine.
  • Voted "Most admirable German woman" by Amica magazine.
  • Voted "Germany's Sportswoman of the Century" in 1999 by the German press.
  • Steffi is the only person to have won the 'Golden Slam' (1988)
  • Steffi is the first German to win the Spain's 'Prince of Asturias' award.

    Trivia

    At the 1992 Wimbledon champions banquet, she and husband-to-be Andre Agassi showed no interest in one another. However, in a 2006 Sports Illustrated piece, Agassi - who claimed he had been secretly pining for Graf as far back as 1990 - said that officials would not allow him to dance with her, which was a Wimbledon tradition.

    In the first season episode "The Crackpots and these Women" of The West Wing, President Bartlet brings in a ringer for a basketball game with the senior staff. Toby Ziegler mentions that it was like the time he and C.J. were playing doubles with him once and he brought in someone he claimed worked at the American Consulate who (despite his denial) was in fact Steffi Graf. Hugh Laurie sang a song about her on the show A Bit of Fry and Laurie.

    External links

    Preceded byMartina Navrátilová
    Monica Seles
    Monica Seles
    Monica Seles
    Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
    Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
    Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
    '
    '
    World No. 1
    August 17, 1987 - March 10, 1991
    August 5, 1991 - August 11, 1991
    August 19, 1991 - September 8, 1991
    June 7, 1993 - February 5, 1995
    February 20, 1995 - February 26, 1995
    April 10, 1995 - May 14, 1995
    June 12, 1995 - March 30, 1997
    inc. August 15, 1995 - November 3, 1996 (w/ Seles)
    inc. November 18, 1996 - November 24, 1996 (w/ Seles)
    Succeeded byMonica Seles
    Monica Seles
    Monica Seles
    Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
    Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
    Arantxa Sanchez Vicario
    Martina Hingis
    '
    '
    Preceded byMartina Navrátilová ITF World Champion
    1987-1990
    Succeeded byMonica Seles
    Preceded byMonica Seles ITF World Champion
    1993
    Succeeded byArantxa Sanchez Vicario
    Preceded byArantxa Sanchez Vicario ITF World Champion
    1995-1996
    Succeeded byMartina Hingis
    Preceded byHeike Drechsler United Press International
    Athlete of the Year

    1987
    Succeeded byFlorence Griffith-Joyner
    Preceded byFlorence Griffith-Joyner United Press International
    Athlete of the Year

    1989
    Succeeded byMerlene Ottey

    Template:Tennis hall of fame germany

    Women's Tennis Association (WTA) world No. 1 singles players

    United States Chris Evert (1975/1985 – 260 w)
    Australia Evonne Goolagong (1976 – 2 w)
    United States Martina Navratilova (1978/1987 – 331 w)
    United States Tracy Austin (1980 – 22 w)
    Germany Steffi Graf (1987/1997 – 377 w)
    Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia/Federal Republic of Yugoslavia/United States Monica Seles (1991/1996 – 178 w)
    Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario (1995 – 12 w)
    Switzerland Martina Hingis (1997/2001 – 209 w)
    United States Lindsay Davenport (1998/2006 – 98 w)
    United States Jennifer Capriati (2001/2002 – 17 w)
    United States Venus Williams (2002 – 11 w)
    United States Serena Williams (2002/2017 – 319 w)
    Belgium Kim Clijsters (2003/2011 – 20 w)
    Belgium Justine Henin (2003/2008 – 117 w)
    France Amélie Mauresmo (2004/2006 – 39 w)
    Russia Maria Sharapova (2005/2012 – 21 w)
    Serbia Ana Ivanovic (2008 – 12 w)
    Serbia Jelena Janković (2008/2009 – 18 w)
    Russia Dinara Safina (2009 – 26 w)
    Denmark Caroline Wozniacki (2010/2018 – 71 w)
    Belarus Victoria Azarenka (2012/2013 – 51 w)
    Germany Angelique Kerber (2016/2017 – 34 w)
    Czech Republic Karolína Plíšková (2017 – 8 w)
    Spain Garbiñe Muguruza (2017 – 4 w)
    Romania Simona Halep (2017/2019 – 64 w)
    Japan Naomi Osaka (2019 – 25 w)
    Australia Ashleigh Barty (2019/2022 – 121 w)
    Poland Iga Świątek (2022/2024 – 125 w)
    Aryna Sabalenka (2023/2024 – 9 w)

    • WTA rankings incepted on 3 November 1975
    • (year first held/year last held – number of weeks (w))
    • current No. 1 in bold, as of week of 20 October 2024
    Olympic tennis women's singles champions
    Demonstration
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    Australian Open women's singles champions
    Amateur Era
    Open Era
    French Open women's singles champions
    Amateur Era
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    Amateur Era
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    Open Era
    Wimbledon women's singles champions
    Amateur Era
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    US Open women's singles champions
    Amateur Era
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    Women's tennis players who won two or more Grand Slam singles titles in one calendar year
    Four wins
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    AO=Australian Open, FO=French Open, WI=Wimbledon, US=US Open
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