Sunday, March 10, 2013

Jelena Jankovic


Jelena Jankovic, Number One Without a Grand Slam

Personal Life

Jelena Jankovic was born February 28, 1985, in Belgrade, Serbia. She is one of the top female tennis players in the world and former world’s number one. She was introduced to tennis by her elder brother and fitness coach Marko at the age of 9. Her mother, Snezana, travels the world with her and is a big influence on her tennis career.
Jelena has a tremendous attitude to hard work and prove herself to be good at things she is deemed to be not talented. “If you told her she couldn’t do something, she would explode” says Chip Brooks, director of tennis at Bollettieri’s. One of her quotes is ‘I never surrender in my life, whether on or off the court …’
Despite her hard work determined attitude, she does not take herself too seriously. This is a good trait but it is not helpful if you want to dominate women’s tennis.

Professional Life

Jelena Jankovic won her first Junior National Championship at the age of 11. Following this success, she was sent to Florida where she entered Nick Bollettieri’s training academy.
As a junior she won the 2001 Australian Open becoming the junior world’s number one junior player.
In 2001 she started to play the WTA tour. She became a pro in 2002.
Jankovic has reached the singles final of the US Open (2008) and the singles semifinals of the Australian Open (2008) and the French Open (2007, 2008). In 2007, she won the Wimbledon mixed doubles title with British partner Jamie Murray.
She was ranked the world’s number one player for seventeen consecutive weeks until she was overtaken by Serena Williams on February 2, 2009. She was the year-end world’s number one in 2008, the first player in the history of the WTA tour to do this without winning a single Grand Slam title.
Jelena has downplayed her inability to win a single Grand Slam Tournament stating that there are a lot of players who have won Grand Slam Tournaments but only 6 women have finished the year as world’s number one. However, she can not be regarded as a great player if she is not able to win several Grand Slam Tournaments during her career.
Although Jelena has great ground strokes, she does not have a serve that can bail her out of tight spots. Her emotional outburst causes her to lose points. She is easily distracted on court. Also, she does not take defeat too seriously which is a good characteristic in terms of sportsmanship but may reduce her desire to go all out to win matches. We will have to wait and see if Jelena Jankovic is able to win some Grand Slam Tournaments during her career. 

Caroline Wozniacki


Caroline Wozniacki: Danish Tennis Star

Caroline Wozniacki is a Danish professional tennis player … Born 11 July 1990 … Has won 6 WTA tour events … Reached 2009 US Open finals … Only Dane to reach a Grand Slam singles final … Currently ranked No. 4 … Youngest player in the top 10.

Personal Life

Began playing tennis at age 7 ... Was introduced to sports at a very young age through her family … Father played pro soccer in Poland and Denmark … Mother, Anna, played volleyball for Polish National Team … Brother, Patrik, plays pro soccer in Denmark ... Enjoys soccer, swimming, watching golf ... Hobbies include reading (especially Harry Potter books), shopping, listening to music … Favorite actor is Johnny Depp ... Admires Martina Hingis, Steffi Graf ... Favorite food is steak and potatoes … Coached by father, Piotr; also coached by Morten Christensen at National Tennis Center in Denmark.

Career Highlights

2005 Made pro debut eight days after 15th birthday.
2007 First Top 100 finish after first full season on the Tour … Made debuts at three Grand Slams, falling 1r at Roland Garros (l. to Dechy) but reaching 2r at Wimbledon (l. to Santangelo) and US Open (l. to Cornet).
2008 Breakthrough season … Highlighted by first three Tour singles titles at Stockholm (d. Dushevina), New Haven (d. Chakvetadze) and Tokyo [Japan Open] (d. Kanep) … First Danish woman ever to win a Tour singles title … Reached 4r four times, at Australian Open (l. to Ivanovic), Indian Wells (l. to Kuznetsova), Miami (l. to V.Williams) and US Open (l. to Jankovic) … 3r finishes at Roland Garros (l. to Ivanovic) and Wimbledon (l. to Jankovic) … Went from outside Top 50 to inside Top 20 during season reaching No. 12 in year-end ranking … Won first Tour doubles title at Beijing (w/Medina Garrigues).
2009 Breakthrough season culminating in first Top 10 finish (at No.4) … Won three Tour singles titles at Ponte Vedra Beach (d. Vesnina), Eastbourne (d. Razzano) and New Haven (d. Vesnina) … Reached first Grand Slam final at US Open … Became first Dane, male or female, to reach a Grand Slam singles final in Open Era … Qualified for first Tour Championships and reached SF (ret. vs. S.Williams) … Caroline Wozniacki won her second Tour doubles title at Memphis (w/Azarenka).

Venus Williams


Venus Williams – First African American Number One

Venus Williams (born June 17, 1980) is a former No. 1 American professional tennis player. She has won 20 Grand Slam titles: seven in women's singles (5 Wimbledon, 2 US Open), eleven in women's doubles (4 Australian Open, 1 French Open, 4 Wimbledon, 2 US Open) and two in mixed doubles (Australian Open and French Open). Venus Williams has also won 3 Olympic Gold Medals (1 Singles and 2 Doubles).

Personal Life

Coached by father Richard Williams and mother Oracene Price ... Sisters are Serena, Isha (lawyer, singer), Lyndrea (actress, singer, stylist, computer science major) and Yetunde (deceased September 14, 2003) … Venus Williams is a Jehovah's Witness, along with sisters and mother ... Launched clothing line EleVen by Venus Williams, the largest line ever launched by a female athlete … Has appeared in Oprah, CNN, CBS Late Night Show, ABC Family reality show starring herself and sister Serena, titled "Venus and Serena: For Real" … Has co-written two books with Serena, titled "How to Play Tennis" (2004) and "Serving From the Hip: 10 Rules for Living, Loving and Winning" (2005) … Reebok endorsement contract is largest ever awarded to a female athlete. …After tennis, would like to continue her careers in interior design and fashion design, and would also like to take up choreography and music production.
Has been a member of the WTA Player Council which advises the Board of Directors, for 10 years .. Is a founding ambassador for the WTA-UNESCO Gender Equality Program, which addresses worldwide gender issues … Glamour® Magazine’s "Woman of the Year" in 2005 … Four-time ESPY® winner; 3 Best Female Tennis player (’01, ’02 & ’06) and 1 Best Female Athlete (’02).

Professional Life

Accumulated a 63-0 record in USTA sectional play in Southern California by age 12.
1994 Made pro debut at 14. Beat world #50 in the first match; then lost to world No.2 Sánchez-Vicario 2-6 6-3 6-0, having led 6-2 3-1.
1997 Breakthrough season … Grand Slam debuts at Roland Garros (l. 2r) and Wimbledon (l. 1r) … reached first Grand Slam final at US Open (l to Hingis) … final between V.Williams (17) and Hingis (16) was youngest major final in Open Era … Broke into top 50 in the world for the first time finishing the year at 22.
1998 Went from outside top 20 at the start to end the year at No. 5 … Won first three tour singles titles … QF at Australian Open (l. to Davenport), Roland Garros (l. to Hingis), Wimbledon (l. to Novotna) and SF at US Open (l. to Davenport) … Served up 127mph ace vs. Pierce in Zürich (would be the fastest serve on Tour for nearly 10 years) … Won first two doubles titles, both with sister Serena … Won first two major titles in mixed doubles, at Australian Open and Roland Garros (both w/Gimelstob); S.Williams would win Wimbledon and US Open (both w/Mirnyi), completing a family mixed doubles Grand Slam.
1999 Won 6 singles titles … QF at Australian Open (l. to Davenport) and Wimbledon (l. to Graf) and SF at US Open (l. to Hingis) … Played first Tour Championships, reaching SF (l. to Hingis) … Finished the year as No. 3.
2000 Venus Williams missed the first four months with tendonitis in both wrists … QF at Roland Garros (l. to Sánchez-Vicario). Then went on a 35-match winning streak that included winning Wimbledon (d. Davenport), US Open (d. Davenport), and Olympics (d. Dementieva). Streak remains longest of the millennium … Won doubles titles at Wimbledon and Olympics (both w/S.Williams) … Year end No. 3.
2001 Defended titles at Wimbledon (d. Henin in final) and US Open (d. S.Williams) … Was first time sisters played for a Grand Slam title since the Watson sisters played in the 1884 Wimbledon final … Reached SF at Australian Open (l. to Hingis) … Won four other titles … Won Australian Open doubles title (w/S.Williams; completed a career doubles Grand Slam, one of five teams to do so) … Year end No. 3 again.

2002 Finished the year at No. 2 although held the No. 1 position several times during the year … Won 7 non-grand slam titles … Runner up at Roland Garros, Wimbledon and US Open (l. to S.Williams in all three finals); Roland Garros and US Open finals were first all-sister finals at those events, and Wimbledon final was first since Watson sisters played for first title there in 1884) … Became first African American to attain No.1 ranking, and on June 10 were first ever siblings to rank Top 2 at same time (V.Williams No.1, S.Williams No.2) … won Wimbledon doubles title (w/S.Williams).

2003 Injury-plagued season resulting in first non-Top 10 finish since 1997 … Won only 1 title which was at Antwerp (d. Clijsters) … Runner up at 2 Grand Slams Australian Open (l. to S.Williams in their fourth straight Grand Slam final) and Wimbledon (l. to S.Williams) … won Australian Open doubles title (w/S.Williams).

2004 Strong return from injury-plagued 2003, finishing in Top 10 at No.9 … Won 2 non Grand Slam events.

2005 Another Top 10 finish (at No.10) in season highlighted by sensational run to fifth career Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon (d. Davenport in epic 2hr 45min final, longest women's final there in history) … Won one more non Grand Slam title … Struggled from injury and illness during season.

2006 Lowest finish at No 48 in 10 years after injury-marred season.

2007 Sensational comeback highlighted by Wimbledon (d. Bartoli) title and return to Top 10 (finished No. 8) … Won 2 other non Grand Slam titles … Served two 128mph serves during season (once at Roland Garros, once at US Open), bettering her own Tour record of 127mph (1998).

2008 Finished at No 6 … Won Wimbledon (d. S.Williams) and first Tour Championships (d. Zvonareva in final) … Also won Zürich … Won two Tour doubles titles (both w/S.Williams) at Wimbledon (d. Raymond/Stosur) and Olympics (d. Medina Garrigues/Ruano Pascual).

2009 Finished at No. 6 … Won Dubai and Acapulco … Runner-up at Wimbledon (l. S.Williams), Stanford, and Tour Championships (d. S.Williams in final) … Venus Williams won four of six events entered in doubles (w/S.Williams), at Australian Open, Wimbledon, Stanford and US Open (three Grand Slam doubles titles brought career tally to 10, all w/S.Williams).

2010 Venus Williams won the Australian Open doubles title (w/S.Williams; now 11-0 in Grand Slam doubles finals w/S.Williams).

Justine Henin


Justine Henin: Using Aggressive All Court Play For Outstanding Results

Introduction

Justine Henin is a professional Belgian tennis player who has had phenomenal success on the tennis court.

Personal Life

Justine Henin was born June 1, 1982 in Liège, Belgium to José Henin (father) and Françoise Rosière (mother). She has two brothers (David and Thomas) and a sister (Sarah).
Justine started to play tennis when she was 2 years old when the family moved to a house next to a tennis club. As a kid she was a very good soccer player and a brilliant student.
In 1995 when Justine was 12 years old her mother died. Shortly after her death Justine met her coach Carlos Rodriguez who has guided her tennis career ever since. After a conflict with her father regarding her tennis career and her relationships with Pierre-Yves Hardenne, Carols has been a second father figure to Justine.
Justine met Pierre-Yves Hardenne in 1999. They got married in November 2002. After the marriage Justine changed her name to Justine Henin Hardenne. Eventually the couple got divorced and Justine has changed her name back to Justine Henin.
In 2007 Justine opened two tennis camps to help kids learn the sport.

Playing Style

Justine plays mostly from the baseline. She can hit powerful, consistent, topspin forehands and backhands. Her single handed back hand, which is rare in professional tennis these days, is considered to be one of the best in the sport. She can hit top spin, slice and flat back hands with pace and accuracy. However, her forehand is considered to be even more of a weapon. Justine has a compact swing on her forehand, but can generate spin, power and placement on her forehand consistently.
Although Justine is known for her attacking tennis she is also a good defensive player when required. Her foot work and court coverage is phenomenal. She can rundown and return difficult balls in defense, and attack as soon as she gets an opening.
Justine is a complete tennis player. In addition to having great ground strokes, she also has a good powerful serve and good to exceptional volleys. Henin started to serve and volley more towards the latter part of her career.

Tennis Career

Justine Henin’s accomplishments as a professional tennis player are very impressive. She has:
  • Won 7 Grand Slam Singles Titles
    • 4 French Open Titles (2003, 2005-7)
    • 2 US Open Titles (2003, 2007)
    • 1 Australian Open Title in 2004
  • Won the Summer Olympic Gold in Singles at the 2004 Games in Athens.
  • Won the Year-End WTA Tour Championships in 2006, 2007.
  • Won 8 WTA Tier 1 Tournaments.
  • Finished the year as the World’s Number 1 Women’s Singles Player in 2003, 2006 and 2007.
  • As a junior Justine won the junior Girls Singles title at the 1997 French Open.

  • She began her professional career with a wild card entry to the Belgian Open in the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) tour in May 1999 and became only the fifth player to win her debut WTA Tour event.

    2003 was Justine’s year in Women’s tennis. She won her first Singles Grand Slam at the French Open defeating Kim Clijsters in the finals. This was Belgium’s first Grand Slam win. Later that year she won her second Singles Grand Slam Tournament at the US Open and became the World Number 2 player behind her compatriot Kim Clijsters. The Belgians were dominating Women’s tennis at this stage. Henin won five other tournaments that year. She finished the year as the World Number 1 player for the first time.

    Justine had a good start to 2004 wining the Australian Open. But at the start of the 2004 spring clay court season her health was badly affected by a virus (cytomegalovirus) and an immune system problem. She often slept up to 18hrs a day. She decided to defend her French Open title but lost in the second round to a much lower ranked player. After months of layoffs Justine returned to competition in August to win the Summer Olympic Gold Medal for Women’s Singles in Athens, Greece, defeating Amélie Mauresmo of France in the final. This was the only Belgian Gold Medal at Athens. Henin considers this victory to be her most beautiful victory in her career.

    In 2005, the Tennis Magazine placed Justine in 31st place on its list of the 40 Greatest Players for the period 1965 through 2005. In November 2005, at the WTA Tour Championships, she was named the inaugural winner of the Whirlpool Sixth Sense Player of the Year, which honors the player who has demonstrated the most sixth sense intuition which means "heightened intelligence, unbeatable performance and pinpoint precision".

    In 2006, at the Australian Open final against the Amélie Mauresmo, Henin retired after trailing 6–1, 2–0, citing intense stomach pain caused by over-use of anti-inflammatories for a persistent shoulder injury. She was criticized by the press as she stated that she was in "peak of her fitness" and playing the "best tennis of her life" after her semifinal win over Maria Sharapova. This was only the fourth Grand Slam women's singles final to end by retirement since 1900 and the first in the open era.

    At the 2007 Wimbledon Semifinals, Henin lost to Marion Bartoli 1–6, 7–5, 6–1. Henin won the first set and was up a break in the second set at 1-0 and 4-3 but could not hold her lead. This match is described as one of the biggest upsets in Wimbledon history. In the year end WTA Tour Championships Henin beat Maria Sharapova in a three set match that lasted 3 hours, 24 minutes. This is the longest match in this tournament and Henin’s longest match. It is the 12th longest women’s match ever. In 2007 Justine also became the first Woman to pass the US$5 Million a year barrier in prize money. By crossing US$19 Million in overall price money, she is ranked 5th in the all time price money list.

    In the start of 2008 Justine Henin withdrew from several tournaments due to injury and fatigue. She also lost easily to several opponents.


    Retirement And Return



    On 14 May 2008 Justine announced her immediate retirement form professed tennis. This came as a surprise as she was still the World Number 1 and the favorite to win the French Open Championships she won the previous year.

    On 22 September 2009 Henin officially announced that she is returning to competitive tennis. Her intention is to play competitively till the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

    Justine Henin had a great run at the 2010 Australian Open – her first Grand Slam tournament after returning from retirement. She reached the finals losing to World #1 Serena Williams 6-4 3-6 6-2.

Anna Kournikova


Anna Kournikova: 

One of The Most Popular Tennis Players Ever

Introduction

Anna Kournikova is probably a name you came across if you have followed tennis or sports in general in the recent past. She was one of the most popular professional tennis players. At the peak of her fame her name was one of the most searched strings on Google. Her global fame was more because of her beauty and modeling than her performance on the tennis court. ESPN citing the degree of hype as compared to actual accomplishments as a singles player ranked beautiful Anna Kournikova as the 18th in its “25 Biggest Sports Flops of the Past 25 Years”.
Anna has had success in singles defeating many of the top players in the world including Lindsay Davenport, Steffi Graff, Monica Seles, Jennifer Capriati, Arantxa Sanchez and Martina Hingis. She reached a career best ranking as Worlds Number 8 in 2000.
However, Anna’s specialty has been doubles. She has at times been ranked Worlds Number 1 in doubles with Martina Hingis. She has won two Grand Slam doubles titles at the 1999 and 2002 Australian Open partnering Hingis.
Anna’s tennis career was curtailed and ended suddenly in 2003 by serious back and spinal problems.

Personal Life

Anna was born in Moscow, Soviet Russia, on 7 June 1981 to very young parents. Father Sergei was 20 and mother Alla was 18. Sergei says "We were young and we liked the clean, physical life, so Anna was in a good environment for sport from the beginning."
Anna now resides in Miami Beach, Florida
There have been conflicting rumors about Kournikova's marital status. She has consistently refused to confirm or deny the status of her personal relationships.

Fashion Model

A lot of Anna’s fame is from her beauty and modeling. She has appeared scantily clad in several Men’s Magazines including the 2004 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue. She was among the People Magazine’s 50 Most Beautiful People in 1998, 2000, 2002 and 2003.
Since 2006 Anna has served as one of K-Swiss' global ambassadors helping to design tennis and casual apparel for the international brand.

Life As A Tennis Pro



Anna Kournikova signed a management deal at age 10 and went to Bradenton, Florida, USA, to train at the famed Nick Bolletierri’s tennis academy.

Kournikova had a great junior career. In 1995 at age 14 she accomplished a lot. She was the youngest player ever to win the under 18 division of the prestigious Junior Orange Bowl tournament. She also won the European Championships and the Italian Open Junior tournament. Anna was crowned the ITF Junior World Champion U-18.

Anna turned pro in 1995 at the very young age of 14. She became the youngest player ever to win a Fed Cup match at 14 when she played for Russia.

In 1997 Anna reached the semi-finals of Wimbledon. She was the 2nd woman in the Open Era, next to Chris Evert, to reach the Wimbledon Semi's in her career debut.

In 1998 Anna broke into the world's top 20 for the first time at #16. At The Lipton Championships in Key Biscayne, Florida, Anna defeated four consecutive top 10 players in a four day period during a single tournament, an unprecedented achievement that no other female tennis player has accomplished to date. Later that year, broke into the top 10 for the first time in her career. Anna finished 1998 as World’s Number 13 in singles and 10 in doubles.

Although Anna had some success in the next few years in singles, she accomplished more in doubles as her game is more suitable for doubles. She is known for her foot speed, aggressive but risky relatively flat ground strokes, excellent angles, drop shots, good net play and sometimes unreliable serve. She won two doubles Grand Slam tiles in 1999 and 2002at the Australian Open partnering Martina Hingis.

Kournikova has not played on the WTA Tour since 2003. She now participates in World Team Tennis matches and tennis exhibitions to support various charitable organizations.


Philanthropy



Anna Kournikova is involved in several philanthropic activities. She works with the Boys & Girls Club of America. In partnership with the Cartoon Network, she helped launch the Get Animated campaign which encourages kids and their parents to "get up and get moving!" She is also involved in her philanthropic work with PSI, a U.S. based NGO focusing on children's health in under developed countries. Anna Kournikova is an active participant in the USO, visiting troops and their schools on military bases around the world.

Serena Williams


Serena Williams: One Of The Best in Tennis for Singles And Doubles

Introduction

Serena Williams is one of the best women tennis players in the world. You may know that she is from the USA. The 2005 Tennis Magazine ranked her as the 17th best player in 40 years.
Serena Williams has had an outstanding career on the tennis court despite having to overcome several obstacles such as growing up in a tough neighborhood, the death of her older sister by shooting, and injuries. She has won 22 Grand Slam titles including 11 singles, 9 doubles and 2 mixed doubles. She has won all four Major Grand Slam titles in both singles and doubles. This is a significant achievement. She has also won 2 Olympic Gold Medals in women’s doubles. Serena Williams has been ranked the World Number 1 on five separate occasions as of July 2009.
Serena’s achievements on the court have been well compensated. She has won more career prize money than any other female athlete in history!

Personal Life

Serena was born on September 26th, 1981, in Saginaw, Michigan, to Richard Williams and Oracene Price. She is one of 5 sisters. Her elder sister Venus is also a former World’s Number 1 Women’s professional tennis player.
Serena’s off the court passions include acting and fashion.
Her latest TV credit is the reality show titled “Venus and Serena For Real” where cameras follow Serena and Venus on and off the court. She has also appeared in TV shows such as “ER”, “My Wife and Kids”, “Street Time” and “The Division”. Her voice was used in “The Simpsons” and Disney’s “Higglytown Heroes”.
In fashion she was among the 10 individuals named “Fashion Trendsetters” by Vogue Magazine on a VH1/Vogue Television Special. She has founded her own clothing label named Aneres which has been featured in In Style Magazine.
Serena recently published her autobiography ‘On The Line’.

Professional Life

1995–2001: Early success

Serena Williams started playing professional tennis in September 1995. She was only 14years old. After a few years she entered the top ten world ranking for the first time in 1999 when she won several tournaments including her first Grand Slam victory at the US Open at age 17.

2002–03: "Serena Slam"

In 2002 Serena won the Italian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and U.S. Open. She became the World Number 1 for the first time in July 2002. She was named Associated Press “Female Athlete of the Year”.
In 2003 Serena won the Australian Open (singles & doubles), NASDAQ Open, French Indoors and Wimbledon. She became only the fifth woman in history to hold all four Grand Slam titles simultaneously. Sadly, her dominance of the women’s sport came to an abrupt end in mid 2003 when she had to undergo surgery to repair a partial tear in a knee tendon.

2004–06: Injuries and inconsistent results

Serena Williams started playing again in 2004. Her results in 2004 were not consistent. In the beginning of 2005 she won the Australian Open, her first Grand Slam title in 18 months. In the two years that followed Serena was only able to compete in 13 events due to injuries. Her world ranking suffered as a result and she went as low as 140 in July 2006.

2007–08: Return to form

Serena returned back to form in early 2007 winning the Australian Open despite being ranked World Number 81. She also won the Sony Ericsson Open in 2007 and returned to the top 10 by the end of the year. In 2008 Serena won the US Open. Her win at the US Open made her World No 1, but she lost this ranking after 4 weeks when she lost in her first post US Open match.

2009 – World Number 1 Again

2009 was a great year for Serena. She won the Australian Open. This victory made her the World Number 1 again and also the highest earner in the history of Women’s sports. Serena also partnered with Venus to win the doubles title at this event. At the start of the clay court season Serena had a four match losing streak which is the longest in her career. This losing streak meant that she lost her World Number 1 ranking to Safina.
She came back at Wimbledon winning the Singles and Doubles titles with Venus.
At the US Open Serene lost in the semifinals to eventual champion Kim Clijsters in a controversial match. Trailing 6-4, 6-5 (15-30) Serena’s second serve was called foot fault giving Kim match point. Serena lost her temper and was abusive to the woman line judge. The referee decided to penalize a point for this outburst and a previous racket abuse violation awarding Kim victory. The Grand Slam committee eventually decided to fine her $175,000 and put her on a 2 year probation so that if she commits another violation during the next two seasons at any of the Grand Slam events she will be banned from the next US Open. Despite this controversy Serena partnered with Venus to win the Women’s doubles at the US Open.
Serena won the WTA Season Ending Championship for the second time.
She finished the year as the World Number 1 for the second time in the career. She also beat Justine Henin’s record for the most money won during a season by a Women’s tennis player. Serena earned $6,545,586 during the year.
Serena was named the Female Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press for 2009 and ITF World Champion in Singles and Doubles.

2010 The Success Continues

Serena won the Australian Open defeating Justine Henin in the final. This win gave her at least one Grand Slam title in 3 decades (1990s, 2000s and 2010s) a record matched only by Martina Navratilova among women and Ken Rosewall among men. With her 5th Australian Open victory Serena has won more Australian Open Women’s Singles titles than any other player. She also won the doubles title with Venus.

Rivalry With Sister

Serena Williams and her sister Venus Williams have an unique place in Women’s Tennis because the two sisters became two of the top players in the world during the same period.
They have played each other in 21 professional matches going back to 1998. Serena has won 11 of these. Their meeting at finals of the 2001 US Open was the first Grand Slam Final contested by two sisters in the Open Era. Between the 2002 French Open and the 2003 Australian Open, the sisters met in all four Grand Slam finals. This was the first time in Open Era that the same two players had contested four consecutive Grand Slam finals.

Roger Federer


Roger Federer: 

One Of The Most Successful Tennis Careers Ever?

Roger Federer is arguably the greatest tennis player of all times. He is from Switzerland. Federer was born on August 8, 1981.
Federer’s parents are Swiss national Robert Federer and South Africa-born Lynette Durand. He was raised a Catholic. Federer is married to Miroslava "Mirka" Vavrinec. Mirka is a former Women's Tennis Association player. They married in Basel on 11 April 2009. On 23 July 2009, Mirka gave birth to twin girls, Myla Rose and Charlene Riva.
Federer is an all court player. He has text book strokes and is pleasing to watch. He has a very powerful forehand referred to by John McEnroe as "the greatest shot in our sport".
Federer holds many records in the Men’s singles game. He has won 16 Grand Slam titles which is more than any other male tennis player. Federer stands alone as the only player to appear in 23 Grand Slam semi-finals in a row as of January, 2010. He is only one of 6 players to win all four Grand Slam Tournaments during his career.
Federer’s rivalry with Rafael Nadal is considered by many critics to be the greatest in tennis history. They are the only men in open era to play each other in 7 Grand Slam finals. Their 2008 Wimbledon Finals is considered to be the greatest match of all times. 

Rafael Nadal


Rafael Nadal: Fierce Determination and Consistency From The Baseline

Rafael Nadal is known as the King of Clay because of his high tops spin consistent back court play and record breaking success on clay courts.
Nadal was born in June 3, 1986 to Manacor, Majorca, Spain. His uncle Toni Nadal introduced Nadal to tennis when he was 3 and has been coaching him ever since. By the age of 16, Nadal was ranked in the world's top 50 players.
Nadal won his first Grand Slam at the 2005 French Open. This was his first attempt at the French Open. He won the French Open for the next four years in a row. In 2008 Nadal won his first Wimbledon beating the defending champing Roger Federe in the final. This final is considered by many to be the greatest tennis match every played. In August 18, 2008, Nadal became the world’s number one player. He won his first Australian Open in 2009. Nadal has yet to win the US Open.
Nadal plays most of this tennis from behind the baseline. He uses heavy topspin on his shots. He is very consistent and covers the court very well. Nadal is also very athletic and can play winning shots from very difficult defensive positions. He is comfortable at the net to follow short balls to the net and finish points form there. One of the key facts that enables Nadal to win tennis matches is his mental toughness and determination to win.
Nadal has several records on clay courts. He has the longest winning streak on clay (which is also the longest wining streak in any surface) at 81 matches (2005-May 21, 2007). He has won the most clay court titles in a single year at 8 in 2005. Rafael Nadal is also the only male player to have won Wimbledon, French Open and Olympic Gold in the same year (2008). 

Juan Martín Del Potro


Juan Martín Del Potro was born 23 September 1988 … In April 2009 reached a career-high ranking of No. 5 … In 2008 became the first player in ATP history to win his first four career titles in as many tournaments … Captured his maiden Grand Slam title at the 2009 US Open defeating Roger Federer in the final … Runner-up at the 2009 ATP World Tour Finals.

Personal

Nicknames are Enano, Palito and Delpo... Juan Martín del Potro began playing at age seven … Father, Daniel, played semi-pro rugby in Argentina, and works as a veterinarian, and mother, Patricia, is a teacher...Has one younger sister, Julieta...Childhood idol was Pete Sampras and admires Marat Safin...Speaks Spanish and some Italian and English.
Favorite surface is hard court... Says if he wasn't a tennis player, he would look to pursue a career in architecture... After winning his first ATP title in Stuttgart in July 2008, gave his CLK Mercedes-Benz to his sister, Julieta.... Coached by former ATP pro Franco Davin (since March 2008).

Career Highlights

2005 Finished as youngest player in year-end Top 200...Raised his ranking by over 900 positions...
2006 Youngest player to finish in Top 100 during the year at 18 years, 2 months... Made ATP debut in Vina del Mar and reached 2nd RD … Qualified in his Grand Slam debut at Roland Garros, falling in 1st RD to former champion Ferrero in four sets...
2007 Finished as youngest player in Top 50 at 19 years, 2 months … In October at ATP Masters Series in Madrid, defeated No. 9 Robredo for first Top 10 win en route to 3rd RD (l. to eventual champ Nalbandian)
2008 The youngest player in the year-end Top 10 … Won four titles in five finals...Finished as top Argentine and South American for first time... Won first ATP title in Stuttgart (d. Gasquet) … Helped his country to its third Davis Cup final (1981, 2006) by defeating Russia's No. 5 Davydenko and then Andreev in decisive fifth rubber... In debut at Tennis Masters Cup went 1-2 in round robin play...
2009 Was the youngest player in year-end Top 10, finishing a personal-best No. 5… The top South American on ATP World Tour. Captured three titles and reached his first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 final in Canada.
At US Open he captured the title with back-to-back wins over No. 3 Nadal in SF and No. 1 Federer in final in five sets (rallying from 1-2 set deficit)…Became first player to beat Nadal and Federer in a Grand Slam tournament and first Argentinean to capture US Open since Vilas in 1977… Reached final at Barclays ATP World Tour Finals in London by posting round-robin wins over Verdasco and Federer, Soderling in SF before falling to Davydenko in final… Juan Martín del Potro earned a career-high $4,753,087. 

Andre Agassi


The Andre Agassi Biography: A Compelling Story of Change, Talent and Humanity

Introduction

This Andre Agassi Biography is of the former world number one professional tennis player Andre Agassi from America.
Agassi is only one of three males players to win all four Grand Slam Tournaments to achieve a Career Grand Slam since the beginning of the Open Era. The other two are Roger Federer and Rod Laver. The Andre Agassi Biography includes eight Grand Slam Singles Tournaments in total (4 Australian Open, 1 French Open, 1 Wimbledon, 2 US Open). In addition to winning all four Grand Slam Tournaments Agassi also won the Olympic Gold Medal for singles giving him a Career Golden Slam. He is the only male player to achieve this unique feat.
The Andre Agassi Biography is one of an enormously talented striker of the tennis ball who starts out as a ‘rebel’ but goes on to become one of the most humble and admired role models of the sport committed to charitable work.

Personal Life

The Andre Agassi Biography begins with his birth on April 29, 1970, in Las Vegas, Nevada, to Emmanuel ‘Mike’ Agassi and Elizabeth ‘Betty’ Agassi. His father is an Iranian who represented Iran in boxing at the 1948 and 1952 Olympic Games before migrating to the US.
Andre dated famed American singer Barbra Streisand in the early 1990s.
He got married to Brooke Shields on April 19, 1997. Andre later filed for divorce which was granted on April 9, 1999.
At the 1999 French Open Tournament Andre Agassi won the Men’s Singles Championship and Steffi Graf won the Women’s Single’s Championship and they danced together at the traditional Champions’ Dance. After the event they began dating. They got married on October 22, 2001. The couple has a son, Jaden Gil (born October 26, 2001), and a daughter, Jaz Elle (born October 3, 2003). They live in the Las Vegas area and own several vacation homes.

Career Highlights



Agassi turned pro at age 16 in 1986. He ended his first year ranked 91 in the World.

In the Andre Agassi Biography we note that as a young player Agassi embraced a rebel image. He grew his hair to his waist, wore an earring and colorful shirts. He chose not to play the Australian Open for the first eight years of his career although this Grand Slam eventually became his best Grand Slam event. Agassi also did not play Wimbledon from 1988 to 1990 stating that he did not wish to participate because of the ‘predominantly white’ dress that players had to wear.

In 1990, Agassi helped the United States win the Davis Cup and won his only ATP Tour World Championship.

Agassi won his first Grand Slam at the 1992 Wimbledon Tournament. He beat Goran Ivanisevic in a five set final. He also helped the US win the Davis Cup Tournament.

In 1994 Agassi had a new coach, Brad Gilbert. Andre started to employ a more tactical consistent approach to his game which fueled his comeback from a poor year in 1993. He became the first man to win the US Open as an unseeded player beating Michael Stich in the final.

Agassi shaved his balding head in 1995 breaking his ‘image is everything’ style. He played the Australian Open for the first time and won it beating Pete Sampras in the final. Agassi won three Masters Series events (Cincinnati, Key Biscayne, and the Canadian Open). He reached World Number 1 ranking for the first time in April 1995. He held the number 1 rank for 30 weeks. Andre was part of the US Davis Cup wining team for the third time.

Andre won the Men’s Singles Gold Medal at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta beating Sergi Bruguera of Spain in the final. He also defended his titles in Cincinnati and Key Biscayne Masters Series events.

1997 was a low point in Agassi’s career. He won no top-level title and his ranking went down to 141 in the World on November 10, 1997.

In 1998, Agassi re-dedicated himself to tennis. He started a rigorous conditioning program. The one time ‘rebel’ became a gracious and thoughtful athlete. He bowed and blew two-handed kisses to spectators on each side of the court after winning a match, a gesture seen as a humble acknowledgement of their support for him and for tennis. Andre won five titles to leap from World Number 122 at the start of the year to 6 at the end, making it the highest climb into the top 10 made by any player during a single calendar year.

One of the high points in the Andre Agassi biography is when Agassi entered the history books in 1999 when he won the French Open beating Andrei Medvedev in a five set final to become only the third player in the Open Era (others being Rod Laver and Roger Federer) to win all four Grand Slam Tournaments during his career. He won the US Open beating Todd Martin in a five set final. Agassi finished 1999 as the World Number 1 ranked player. This was the only time that he finished the year as the World Number 1 player.

2000 was the second year that Andre won the Australian Open tile beating Yevgeny Kafelnikov in a four-set final. Agassi reached the semifinals of Wimbledon losing to Patrick Rafter in five sets in match a considered by some to be one of the best ever played at Wimbledon.

In 2001 Agassi defended his Australian Open title beating Arnaud Clement in the finals in straight sets. Andre finished the year as the World Number three ranked player becoming the only male player to finish the year ranked in the top 10 in three different decades.

Andre won the Masters Series Tournaments in Key Biscayne, Rome and Madrid in2002. He finished 2002 as the oldest year-end World Number 2 at 32 years and 8 months.

Agassi won his eight and final Grand Slam Tournament at the 2003 Australian Open beating Rainer Schuttler in straight sets in the final. He won his sixth career and third consecutive Key Biscayne title becoming the youngest (at 19) and oldest (at 32) winner of this event. On April 28, 2003, at 33 years and 13 days, Agassi captured the World Number 1 ranking to become the oldest top ranked player since the ATP ranking began.

In 2004, at age 34 Agassi won the Masters Series event in Cincinnati to achieve a record 17 Masters Series titles.

One of the highlights in the Andre Agassi Biography is when Andre did an improbable run to the US Open finals in 2005. In the quarterfinals he rallied from two sets down to beat James Blake 7-6 in the fifth and final set. Agassi lost to Federer in four sets in the final. Andre finished the year ranked Number 7 in the World, his 16th time in the year-end top 10, a record which equaled Jimmy Connors for the most times ranked in the top 10 at year-end.

Agassi had a short but dramatic run in his final US Open in 2006. Because of extreme back pain he had to receive anti-inflammatory injections after every match. Agassi’s last match was the 3rd round of the US Open. He was in obvious pain during the match in which he lost to 112th ranked Benjamin Becker of Germany in four sets. After the match Agassi received an eight minute standing ovation from the crowed and delivered a memorable retirement speech.

Andre earned more than US $30 million in price money during his career, third only to Pete Sampras and Roger Federer (as of August 2009). He is said to have earned over US $25 million a year through endorsements during his career the highest by any tennis player.

After retirement Agassi continues to participate in charity Tournaments and play World Team Tennis for the Philadelphia Freedoms.

Andy Roddick


Andy Roddick:

 The Fastest Server In The Planet

Introduction

Andrew Stephen Roddick ( Andy Roddick ) is a former world number one singles professional American tennis player. He has won one Grand Slam singles championship which is the 2003 US Open. Andy Roddick has come to the finals in four other singles Grand Slam championships (3 Wimbledon and 1 US Open) losing to Roger Federer on each occasion.
Roddick is known for his super fast serve. He holds the record for the fastest serve in professional tennis at 155mph which was served in a 2004 Davis Cup match on hard court.
Andy Roddick’s nick name is “A-Rod”.
Roddick is known for his humanitarian work. He established the Andy Roddick Foundation to help at risk kids. Andy has been awarded the Humanitarian Leadership Award by the Arthur Ashe Institute of Urban Health.
Andy is also known for his outbursts against umpires. At the 2008 Australian Open match he told umpire Emmanuel Joseph “You’re an idiot! Stay in school kids, or you’ll end up being an umpire.”

Personal Life

Andy Roddick was born on August 30, 1982, in Omaha, Bebraska to Jerry and Blanche Roddick. Roddick’s father was an investor and his mother was a school teacher. Roddick has two older brothers named Lawrence and John. John was an All-American tennis player at the University of Georgia and now operates a tennis academy at San Antonio. Lawrence is a chiropractor and a former member of the US Senior National Spring Board Diving Team.
Andy began dating singer Mandy Moore in 2002. He ended the relationship in March 2004.
Roddick started to date Brooklyn Decker from 2007. Brooklyn Decker is a fashion model that Roddick spotted while reading the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue. Roddick got married to Decker on April 17, 2009.

Playing Style



Andy Roddick is an aggressive baseline player. He has a double handed topspin back hand and a single handed slice backhand. Roddick’s biggest weapon is his powerful topspin serve. He usually servers around 130-150 mph.

Andy Roddick has worked on becoming more of an all court player. Under new coach Larry Stefanki his volleying skills have improved. He is also in the fittest shape of his career.


Awards and Records




  • Fastest server in professional tennis at 155 mph during Davis Cup match on hard courts in 2004.
  • 2004 ESPY Award for Best Male Tennis Player.
  • Fastest server at a Grand Slam tournament at the 2004 US Open at 152 mph.
  • Awarded the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award of the year in 2005.
  • Roddick and the Andy Roddick Foundation were awarded the 2007 Humanitarian Leadership Award by the Arthur Ashe Institute of Urban Health.
  • Most games won at a Grand Slam final at 39 at the 2009 Wimbledon finals.

Andy Murray


Introduction

Andy Murray is a British professional tennis player. Murray reached the world number two position for singles making him the highest-ranked British player ever. Andy Murray’s best achievement in a Grand Slam Tournament was to be the runner-up to Roger Federer at the 2008 US Open and the 2009 Australian Open. Murray is known to be one of the best tacticians on the court.

Personal Life

Murray was born on 15 May 1987 to Willie and Judy Murray in Dunblane, Scotland. He now resides in London, UK.
He started playing tennis at the age of 3 first with sponge balls against the walls indoors and later outside on Swingball.
Murray also played a lot of foot ball (soccer) when he was growing up. But he preferred tennis as he liked the fact that it was him and the opponent on the court as opposed to a team in foot ball. This is the reason that he also loves Boxing.
Murray’s brother Jamie is a top 100 doubles player and was the number two junior player in the world.
His former girl friend is Kim Sears. The couple were together from 2006 towards the end of 2009.
Murray identifies himself as “Scottish, but also British”. He states that he is equally proud of both. He points out that he is quarter English with some of his family originating from Newcastle, his coach is Scottish, and his girl friend is English.
Murray has written an autobiography titled ‘Hitting Back’.

Professional Life



Murray won the prestigious Orange Bowl Tournament in Miami, US, at the age of 12.

In 2004 he won the Junior US Open title.

Andy Murray turned Professional in 2005. He represented Great Britain in the Davis Cup Team making him the youngest player to do so. Murray played the top ranked British player World Number 28 Tim Henman for the first time in a professional match which Murray won.

He won his first Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) title in 2006 at the SAP Open in San Jose, California, defeating Lleyton Hewitt in the finals.

In 2008 Murray won his first Masters 1000 title, the Cincinnati Masters beating Novak Djokovic in the finals. Murray reached his first Grand Slam final at the US Open losing to Roger Federer in the finals. At the Madrid Masters 1000 Tournament he beat Roger Federer in the Semifinals making his head to head record against Federer 3-2 in Murray’s favor. Murray is only one of two players to have a positive record against Federer (the other being Rafael Nadal). Murray won this Tournament beating Gilles Simon in the finals. He became the first Briton to win multiple Masters titles.

In 2009 Murray won his 3rd Masters Series title winning the Miami Masters beating Novak Djokovic in the final. On 11 May 2009 Murray rose in ranking to World Number 3. He became the first British player in Open Era to achieve this ranking. He won the Queen’s Club Championships which was his first tournament win on grass. Murray won the Montreal Masters Series tile beating Juan Martín del Potro in the finals. By coming to the finals in this tournament Murray became the World Number 2 player, his highest ranking ever.

So far in 2010 Murray has reached the finals of the Australian Open losing to Roger Federer in straight sets.

Murray works with a team of fitness experts. His main coach is Miles Maclagan. He was previously coached by Brad Gilbert.

Playing Style



Murray has an offensive and defensive baseline style. He sometimes tends to play defensively, but can hit the ball with pace when he wants to. He is one of the best tacticians on the court.

Andy Murray has one of the best backhands in the world. He is able to hit down the line and cross court winners with ease and efficiency. He has a good forehand where he can put pace when necessary.

Andy Murray is known to be one of the fittest players on the tour.