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Anett Kontaveit

Anett Kontaveit (Estonian pronunciation: [aˈnetː ˈkon.taˈveit]; born 24 December 1995) is an Estonian professional tennis player. She has been ranked as high as world No. 2 by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA), which she first achieved on 6 June 2022, making her the highest-ranked Estonian player in history. In 2021, she became the first Estonian to participate in the WTA Finals, where she reached the final.[1] Kontaveit also holds a career-high ranking of No. 95 in doubles, achieved on 2 March 2020.

Anett Kontaveit
Country (sports) Estonia
ResidenceViimsi, Estonia
Born (1995-12-24) 24 December 1995 (age 27)
Tallinn, Estonia
Height1.74 m (5 ft 9 in)
Turned pro2010
PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)
CoachTorben Beltz
Prize moneyUS$ 7,940,128
Official websiteanettkontaveit.ee
Singles
Career record388–200 (66.0%)
Career titles6
Highest rankingNo. 2 (6 June 2022)
Current rankingNo. 27 (13 February 2023)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenQF (2020)
French Open4R (2018)
Wimbledon3R (2017, 2018, 2019)
US Open4R (2015, 2020)
Other tournaments
Tour FinalsF (2021)
Olympic Games1R (2020)
Doubles
Career record55–45 (55.0%)
Career titles0
Highest rankingNo. 95 (2 March 2020)
Current rankingNo. 498 (30 January 2023)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian Open2R (2019, 2020)
French Open3R (2019)
Wimbledon2R (2017, 2022)
US Open2R (2019, 2021)
Team competitions
Fed Cup26–17 (60.5%)
Last updated on: 13 February 2023.

Kontaveit has won six singles titles on the WTA Tour as well as eleven singles and five doubles titles on the ITF Circuit. She produced her best performance at a major by reaching the quarterfinals at the 2020 Australian Open. She has reached two WTA 1000 finals at the 2018 Wuhan Open and 2022 Qatar Open.

Career

2011: First ITF Circuit title

Kontaveit had success on the junior tour in 2011, her best Grand Slam performance of the year being at Roland Garros. There, she made the quarterfinals with wins over world No. 6, Danka Kovinić, and future-Wimbledon junior champion, Ashleigh Barty. At the quarterfinal stage, she lost to Irina Khromacheva, the Wimbledon junior runner-up.[2] She also won the European Under-16 Junior Championships partnering 14-year-old Tatjana Vorobjova in girls' doubles; they beat first seeded Czechs Barbora Krejčíková and Petra Rohanová.[3]

Kontaveit also made some breakthroughs on the pro circuit; winning her maiden ITF title at her home event in Tallinn in January, beating Zuzana Luknárová in the final. She also made the finals in doubles, partnering compatriot Maret Ani.[4]

Kontaveit was chosen for the 2011 Estonian Fed Cup team,[5] but lost both of her singles matches in the World Group II tie against Spain.[6]

In August, Kontaveit won her second title at the Savitaipale Open in Finland, where she beat Dutch player Lisanne van Riet in the final.[7] She continued in October with a third $10k title at the Djursholm Tennis Club Stockholm Open as an unseeded player. She defeated top seed Marion Gaud in the quarterfinals, and then seventh seed Syna Kayser in the final.[8] In December, Kontaveit won the Orange Bowl, a Grade-A tournament on the ITF Junior Circuit, where she beat Eugenie Bouchard and Yulia Putintseva (both with top 300 WTA rankings) en route to the title. Her junior ranking rose to her career high of No. 9.[9]

2012: Junior US Open final

Kontaveit began the year at the Traralgon International, an under-18 girls tournament in Australia. Seeded second, she reached the third round where she lost to Taylor Townsend.[10] At the Junior Australian Open, she defeated Miho Kowase and Lee So-ra to advance to the third round, before losing once more to eventual champion Taylor Townsend.[11]

For the second year, Kontaveit was chosen for the Estonian Fed Cup team- she played in the Europe/Africa Zone I, where she achieved two the biggest wins of her career at the time. She posted Estonia's only win against Austria and became the lowest ranked player to beat a top-50 player in seven years, with her straight-sets victory over Tamira Paszek of Austria- however Estonia failed to win either of their ties. In the relegation play-offs, she achieved Estonia's only win in their tie against the Netherlands over Bibiane Schoofs, but despite Kontaveit's performances, Estonia was relegated to the Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone II.

Kontaveit was awarded a wildcard for the qualifying draw of her first WTA Tour tournament, the Danish Open in Copenhagen, where she won two qualifying matches, before losing in the final round of qualifying to Annika Beck.[12]

She posted strong results at the Junior Grand Slam championships, reaching the semifinals of the French Open girls' singles, losing to eventual champion Annika Beck.[13] At Wimbledon, she reached her second consecutive junior major semifinal, where she lost to the eventual champion Eugenie Bouchard.[14]

In August, she won her fourth $10k title in San Luis Potosí, beating wildcard Victoria Rodriguez in the final, in straight sets.[15]

Kontaveit became the first Estonian to reach the girls' singles finals at the US Open, but she was defeated in straight sets by Samantha Crawford.[16]

2013: Last junior year, top 250

Kontaveit began her final year in junior tennis at the Australian Open. After some convincing wins, including over higher ranked opponents including Antonia Lottner and Anna Danilina, she lost in the semifinals to Kateřina Siniaková.[17]

In March, Kontaveit received a wildcard into the main draw of the Miami Open due to her management deal with IMG. She lost to Christina McHale in straight sets.[18]

She played the rest of the year at ITF tournaments, winning four titles from the five finals she reached- including her first $25k title in Moscow.[19] These results helped her enter the world's top 250 for the first time at the age of 18.

2014: ITF wins, mononucleosis

Kontaveit started the year as No. 249 in the WTA rankings. In January, she qualified for her first WTA Tour tournament at the Auckland Open, losing to Sachie Ishizu in three sets in the first round of the main draw.[20]

She then went on to play Fed Cup in Tallinn, winning 49 games in a row spanning three Fed Cup matches and two matches in the following week's ITF event in her hometown. After losing in the final to Timea Bacsinszky, she then played another ITF event in Moscow, where she lost in the final to Aliaksandra Sasnovich. After mediocre performances at the Miami Open and the WTA event in Monterrey, she performed well in a series of ITF tournaments on green clay in the United States. She held two match points to make the final of a tournament in Indian Harbour Beach, but lost the match to Taylor Townsend, who went on to win the tournament. Kontaveit lost in the final round of qualifying for the French Open.

Kontaveit qualified for Wimbledon for the first time in 2014. She held match point in the first round against Casey Dellacqua, but lost the match in three sets. She then qualified for the Swedish Open, beating top seed Alizé Cornet in the first round. She lost in the second round to Jana Čepelová.

Kontaveit travelled to North America and played in an ITF event in Vancouver, receiving a wildcard into the Canadian Open, however did not play again for the remainder of the year after being diagnosed with infectious mononucleosis. At the end of the season, Kontaveit found a new coach in Australian Paul McNamee, and began training in Istanbul at the KozaWOS Academy.

2015: Recovery, Wimbledon 4th round, and top 100

 
Kontaveit at the 2015 French Open

After an extended training block in Australia to end 2014, Kontaveit's first tournament since the Canadian Open was the Auckland Open, where she lost to Urszula Radwańska in three sets. She then played her first Australian Open, defeating Paula Kania in the first round of qualifying before losing a close match against Evgeniya Rodina.

Kontaveit returned to Estonia to play in the Fed Cup, seemingly still suffering from illness as she put in poor performances and struggled to beat much lower ranked opponents. She made a strong return to the ITF Circuit at her training base in Istanbul, where she made the semifinals, her equal best result before losing to Shahar Pe'er. She then went to Wiesbaden in Germany, where she was routed by Adrijana Lekaj, winning only three games. Kontaveit then headed to La Marsa, Tunisia where she lost to Romina Oprandi at the semifinal stage. Participating in the French Open qualifying again, she defeated Katerina Stewart, before losing to French wildcard Clothilde de Bernardi.

Kontaveit transferred to the grass in Eastbourne, and won the $50k event, her biggest ITF title so far, without losing a set. She then continued this form in Surbiton, making the semifinals before losing a three-set match to Naomi Osaka. She then qualified and made the semifinals in Ilkley, beating players including Zhu Lin, Jeļena Ostapenko and Wang Yafan. However, she lost to Magda Linette after leading 5–1 in the third set and holding a match point. Despite this loss, Kontaveit had the most wins of any player on grass, and this form granted her a main-draw wildcard to the Wimbledon Championships. She lost in the first round to the former world No. 1, Victoria Azarenka.

Kontaveit played three WTA tournaments after Wimbledon, the Swedish Open, Istanbul Cup and Baku Cup. Despite disappointing showings in the singles including losses to Olga Govortsova, Melis Sezer and Karin Knapp, she made her first WTA semifinal in doubles in Istanbul, partnering Elizaveta Kulichkova after being offered a wildcard. At the Vancouver Open, Kontaveit qualified and beat Zhang Shuai and Patricia Maria Țig before losing to Alla Kudryavtseva in the quarterfinals.

Kontaveit had her first Grand Slam breakthrough at the US Open. Starting as an unseeded player in qualifying, she beat Stephanie Vogt, María Teresa Torró Flor and Naomi Broady to qualify for the main draw. There, Kontaveit then beat Casey Dellacqua, 31st seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Madison Brengle to reach the fourth round proper, where she lost to 23rd seed Venus Williams, in straight sets. With this result Kontaveit broke into the top 100 for the first time, moving up over 60 places.

She finished the year by participating in WTA tournaments in Guangzhou, Tashkent and Luxembourg. However, a thigh injury hindered her performance at the latter events and she ended her season with a retirement in qualifying in Luxembourg.

2016: Out of the top 100

Kontaveit started the season with a quarterfinal run at the Shenzhen Open before losing in the first round of the Australian Open to Garbiñe Muguruza. After losing in the first round of the Mexican Open to No. 4 seed Johanna Konta, she reached the semifinals in Monterrey, losing there to Kirsten Flipkens; however, she failed to qualify for both Indian Wells and Miami. She also lost in the first round of the French Open to Venus Williams.

During her grass-court season, Kontaveit reached the quarterfinals at the Nottingham Open (losing to Alison Riske) and qualified for the Eastbourne International (losing in the first round to Anna-Lena Friedsam) before losing in the first round of the Wimbledon Championships to Barbora Strýcová. Her next six tournaments (including the US Open) also ended in early exits; therefore, her ranking plummeted and she fell from the top 100. Her best year-end performance was a semifinal run in the Guangzhou International Open.

2017: First WTA title and top 40

Kontaveit started season ranked 121. Her first tournament was the Australian Open and she was named one of the seven alternates through on the entry list, but a number of withdrawals that did not qualify to the main draw. She lost to Maria Sakkari in the first round. She then won the Open Andrézieux-Bouthéon 42, beating Ivana Jorović in the final. After that, she entered the Hungarian Ladies Open's main draw as a qualifier, losing to eventual semifinalist Julia Görges in the first round.[21]

At the Indian Wells Open, Kontaveit entered the main draw as a qualifier and beat world No. 47, Misaki Doi, in the first round, before falling to No. 19 seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. Her next tournament was the Miami Open, where, once again as a qualifier, she beat Kurumi Nara and recorded an upset over No. 32 seed and world No. 35, Ekaterina Makarova, before losing to No. 3 seed, Simona Halep in straight sets. Ranked No. 99, Kontaveit reached her first WTA Tour-level final at her next tournament, the Ladies Open Biel Bienne, beating former world No. 38, Heather Watson, Evgeniya Rodina, Elise Mertens, and Aliaksandra Sasnovich en-route. She then lost to fellow first time finalist Markéta Vondroušová. Good results followed as she qualified for Stuttgart and reached the quarterfinals there. As a qualifier, she also entered into Madrid and Rome, reaching the quarterfinals in the latter which was her first Premier 5-quarterfinal. She lost to Simona Halep but beat world No. 1, Angelique Kerber, en route. She followed that with a second-round appearance at the French Open, beating Monica Niculescu before losing to Garbiñe Muguruza.[21]

At her first grass-court tournament of 2017, the Rosmalen Open, Kontaveit reached her second final of the year. En-route she scored wins over sixth seed Kristýna Plíšková, former Wimbledon semifinalist Kirsten Flipkens, Carina Witthöft and seventh seed Lesia Tsurenko. In the final, she got past Natalia Vikhlyantseva to clinch her maiden WTA tournament title and ensure a top-40 debut.[21]

2018: First Premier-5 final

Kontaveit began the new season at the Brisbane International losing in second round to Aliaksandra Sasnovich. At Sydney, she retired in the qualifying due to heatstroke.[22]

At the Australian Open, she defeated Aleksandra Krunić and Mona Barthel to advance to the third round where she faced world No. 7, Jeļena Ostapenko. Kontaveit defeated her to advance to the fourth round in Melbourne for the first time;[23] however, she lost to Carla Suárez Navarro.[24]

In spring on clay courts, she reached semifinals of Stuttgart and also in Rome, where she defeated world No. 9, Venus Williams, and world No. 2, Caroline Wozniaki, in the same tournament. At the French Open, she was seeded 25th and reached the fourth round for the second Grand Slam tournament in a row losing to eventual finalist Sloane Stephens.

Kontaveit hired Nigel Sears as her new coach at the start of the grass-court season but failed to defend her Rosmalen Open title, losing in the first round to Veronika Kudermetova. She reached the third round of Wimbledon losing to Alison Van Uytvanck.

At the Rogers Cup, she lost to Petra Kvitová in straight sets, and lost in the third round of the Cincinnati Open to eventual winner Kiki Bertens. At the US Open, she lost in the first round to Katarina Siniaková.

On 1 October 2018, she reached her best singles ranking of No. 21, after finishing runner-up at the Wuhan Open. During the tournament, she beat Sloane Stephens, Donna Vekić, Zhang Shuai, Katarina Siniaková and Wang Qiang to reach the final where she lost in straight sets to Aryna Sabalenka.

She received a bye into the second round of the China Open, after reaching the final of Wuhan. She was later defeated by Caroline Wozniacki in the third round. She finished the season being eliminated in the round-robin stage of the WTA Elite Trophy, after losing to Elise Mertens and beating Julia Görges.

2019: Miami Open semifinal, top 15, and illness

Kontaveit started the year by reaching the quarterfinals of the Brisbane International beating Suarez Navarro and Kvitová before losing to eventual finalist Lesia Tsurenko. She then lost to Elise Mertens in the second round of the Sydney International. Seeded 20th at the Australian Open, she won against Sara Sorribes Tormo and lost in the second round to Aliaksandra Sasnovich.

During the Middle Eastern swing, she lost in the second round of the Qatar Open to Angelique Kerber. Seeded 15th at the Dubai Tennis Championships, she lost in the first round to Zhang Shuai.

Kontaveit then moved onto the Sunshine Double tournaments at Indian Wells and Miami. Seeded 21st, she reached the fourth round at Indian losing to Karolína Plíšková in three sets. She then made her breakthrough at the Miami Open. Seeded again 21st, she defeated Amanda Anisimova, Ajla Tomljanovic and Indian Wells champion Bianca Andreescu to reach her first Premier Mandatory quarterfinal. She defeated 27th seed Hsieh Su-wei despite trailing in the third set. She then faced Ashleigh Barty but lost in straight sets. These results propelled her ranking from No. 20 to 14 and made her the highest ranked Estonian player in history, male or female, and surpassed compatriot Kaia Kanepi's career-high rank of No. 15.

At her first clay-court event of the season, she was seeded eighth; at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, she defeated Caroline García in two sets to face Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in a rematch of last years quarterfinal. She defeated her in straight sets to reach the quarterfinals for the third year in a row and face Viktoria Azarenka, who retired in the third set. This meant, she reached the semifinals for the second year running and was due to face world No. 1, Naomi Osaka. However, Osaka withdrew with an abdominal injury handing Kontaveit a walkover to the final to face Petra Kvitová. She lost the final in two sets.

She was seeded 14th at the Madrid Open, however, lost in the first round to Aliaksandra Sasnovich in three sets. Her next event was the Italian Open where she was seeded 15th. She defeated Mona Barthel to face Maria Sakkari in the second round. However, she lost in straight sets. Her results meant she was seeded 17th at the French Open, her best seeding at a Grand Slam event but she lost there in the first round to Karolina Muchová.

 

Her first grass-court match ended in defeat to seventh seed Johanna Konta at the Birmingham Classic. Seeded 16th at Eastbourne, she came from a set down to defeat wildcarded Harriet Dart in the first round to set up a second-round clash with Anna-Lena Friedsam. She was defeated in straight sets.

At Wimbledon, she was the 20th seed, and defeated Shelby Rogers in the first round to face Heather Watson. She defeated her in two sets to face Karolina Muchová in the third round; she lost to the Czech in two sets.

After taking the next month off she returned at the Rogers Cup where she is the 16th seed. Her first match was against the wildcarded Maria Sharapova. She defeated her in an epic two-hour and 40-minute match. She won a 17-minute service game to break Sharapova and to serve for the match. In the second round, she defeated Suárez Navarro who retired in the second set. She lost to third seed Karolína Plíšková in the third round.

At the Cincinnati Open, she defeated 13th seed Angelique Kerber in the first round to face Polish teenager Iga Świątek in round two. She defeated her in two sets to face the top seed and world No. 2, Ash Barty in round three. She lost in three tight sets, despite serving for the match in the final set. With this results she secured her the 21st seed at the US Open.

At the US Open, Kontaveit opened the tournament with a win against Sorribes Tormo. She defeated Ajla Tomljanović in the second round but withdrew from her third-round match against 13th seed Belinda Bencic with a viral illness.

She withdrew from two Premier events, in Zhengzhou and the Pan Pacific Open. She also withdrew from the Wuhan Open where she had reached the final in 2018. Her withdrawal meant that she would drop down the rankings with points being deducted from last year. She later revealed on Instagram that she had been suffering from an ongoing illness and a small operation. She said, she may return in time for either Linz or the Kremlin Cup but withdrew from both.

2020: First major quarterfinal, consistency

Kontaveit began the season at the Brisbane International defeating Hsieh Su-wei but losing to sixth seed Kiki Bertens in three sets.[25] At Adelaide, she lost to Pavlyuchenkova in the first round, in straight sets.[25] As the 28th seed at the Australian Open, she defeated Astra Sharma and Sorribes Tormo and then crushed Belinda Bencic, losing only one game, to reach the fourth round for the second time in her career. She then defeated Iga Świątek in three sets to give Kontaveit a place in the quarterfinals where she lost against to Simona Halep.[25] However, with her win in the fourth round against Iga Świątek, she became the first Estonian, male or female, to reach a quarterfinal at the Australian Open,[26] and with this tournament's result she moved up nine places in the WTA rankings to 22. She next went to Dubai where she made the quarterfinals but lost to Petra Martić.[25]

At the first Premier 5 tournament at Doha, she defeated Anastasija Sevastova in straight sets before losing to ninth seed and eventual champion, Aryna Sabalenka, in a tight three-set match.

Kontaveit returned to the tour at Palermo, the first WTA tournament during the coronavirus pandemic. She was seeded fourth and defeated in her first match Patricia Maria Țig. In the second round, she defeated Laura Siegemund in three sets to face Elisabetta Cocciaretto in the quarterfinals. She also beat the Italian wildcard in three sets to reach her first semifinal of the season against top seed Petra Martić. She defeated the Croatian in two sets to advance to her first final of the season. There, she was defeated by Frenchwoman Fiona Ferro in two sets despite serving for the second set. Nevertheless, the run to the final saw Kontaveit return to the top 20.

Seeded 12th at the Cincinnati Open, she defeated former top-ten player Daria Kasatkina, Jil Teichmann, and Marie Bouzková, to set up a quarterfinal clash against former world No. 1, Naomi Osaka. Despite leading by a set and a break she eventually lost the match in three sets.

Seeded 14th at the US Open, she defeated Danielle Collins in the first round in three sets. In the second round, she beat Slovenian teenager Kaja Juvan and 24th Magda Linette to reach the fourth round of the US Open for a second time to face fourth seeded Osaka. However, she was not able to avenge her prior defeat, falling to the eventual champion in straight sets.

She then played at the Italian Open, where she defeated Caroline Garcia, in straight sets, in the first round, before falling to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the second. At the French Open, Kontaveit again faced Garcia in the first round. Unfortunately, Garcia managed to clinch her revenge against the 17th seed, who suffered a disappointing loss in three sets, culminating the season. Her final event of the season was the Ostrava Open where she defeated Ekaterina Alexandrova in three sets before losing to Sara Sorribes Tormo, in straight sets.

2021: Four titles, WTA Finals runner-up & top 10

 
Kontaveit at the 2021 French Open

Kontaveit started the new season at the WTA 500 event in Abu Dhabi as the tenth seed, losing to Veronika Kudermetova in straight sets.

In Australia, Kontaveit was placed in hard quarantine with 72 other players due to the COVID-19 pandemic, meaning she wasn't allowed to practice for the upcoming Australian Open and had to stay in her hotel room for 14 days. She played the WTA 500 Grampians Trophy where she defeated Christina McHale, Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Maria Sakkari to reach the final against American Ann Li. However, the final wasn't played due to scheduling difficulties. Seeded 21st at the Australian Open, she defeated Aliaksandra Sasnovich in straight sets, and Heather Watson in three to reach the third round. She then was defeated by Shelby Rogers in straight sets, despite holding a 4–1 lead in the first set. Next was the Middle Eastern swing. At the WTA 500 Qatar Open, she defeated seventh seed and 2021 Australian Open finalist Jennifer Brady in 57 minutes to progress. She then beat former world No. 1 and three-time Grand Slam champion, Angelique Kerber, in an hour, to reach the quarterfinals where she lost in three sets to the eventual champion, Petra Kvitová. At the WTA 1000 Dubai Championships, she defeated Timea Babos and Sorana Cirstea to reach the third round. She then lost to third-seeded Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets.

At the Miami Open, she was seeded 22nd and defeated Sorana Cirstea in three sets to reach the third round against the 16th seed Elise Mertens, losing again in three sets. Her ranking would drop a few spots, because she was defending semifinal points from the 2019 edition of the tournament. Her next tournament was the 2021 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix where she was the 2019 finalist. In her first-round match, she defeated a qualifier, German teenager Julia Middendorf, to set up a match against the world No. 4 and third seed, Sofia Kenin. She upset the American to reach the quarterfinals, a feat she had achieved in her four previous main-draw appearances at the tournament. In the quarterfinals, she lost to Aryna Sabalenka in three sets. Shortly after the tournament Kontaveit and Nigel Sears announced an amicable coaching split after three years together.

In Madrid, she defeated Serbian qualifier Nina Stojanović to reach the second, where she was defeated by the 16th seed Maria Sakkari, in straight sets. She withdrew from the Italian Open due to exhaustion, and did not play another lead up clay-court tournament in the weeks till Roland Garros. Seeded 30th at the French Open, she defeated Viktorija Golubic in three sets to progress to the second round where she defeated Kristina Mladenovic in two sets to reach the third round. There, she lost to the defending champion and eighth seed Iga Świątek. Her next tournament was the WTA 500 grass-court event in Eastbourne. She defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova and then third seed Bianca Andreescu, her second top-10 win of the season and 13th overall, to reach the quarterfinals.[27] There, she beat again Golubic in three tough sets to reach her second semifinal of the season against Camila Giorgi. She reached the final after Giorgi's retirement but lost to Jelena Ostapenko. At Wimbledon, she was defeated in the first round by Markéta Vondroušová, in three sets.

Her debut at the Olympic Games in Tokyo was cut short, after being defeated by Maria Sakkari in the first round despite leading in the opening set. Her next tournament was the Canadian Open edition of the Rogers Cup in Canada where she was defeated by American Jessica Pegula in the opening round despite leading by a set and a break.

She started a coaching trial with former player Dmitry Tursunov, ex-coach of Aryna Sabalenka. At the Cincinnati Open she was defeated by world No. 20, Ons Jabeur, in the first round. Her results improved the following week at the WTA 250 Cleveland tournament. As the second seed she defeated Lauren Davis, Caroline Garcia, Kateřina Siniaková and Sorribes Tormo to reach her third final of the season against Irina-Camelia Begu. She defeated Begu in straight sets to win her second career title.[28] Seeded 28th at the US Open, she reached the third round for the third time at a Grand Slam championship for the season where she lost again to seventh seed Iga Świątek.

At the Ostrava Open, she won her third WTA title of her career and the second in the season without losing a set. She defeated No. 3 seed, Belinda Bencic, in the quarterfinals,[29] the local favorite, world No. 10, tournament No. 2 seed, Petra Kvitová, in the semifinals (her third top-10 win of the season)[30][31] and No. 4 seed Maria Sakkari in the final (her fifth top-20 win of the season).[32] This was the biggest WTA Tour title of the season and of her career since her first title in 2017.

At the Chicago Open, she defeated Madison Brengle in straight sets, then withdrew before her second-round match citing a thigh strain. Her next tournament was at Indian Wells where she was seeded 18th. In her first-round match, she defeated Martina Trevisan to face the 16th seed and defending champion Bianca Andreescu; she defeated the Canadian to reach the fourth round for the second time in her career. She then defeated qualifier Beatriz Haddad Maia to reach the quarterfinals for the first time. She lost out to Ons Jabeur in straight sets. This result meant she returned to the top 20 again, the first time since 2020.

Kontaveit's next tournament was the Kremlin Cup, where she took a wildcard. As the ninth seed, she defeated Kateřina Siniaková and Andrea Petkovic to reach the quarterfinals. She demolished Garbiñe Muguruza to reach the semifinals. She defeated Olympic silver medalist Markéta Vondroušová in straight sets to reach her fifth final of the season. There she defeated Ekaterina Alexandrova in three sets (coming from four games down in the second set) to win her third title of the season and fourth WTA title. This result propelled her back to 14th in the world and equal her career high. It also put her in contention of reaching the WTA Finals, as she reached tenth in the race.

Kontaveit then headed to the Transylvania Open. As the second seed in Cluj-Napoca, she defeated Aleksandra Krunić, Alison Van Uytvanck, Anhelina Kalinina and Rebecca Peterson to reach her sixth final of the year. She defeated Simona Halep in straight sets in the final, winning her fourth title of the year (all coming within the space of her last seven tournaments). Her victory in the final was her 26th in her last 28 matches.[33] As a result, Kontaveit secured the final spot at the 2021 WTA Finals, surpassing Jabeur, whilst also guaranteeing her top-10 debut, reaching a new career high of world No. 8, on 1 November 2021.[34] Kontaveit lost to Garbiñe Muguruza during the round robin stage, but defeated Barbora Krejčíková and Karolína Plíšková, in straight sets, to finish first in her group and advance to the semifinals.[35] She then defeated Maria Sakkari to reach the biggest final of her career, posting a 7–0 undefeated record in semifinals this year. She became the first Estonian tennis player, male or female, to qualify and reach the final of a year-end tournament.[36] Her semifinal win over Sakkari was her 48th win of the season, tying Ons Jabeur for the most wins in 2021.[37] She lost to Muguruza in the championship match, finishing her breakout season ranked No. 7 in the world.[38]

2022: World No. 2, coaching change, struggles after Covid, fifth title

 

Kontaveit started at the Sydney International as the fourth seed. She began her campaign by defeating Zhang Shuai, Elena-Gabriela Ruse, and Ons Jabeur to reach the semifinals. However, she was defeated by third seed Barbora Krejčíková, in the final set tirbreaker, despite having seven match points.[39]

Seeded No. 7 at the Australian Open, she was considered a favourite following her run of form at the end of 2021. She defeated Kateřina Siniaková in the first round but was upset by Danish teenager and rising star, Clara Tauson, in the second round."Australian Open 2022 Scores | Latest Scores & Live Updates – WTA Official". Women's Tennis Association. Retrieved 16 October 2022.</ref>

Continuing a streak of indoor hardcourt wins in 2021- Kontaveit won the St. Petersburg Trophy as the second seed, reaching the final after defeating Jil Teichmann, Sorana Cîrstea, Belinda Bencic, and Jeļena Ostapenko. She defeated the top seed, Maria Sakkari, in the final, in three sets, and reached a career high of No. 5.[40]

Kontaveit then played at the Qatar Ladies Open, and defeated Ana Konjuh, Elise Mertens, Ons Jabeur, and recent Dubai Tennis Championships champion, Jeļena Ostapenko, to reach the final. This was her second WTA 1000 final- after Wuhan in 2018. She was defeated by Iga Świątek.[41] This run helped her ranking rise to a career-high of No. 4 in the world.

Kontaveit then experienced a drop in form, losing in the third and second rounds at the Sunshine Double- falling to 30th seed Markéta Vondroušová at Indian Wells and an unseeded American player, Ann Li in Miami, respectively. At the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart, she reached the quarterfinals, where she lost to Aryna Sabalenka in three sets, in a rematch of last year's quarterfinal. She then withdrew from the Madrid Open after contracting COVID-19; this period of illness led to her reporting fitness struggles such as breathing issues throughout the summer months.[42] Upon her return, she participated at the Italian Open where she lost to Petra Martić in the second round, after receiving a bye in the first round.

As the fifth seed at the French Open, Kontaveit lost to Ajla Tomljanović in the first round. Despite this, she reached a career-high ranking of world No. 2 on 6 June 2022. She announced her split with her coach Dmitry Tursunov following the conclusion of the tournament as he has difficulty traveling to events with her due to visa difficulties of people holding Russian citizenship.[43] Kontaveit later revealed that she had COVID-19 after Stuttgart, which affected her game in the next tournaments in Rome[44] and French Open.[45] She played no warm-up tournaments on grass in the lead up to the 2022 Wimbledon Championships.[46] Kontaveit started working with a new coach, German Torben Beltz.[47]

At the Wimbledon Championships, Kontaveit played as second seed, defeating Bernarda Pera in the first round, but losing to unseeded Jule Niemeier in the second.[48]

Kontaveit received a late wildcard entry into Hamburg European Open where she defeated Irina Bara and Rebecca Peterson to reach quarterfinals. Then she reached semifinals after Andrea Petkovic retired. After that, she beat Anastasia Potapova to reach her third final of the season and first since February. In the final, she lost to Bernarda Pera."Pera continues winning streak, faces Kontaveit in Hamburg final". Women's Tennis Association. Retrieved 22 July 2022.</ref>

At the US Open, Kontaveit came into the tournament as the second seed and beat Jaqueline Cristian in the first round. She was then defeated in the second round by 23-time major champion Serena Williams, who was making playing in her final tournament; the match went three sets and lasted two and a half hours.[49] It completed Kontaveit's subpar major record in 2022, having never made it past the second round, the first such result since 2016.

Kontaveit was the top seed at the inaugural edition of her home tournament, the Tallinn Open. She reached final defeating compatriot Kaia Kanepi in the semifinals, before losing to seventh seed Barbora Krejčíková, in straight sets.[50] At the Ostrava Open, Kontaveit entered as defending champion and third seed- but retired, after dropping the first set to unseeded Tereza Martincová in her first match.[51] She announced, she was ending her 2022 season due to a back injury shortly after.[52]

2023

Kontaveit started her 2023 season at the Adelaide International (week 1), where she was the sixth seed. Kontaveit played Zheng Qinwen in first round, where she lost in three close sets;[53] failing to convert match points in a final set tiebreak.[54] At the Adelaide International (week 2), Kontaveit played ninth seed Paula Badosa in the first round, losing in two sets.[55] Seeded 16th at the Australian Open, she defeated Julia Grabher in straight sets,[56] posting her first win of the season, and first win since the Tallinn Open in October. In the second round, she led by a set and a break against eventual semifinalist Magda Linette, but lost in three sets.[57]

Playing style

 
Kontaveit swinging a backhand

Kontaveit is an aggressive baseline player who uses a variety of strokes to force opponents to hit awkward shots; this enables her to strike fast winners or draw quick errors.[58][59] Due to her aggressive style, she typically hits many winners and unforced errors. Both her forehand and her two-handed backhand are hit flat, with relentless depth, power, and penetration, allowing her to dictate play from the first stroke of the rally. Kontaveit is also adept at hitting her backhand with slice, slowing the pace of rallies; she typically uses this shot while playing defensively, allowing her to slow a rally's pace and reposition herself so that she can resume her aggressive style. Kontaveit has a powerful first serve, which peaks at 109 mph (175 km/h), allowing her to serve aces. She also has effective kick and slice second serves, which prevent her from double-faulting and prevents opponents from scoring free points on second-serve returns.

Although she typically plays from the baseline; Kontaveit is adept at the net due to her doubles experience, and frequently attacks the net with powerful swinging volleys, which she uses to finish points quickly. She typically aims to receive short balls from her opponents, attacking with a high kick serve, altering pace with a backhand slice, and changing direction in a prolonged rally to do so.[60] She is also noted for her speed around the baseline, allowing her to reach most shots, counterpunch effectively, and hit running forehands; this is aided by her exceptional footwork, stamina, and court coverage.[59]

Since hiring Nigel Sears as her coach, Kontaveit has improved her service, adding more power and variety, such as the kick serve, which has helped save break points against opponents; her serve made further improvements under Dmitry Tursunov's tutelage, making her a reliable server who serves multiple aces every match. Kontaveit's movement also improved under Tursunov, allowing her to hit powerful groundstroke winners on the run and developing a more confident, positive mindset. She has also become more aggressive and learned when to pull the trigger in rallies, allowing her to develop into a proactive player who dominates her opponents through sheer power and aggression.

Endorsements

Kontaveit has been endorsed by Lacoste for clothing and apparel since 2019, she was previously endorsed by Adidas; when on court, she wears Nike footwear. Kontaveit has used Babolat racquets since her junior career, specifically using the Pure Strike range of racquets.[61] Further partners include Tallink,[62] Porsche Estonia,[63] and Alexela.

Personal life

In 2022, Kontaveit began dating soccer player Brent Lepistu.[64] Since 2023, her boyfriend lives in Romania where she has visited him.[65]

Career statistics

Grand Slam performance timelines

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RR Q# DNQ A NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Singles

Tournament 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 SR W–L Win%
Australian Open A A Q2 1R 1R 4R 2R QF 3R 2R 2R 0 / 8 12–8 60%
French Open A Q3 Q2 1R 2R 4R 1R 1R 3R 1R 0 / 7 6–7 46%
Wimbledon A 1R 1R 1R 3R 3R 3R NH 1R 2R 0 / 8 7–8 47%
US Open A A 4R 1R 1R 1R 3R 4R 3R 2R 0 / 8 12–7 63%
Win–loss 0–0 0–1 3–2 0–4 3–4 8–4 5–3 7–3 6–4 3–4 1–1 0 / 31 36–30 55%

Note: Kontaveit withdrew from the 2019 US Open before her third-round match, which does not officially count as a loss.

Doubles

Tournament 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 SR W–L Win%
Australian Open A A 2R 2R 1R A 0 / 3 2–3 40%
French Open A A 3R A A A 0 / 1 2–1 67%
Wimbledon 2R 1R 1R NH A 2R 0 / 4 2–4 33%
US Open A A 2R A 2R A 0 / 2 2–2 50%
Win–loss 1–1 0–1 4–4 1–1 1–2 1–1 0 / 10 8–10 44%

Note: Kontaveit and Daria Kasatkina withdrew from the 2019 US Open before their second-round match, which does not officially count as a loss.

References

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  52. ^ "Anett Kontaveit on Instagram: "Hiii guys! Unfortunately I won't be able to play in Guadalajara this year as my back is still hurting since Ostrava… I really hope to come back to Mexico next year as I have so many good memories of my time there! This means that it is the end of my 2022 season. This year has had absolutely everything. One of the hardest and happiest moments in my career and they all happen so we can learn from them and come out stronger on the other end. Can't wait to see you all again in 2023! And I am very very grateful for everyone's continuous support 🫶🏼 Take care! Anett xx"". Instagram. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
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  62. ^ "Sustainability | Sponsorships". Tallink. 16 October 2022. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  63. ^ "Legendaarne autobränd pani Kontaveidiga leivad ühte kappi". Tennis (in Estonian). 15 July 2022. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  64. ^ Anett Kontaveit makes relationship with footballer Brent Lepistu public following defeat in Tallinn Open finals
  65. ^ Anett Kontaveit şi-a vizitat iubitul în România

External links

Awards
Preceded by Estonian Young Athlete of the Year
2012
2015
Succeeded by
Sporting positions
Preceded by Orange Bowl Girls' Singles Champion
Category: 18 and under

2011
Succeeded by

anett, kontaveit, estonian, pronunciation, aˈnetː, ˈkon, taˈveit, born, december, 1995, estonian, professional, tennis, player, been, ranked, high, world, women, tennis, association, which, first, achieved, june, 2022, making, highest, ranked, estonian, player. Anett Kontaveit Estonian pronunciation aˈnetː ˈkon taˈveit born 24 December 1995 is an Estonian professional tennis player She has been ranked as high as world No 2 by the Women s Tennis Association WTA which she first achieved on 6 June 2022 making her the highest ranked Estonian player in history In 2021 she became the first Estonian to participate in the WTA Finals where she reached the final 1 Kontaveit also holds a career high ranking of No 95 in doubles achieved on 2 March 2020 Anett KontaveitKontaveit at the 2022 Wimbledon ChampionshipsCountry sports EstoniaResidenceViimsi EstoniaBorn 1995 12 24 24 December 1995 age 27 Tallinn EstoniaHeight1 74 m 5 ft 9 in Turned pro2010PlaysRight handed two handed backhand CoachTorben BeltzPrize moneyUS 7 940 128Official websiteanettkontaveit eeSinglesCareer record388 200 66 0 Career titles6Highest rankingNo 2 6 June 2022 Current rankingNo 27 13 February 2023 Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian OpenQF 2020 French Open4R 2018 Wimbledon3R 2017 2018 2019 US Open4R 2015 2020 Other tournamentsTour FinalsF 2021 Olympic Games1R 2020 DoublesCareer record55 45 55 0 Career titles0Highest rankingNo 95 2 March 2020 Current rankingNo 498 30 January 2023 Grand Slam doubles resultsAustralian Open2R 2019 2020 French Open3R 2019 Wimbledon2R 2017 2022 US Open2R 2019 2021 Team competitionsFed Cup26 17 60 5 Last updated on 13 February 2023 Kontaveit has won six singles titles on the WTA Tour as well as eleven singles and five doubles titles on the ITF Circuit She produced her best performance at a major by reaching the quarterfinals at the 2020 Australian Open She has reached two WTA 1000 finals at the 2018 Wuhan Open and 2022 Qatar Open Contents 1 Career 1 1 2011 First ITF Circuit title 1 2 2012 Junior US Open final 1 3 2013 Last junior year top 250 1 4 2014 ITF wins mononucleosis 1 5 2015 Recovery Wimbledon 4th round and top 100 1 6 2016 Out of the top 100 1 7 2017 First WTA title and top 40 1 8 2018 First Premier 5 final 1 9 2019 Miami Open semifinal top 15 and illness 1 10 2020 First major quarterfinal consistency 1 11 2021 Four titles WTA Finals runner up amp top 10 1 12 2022 World No 2 coaching change struggles after Covid fifth title 1 13 2023 2 Playing style 3 Endorsements 4 Personal life 5 Career statistics 5 1 Grand Slam performance timelines 5 1 1 Singles 5 1 2 Doubles 6 References 7 External linksCareer Edit2011 First ITF Circuit title Edit Kontaveit had success on the junior tour in 2011 her best Grand Slam performance of the year being at Roland Garros There she made the quarterfinals with wins over world No 6 Danka Kovinic and future Wimbledon junior champion Ashleigh Barty At the quarterfinal stage she lost to Irina Khromacheva the Wimbledon junior runner up 2 She also won the European Under 16 Junior Championships partnering 14 year old Tatjana Vorobjova in girls doubles they beat first seeded Czechs Barbora Krejcikova and Petra Rohanova 3 Kontaveit also made some breakthroughs on the pro circuit winning her maiden ITF title at her home event in Tallinn in January beating Zuzana Luknarova in the final She also made the finals in doubles partnering compatriot Maret Ani 4 Kontaveit was chosen for the 2011 Estonian Fed Cup team 5 but lost both of her singles matches in the World Group II tie against Spain 6 In August Kontaveit won her second title at the Savitaipale Open in Finland where she beat Dutch player Lisanne van Riet in the final 7 She continued in October with a third 10k title at the Djursholm Tennis Club Stockholm Open as an unseeded player She defeated top seed Marion Gaud in the quarterfinals and then seventh seed Syna Kayser in the final 8 In December Kontaveit won the Orange Bowl a Grade A tournament on the ITF Junior Circuit where she beat Eugenie Bouchard and Yulia Putintseva both with top 300 WTA rankings en route to the title Her junior ranking rose to her career high of No 9 9 2012 Junior US Open final Edit Kontaveit began the year at the Traralgon International an under 18 girls tournament in Australia Seeded second she reached the third round where she lost to Taylor Townsend 10 At the Junior Australian Open she defeated Miho Kowase and Lee So ra to advance to the third round before losing once more to eventual champion Taylor Townsend 11 For the second year Kontaveit was chosen for the Estonian Fed Cup team she played in the Europe Africa Zone I where she achieved two the biggest wins of her career at the time She posted Estonia s only win against Austria and became the lowest ranked player to beat a top 50 player in seven years with her straight sets victory over Tamira Paszek of Austria however Estonia failed to win either of their ties In the relegation play offs she achieved Estonia s only win in their tie against the Netherlands over Bibiane Schoofs but despite Kontaveit s performances Estonia was relegated to the Fed Cup Europe Africa Zone II Kontaveit was awarded a wildcard for the qualifying draw of her first WTA Tour tournament the Danish Open in Copenhagen where she won two qualifying matches before losing in the final round of qualifying to Annika Beck 12 She posted strong results at the Junior Grand Slam championships reaching the semifinals of the French Open girls singles losing to eventual champion Annika Beck 13 At Wimbledon she reached her second consecutive junior major semifinal where she lost to the eventual champion Eugenie Bouchard 14 In August she won her fourth 10k title in San Luis Potosi beating wildcard Victoria Rodriguez in the final in straight sets 15 Kontaveit became the first Estonian to reach the girls singles finals at the US Open but she was defeated in straight sets by Samantha Crawford 16 2013 Last junior year top 250 Edit Kontaveit began her final year in junior tennis at the Australian Open After some convincing wins including over higher ranked opponents including Antonia Lottner and Anna Danilina she lost in the semifinals to Katerina Siniakova 17 In March Kontaveit received a wildcard into the main draw of the Miami Open due to her management deal with IMG She lost to Christina McHale in straight sets 18 She played the rest of the year at ITF tournaments winning four titles from the five finals she reached including her first 25k title in Moscow 19 These results helped her enter the world s top 250 for the first time at the age of 18 2014 ITF wins mononucleosis Edit Kontaveit started the year as No 249 in the WTA rankings In January she qualified for her first WTA Tour tournament at the Auckland Open losing to Sachie Ishizu in three sets in the first round of the main draw 20 She then went on to play Fed Cup in Tallinn winning 49 games in a row spanning three Fed Cup matches and two matches in the following week s ITF event in her hometown After losing in the final to Timea Bacsinszky she then played another ITF event in Moscow where she lost in the final to Aliaksandra Sasnovich After mediocre performances at the Miami Open and the WTA event in Monterrey she performed well in a series of ITF tournaments on green clay in the United States She held two match points to make the final of a tournament in Indian Harbour Beach but lost the match to Taylor Townsend who went on to win the tournament Kontaveit lost in the final round of qualifying for the French Open Kontaveit qualified for Wimbledon for the first time in 2014 She held match point in the first round against Casey Dellacqua but lost the match in three sets She then qualified for the Swedish Open beating top seed Alize Cornet in the first round She lost in the second round to Jana Cepelova Kontaveit travelled to North America and played in an ITF event in Vancouver receiving a wildcard into the Canadian Open however did not play again for the remainder of the year after being diagnosed with infectious mononucleosis At the end of the season Kontaveit found a new coach in Australian Paul McNamee and began training in Istanbul at the KozaWOS Academy 2015 Recovery Wimbledon 4th round and top 100 Edit Kontaveit at the 2015 French Open After an extended training block in Australia to end 2014 Kontaveit s first tournament since the Canadian Open was the Auckland Open where she lost to Urszula Radwanska in three sets She then played her first Australian Open defeating Paula Kania in the first round of qualifying before losing a close match against Evgeniya Rodina Kontaveit returned to Estonia to play in the Fed Cup seemingly still suffering from illness as she put in poor performances and struggled to beat much lower ranked opponents She made a strong return to the ITF Circuit at her training base in Istanbul where she made the semifinals her equal best result before losing to Shahar Pe er She then went to Wiesbaden in Germany where she was routed by Adrijana Lekaj winning only three games Kontaveit then headed to La Marsa Tunisia where she lost to Romina Oprandi at the semifinal stage Participating in the French Open qualifying again she defeated Katerina Stewart before losing to French wildcard Clothilde de Bernardi Kontaveit transferred to the grass in Eastbourne and won the 50k event her biggest ITF title so far without losing a set She then continued this form in Surbiton making the semifinals before losing a three set match to Naomi Osaka She then qualified and made the semifinals in Ilkley beating players including Zhu Lin Jelena Ostapenko and Wang Yafan However she lost to Magda Linette after leading 5 1 in the third set and holding a match point Despite this loss Kontaveit had the most wins of any player on grass and this form granted her a main draw wildcard to the Wimbledon Championships She lost in the first round to the former world No 1 Victoria Azarenka Kontaveit played three WTA tournaments after Wimbledon the Swedish Open Istanbul Cup and Baku Cup Despite disappointing showings in the singles including losses to Olga Govortsova Melis Sezer and Karin Knapp she made her first WTA semifinal in doubles in Istanbul partnering Elizaveta Kulichkova after being offered a wildcard At the Vancouver Open Kontaveit qualified and beat Zhang Shuai and Patricia Maria Țig before losing to Alla Kudryavtseva in the quarterfinals Kontaveit had her first Grand Slam breakthrough at the US Open Starting as an unseeded player in qualifying she beat Stephanie Vogt Maria Teresa Torro Flor and Naomi Broady to qualify for the main draw There Kontaveit then beat Casey Dellacqua 31st seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and Madison Brengle to reach the fourth round proper where she lost to 23rd seed Venus Williams in straight sets With this result Kontaveit broke into the top 100 for the first time moving up over 60 places She finished the year by participating in WTA tournaments in Guangzhou Tashkent and Luxembourg However a thigh injury hindered her performance at the latter events and she ended her season with a retirement in qualifying in Luxembourg 2016 Out of the top 100 Edit Kontaveit started the season with a quarterfinal run at the Shenzhen Open before losing in the first round of the Australian Open to Garbine Muguruza After losing in the first round of the Mexican Open to No 4 seed Johanna Konta she reached the semifinals in Monterrey losing there to Kirsten Flipkens however she failed to qualify for both Indian Wells and Miami She also lost in the first round of the French Open to Venus Williams During her grass court season Kontaveit reached the quarterfinals at the Nottingham Open losing to Alison Riske and qualified for the Eastbourne International losing in the first round to Anna Lena Friedsam before losing in the first round of the Wimbledon Championships to Barbora Strycova Her next six tournaments including the US Open also ended in early exits therefore her ranking plummeted and she fell from the top 100 Her best year end performance was a semifinal run in the Guangzhou International Open 2017 First WTA title and top 40 Edit Kontaveit started season ranked 121 Her first tournament was the Australian Open and she was named one of the seven alternates through on the entry list but a number of withdrawals that did not qualify to the main draw She lost to Maria Sakkari in the first round She then won the Open Andrezieux Boutheon 42 beating Ivana Jorovic in the final After that she entered the Hungarian Ladies Open s main draw as a qualifier losing to eventual semifinalist Julia Gorges in the first round 21 At the Indian Wells Open Kontaveit entered the main draw as a qualifier and beat world No 47 Misaki Doi in the first round before falling to No 19 seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova Her next tournament was the Miami Open where once again as a qualifier she beat Kurumi Nara and recorded an upset over No 32 seed and world No 35 Ekaterina Makarova before losing to No 3 seed Simona Halep in straight sets Ranked No 99 Kontaveit reached her first WTA Tour level final at her next tournament the Ladies Open Biel Bienne beating former world No 38 Heather Watson Evgeniya Rodina Elise Mertens and Aliaksandra Sasnovich en route She then lost to fellow first time finalist Marketa Vondrousova Good results followed as she qualified for Stuttgart and reached the quarterfinals there As a qualifier she also entered into Madrid and Rome reaching the quarterfinals in the latter which was her first Premier 5 quarterfinal She lost to Simona Halep but beat world No 1 Angelique Kerber en route She followed that with a second round appearance at the French Open beating Monica Niculescu before losing to Garbine Muguruza 21 At her first grass court tournament of 2017 the Rosmalen Open Kontaveit reached her second final of the year En route she scored wins over sixth seed Kristyna Pliskova former Wimbledon semifinalist Kirsten Flipkens Carina Witthoft and seventh seed Lesia Tsurenko In the final she got past Natalia Vikhlyantseva to clinch her maiden WTA tournament title and ensure a top 40 debut 21 2018 First Premier 5 final Edit Kontaveit began the new season at the Brisbane International losing in second round to Aliaksandra Sasnovich At Sydney she retired in the qualifying due to heatstroke 22 At the Australian Open she defeated Aleksandra Krunic and Mona Barthel to advance to the third round where she faced world No 7 Jelena Ostapenko Kontaveit defeated her to advance to the fourth round in Melbourne for the first time 23 however she lost to Carla Suarez Navarro 24 In spring on clay courts she reached semifinals of Stuttgart and also in Rome where she defeated world No 9 Venus Williams and world No 2 Caroline Wozniaki in the same tournament At the French Open she was seeded 25th and reached the fourth round for the second Grand Slam tournament in a row losing to eventual finalist Sloane Stephens Kontaveit hired Nigel Sears as her new coach at the start of the grass court season but failed to defend her Rosmalen Open title losing in the first round to Veronika Kudermetova She reached the third round of Wimbledon losing to Alison Van Uytvanck At the Rogers Cup she lost to Petra Kvitova in straight sets and lost in the third round of the Cincinnati Open to eventual winner Kiki Bertens At the US Open she lost in the first round to Katarina Siniakova On 1 October 2018 she reached her best singles ranking of No 21 after finishing runner up at the Wuhan Open During the tournament she beat Sloane Stephens Donna Vekic Zhang Shuai Katarina Siniakova and Wang Qiang to reach the final where she lost in straight sets to Aryna Sabalenka She received a bye into the second round of the China Open after reaching the final of Wuhan She was later defeated by Caroline Wozniacki in the third round She finished the season being eliminated in the round robin stage of the WTA Elite Trophy after losing to Elise Mertens and beating Julia Gorges 2019 Miami Open semifinal top 15 and illness Edit Kontaveit started the year by reaching the quarterfinals of the Brisbane International beating Suarez Navarro and Kvitova before losing to eventual finalist Lesia Tsurenko She then lost to Elise Mertens in the second round of the Sydney International Seeded 20th at the Australian Open she won against Sara Sorribes Tormo and lost in the second round to Aliaksandra Sasnovich During the Middle Eastern swing she lost in the second round of the Qatar Open to Angelique Kerber Seeded 15th at the Dubai Tennis Championships she lost in the first round to Zhang Shuai Kontaveit then moved onto the Sunshine Double tournaments at Indian Wells and Miami Seeded 21st she reached the fourth round at Indian losing to Karolina Pliskova in three sets She then made her breakthrough at the Miami Open Seeded again 21st she defeated Amanda Anisimova Ajla Tomljanovic and Indian Wells champion Bianca Andreescu to reach her first Premier Mandatory quarterfinal She defeated 27th seed Hsieh Su wei despite trailing in the third set She then faced Ashleigh Barty but lost in straight sets These results propelled her ranking from No 20 to 14 and made her the highest ranked Estonian player in history male or female and surpassed compatriot Kaia Kanepi s career high rank of No 15 At her first clay court event of the season she was seeded eighth at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix she defeated Caroline Garcia in two sets to face Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in a rematch of last years quarterfinal She defeated her in straight sets to reach the quarterfinals for the third year in a row and face Viktoria Azarenka who retired in the third set This meant she reached the semifinals for the second year running and was due to face world No 1 Naomi Osaka However Osaka withdrew with an abdominal injury handing Kontaveit a walkover to the final to face Petra Kvitova She lost the final in two sets She was seeded 14th at the Madrid Open however lost in the first round to Aliaksandra Sasnovich in three sets Her next event was the Italian Open where she was seeded 15th She defeated Mona Barthel to face Maria Sakkari in the second round However she lost in straight sets Her results meant she was seeded 17th at the French Open her best seeding at a Grand Slam event but she lost there in the first round to Karolina Muchova Kontaveit at the 2019 Wimbledon Championships Her first grass court match ended in defeat to seventh seed Johanna Konta at the Birmingham Classic Seeded 16th at Eastbourne she came from a set down to defeat wildcarded Harriet Dart in the first round to set up a second round clash with Anna Lena Friedsam She was defeated in straight sets At Wimbledon she was the 20th seed and defeated Shelby Rogers in the first round to face Heather Watson She defeated her in two sets to face Karolina Muchova in the third round she lost to the Czech in two sets After taking the next month off she returned at the Rogers Cup where she is the 16th seed Her first match was against the wildcarded Maria Sharapova She defeated her in an epic two hour and 40 minute match She won a 17 minute service game to break Sharapova and to serve for the match In the second round she defeated Suarez Navarro who retired in the second set She lost to third seed Karolina Pliskova in the third round At the Cincinnati Open she defeated 13th seed Angelique Kerber in the first round to face Polish teenager Iga Swiatek in round two She defeated her in two sets to face the top seed and world No 2 Ash Barty in round three She lost in three tight sets despite serving for the match in the final set With this results she secured her the 21st seed at the US Open At the US Open Kontaveit opened the tournament with a win against Sorribes Tormo She defeated Ajla Tomljanovic in the second round but withdrew from her third round match against 13th seed Belinda Bencic with a viral illness She withdrew from two Premier events in Zhengzhou and the Pan Pacific Open She also withdrew from the Wuhan Open where she had reached the final in 2018 Her withdrawal meant that she would drop down the rankings with points being deducted from last year She later revealed on Instagram that she had been suffering from an ongoing illness and a small operation She said she may return in time for either Linz or the Kremlin Cup but withdrew from both 2020 First major quarterfinal consistency Edit Kontaveit began the season at the Brisbane International defeating Hsieh Su wei but losing to sixth seed Kiki Bertens in three sets 25 At Adelaide she lost to Pavlyuchenkova in the first round in straight sets 25 As the 28th seed at the Australian Open she defeated Astra Sharma and Sorribes Tormo and then crushed Belinda Bencic losing only one game to reach the fourth round for the second time in her career She then defeated Iga Swiatek in three sets to give Kontaveit a place in the quarterfinals where she lost against to Simona Halep 25 However with her win in the fourth round against Iga Swiatek she became the first Estonian male or female to reach a quarterfinal at the Australian Open 26 and with this tournament s result she moved up nine places in the WTA rankings to 22 She next went to Dubai where she made the quarterfinals but lost to Petra Martic 25 At the first Premier 5 tournament at Doha she defeated Anastasija Sevastova in straight sets before losing to ninth seed and eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka in a tight three set match Kontaveit returned to the tour at Palermo the first WTA tournament during the coronavirus pandemic She was seeded fourth and defeated in her first match Patricia Maria Țig In the second round she defeated Laura Siegemund in three sets to face Elisabetta Cocciaretto in the quarterfinals She also beat the Italian wildcard in three sets to reach her first semifinal of the season against top seed Petra Martic She defeated the Croatian in two sets to advance to her first final of the season There she was defeated by Frenchwoman Fiona Ferro in two sets despite serving for the second set Nevertheless the run to the final saw Kontaveit return to the top 20 Seeded 12th at the Cincinnati Open she defeated former top ten player Daria Kasatkina Jil Teichmann and Marie Bouzkova to set up a quarterfinal clash against former world No 1 Naomi Osaka Despite leading by a set and a break she eventually lost the match in three sets Seeded 14th at the US Open she defeated Danielle Collins in the first round in three sets In the second round she beat Slovenian teenager Kaja Juvan and 24th Magda Linette to reach the fourth round of the US Open for a second time to face fourth seeded Osaka However she was not able to avenge her prior defeat falling to the eventual champion in straight sets She then played at the Italian Open where she defeated Caroline Garcia in straight sets in the first round before falling to Svetlana Kuznetsova in the second At the French Open Kontaveit again faced Garcia in the first round Unfortunately Garcia managed to clinch her revenge against the 17th seed who suffered a disappointing loss in three sets culminating the season Her final event of the season was the Ostrava Open where she defeated Ekaterina Alexandrova in three sets before losing to Sara Sorribes Tormo in straight sets 2021 Four titles WTA Finals runner up amp top 10 Edit Kontaveit at the 2021 French Open Kontaveit started the new season at the WTA 500 event in Abu Dhabi as the tenth seed losing to Veronika Kudermetova in straight sets In Australia Kontaveit was placed in hard quarantine with 72 other players due to the COVID 19 pandemic meaning she wasn t allowed to practice for the upcoming Australian Open and had to stay in her hotel room for 14 days She played the WTA 500 Grampians Trophy where she defeated Christina McHale Bethanie Mattek Sands and Maria Sakkari to reach the final against American Ann Li However the final wasn t played due to scheduling difficulties Seeded 21st at the Australian Open she defeated Aliaksandra Sasnovich in straight sets and Heather Watson in three to reach the third round She then was defeated by Shelby Rogers in straight sets despite holding a 4 1 lead in the first set Next was the Middle Eastern swing At the WTA 500 Qatar Open she defeated seventh seed and 2021 Australian Open finalist Jennifer Brady in 57 minutes to progress She then beat former world No 1 and three time Grand Slam champion Angelique Kerber in an hour to reach the quarterfinals where she lost in three sets to the eventual champion Petra Kvitova At the WTA 1000 Dubai Championships she defeated Timea Babos and Sorana Cirstea to reach the third round She then lost to third seeded Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets At the Miami Open she was seeded 22nd and defeated Sorana Cirstea in three sets to reach the third round against the 16th seed Elise Mertens losing again in three sets Her ranking would drop a few spots because she was defending semifinal points from the 2019 edition of the tournament Her next tournament was the 2021 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix where she was the 2019 finalist In her first round match she defeated a qualifier German teenager Julia Middendorf to set up a match against the world No 4 and third seed Sofia Kenin She upset the American to reach the quarterfinals a feat she had achieved in her four previous main draw appearances at the tournament In the quarterfinals she lost to Aryna Sabalenka in three sets Shortly after the tournament Kontaveit and Nigel Sears announced an amicable coaching split after three years together In Madrid she defeated Serbian qualifier Nina Stojanovic to reach the second where she was defeated by the 16th seed Maria Sakkari in straight sets She withdrew from the Italian Open due to exhaustion and did not play another lead up clay court tournament in the weeks till Roland Garros Seeded 30th at the French Open she defeated Viktorija Golubic in three sets to progress to the second round where she defeated Kristina Mladenovic in two sets to reach the third round There she lost to the defending champion and eighth seed Iga Swiatek Her next tournament was the WTA 500 grass court event in Eastbourne She defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova and then third seed Bianca Andreescu her second top 10 win of the season and 13th overall to reach the quarterfinals 27 There she beat again Golubic in three tough sets to reach her second semifinal of the season against Camila Giorgi She reached the final after Giorgi s retirement but lost to Jelena Ostapenko At Wimbledon she was defeated in the first round by Marketa Vondrousova in three sets Her debut at the Olympic Games in Tokyo was cut short after being defeated by Maria Sakkari in the first round despite leading in the opening set Her next tournament was the Canadian Open edition of the Rogers Cup in Canada where she was defeated by American Jessica Pegula in the opening round despite leading by a set and a break She started a coaching trial with former player Dmitry Tursunov ex coach of Aryna Sabalenka At the Cincinnati Open she was defeated by world No 20 Ons Jabeur in the first round Her results improved the following week at the WTA 250 Cleveland tournament As the second seed she defeated Lauren Davis Caroline Garcia Katerina Siniakova and Sorribes Tormo to reach her third final of the season against Irina Camelia Begu She defeated Begu in straight sets to win her second career title 28 Seeded 28th at the US Open she reached the third round for the third time at a Grand Slam championship for the season where she lost again to seventh seed Iga Swiatek At the Ostrava Open she won her third WTA title of her career and the second in the season without losing a set She defeated No 3 seed Belinda Bencic in the quarterfinals 29 the local favorite world No 10 tournament No 2 seed Petra Kvitova in the semifinals her third top 10 win of the season 30 31 and No 4 seed Maria Sakkari in the final her fifth top 20 win of the season 32 This was the biggest WTA Tour title of the season and of her career since her first title in 2017 At the Chicago Open she defeated Madison Brengle in straight sets then withdrew before her second round match citing a thigh strain Her next tournament was at Indian Wells where she was seeded 18th In her first round match she defeated Martina Trevisan to face the 16th seed and defending champion Bianca Andreescu she defeated the Canadian to reach the fourth round for the second time in her career She then defeated qualifier Beatriz Haddad Maia to reach the quarterfinals for the first time She lost out to Ons Jabeur in straight sets This result meant she returned to the top 20 again the first time since 2020 Kontaveit s next tournament was the Kremlin Cup where she took a wildcard As the ninth seed she defeated Katerina Siniakova and Andrea Petkovic to reach the quarterfinals She demolished Garbine Muguruza to reach the semifinals She defeated Olympic silver medalist Marketa Vondrousova in straight sets to reach her fifth final of the season There she defeated Ekaterina Alexandrova in three sets coming from four games down in the second set to win her third title of the season and fourth WTA title This result propelled her back to 14th in the world and equal her career high It also put her in contention of reaching the WTA Finals as she reached tenth in the race Kontaveit then headed to the Transylvania Open As the second seed in Cluj Napoca she defeated Aleksandra Krunic Alison Van Uytvanck Anhelina Kalinina and Rebecca Peterson to reach her sixth final of the year She defeated Simona Halep in straight sets in the final winning her fourth title of the year all coming within the space of her last seven tournaments Her victory in the final was her 26th in her last 28 matches 33 As a result Kontaveit secured the final spot at the 2021 WTA Finals surpassing Jabeur whilst also guaranteeing her top 10 debut reaching a new career high of world No 8 on 1 November 2021 34 Kontaveit lost to Garbine Muguruza during the round robin stage but defeated Barbora Krejcikova and Karolina Pliskova in straight sets to finish first in her group and advance to the semifinals 35 She then defeated Maria Sakkari to reach the biggest final of her career posting a 7 0 undefeated record in semifinals this year She became the first Estonian tennis player male or female to qualify and reach the final of a year end tournament 36 Her semifinal win over Sakkari was her 48th win of the season tying Ons Jabeur for the most wins in 2021 37 She lost to Muguruza in the championship match finishing her breakout season ranked No 7 in the world 38 2022 World No 2 coaching change struggles after Covid fifth title Edit Kontaveit at the 2022 Wimbledon Championships Kontaveit started at the Sydney International as the fourth seed She began her campaign by defeating Zhang Shuai Elena Gabriela Ruse and Ons Jabeur to reach the semifinals However she was defeated by third seed Barbora Krejcikova in the final set tirbreaker despite having seven match points 39 Seeded No 7 at the Australian Open she was considered a favourite following her run of form at the end of 2021 She defeated Katerina Siniakova in the first round but was upset by Danish teenager and rising star Clara Tauson in the second round Australian Open 2022 Scores Latest Scores amp Live Updates WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 16 October 2022 lt ref gt Continuing a streak of indoor hardcourt wins in 2021 Kontaveit won the St Petersburg Trophy as the second seed reaching the final after defeating Jil Teichmann Sorana Cirstea Belinda Bencic and Jelena Ostapenko She defeated the top seed Maria Sakkari in the final in three sets and reached a career high of No 5 40 Kontaveit then played at the Qatar Ladies Open and defeated Ana Konjuh Elise Mertens Ons Jabeur and recent Dubai Tennis Championships champion Jelena Ostapenko to reach the final This was her second WTA 1000 final after Wuhan in 2018 She was defeated by Iga Swiatek 41 This run helped her ranking rise to a career high of No 4 in the world Kontaveit then experienced a drop in form losing in the third and second rounds at the Sunshine Double falling to 30th seed Marketa Vondrousova at Indian Wells and an unseeded American player Ann Li in Miami respectively At the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart she reached the quarterfinals where she lost to Aryna Sabalenka in three sets in a rematch of last year s quarterfinal She then withdrew from the Madrid Open after contracting COVID 19 this period of illness led to her reporting fitness struggles such as breathing issues throughout the summer months 42 Upon her return she participated at the Italian Open where she lost to Petra Martic in the second round after receiving a bye in the first round As the fifth seed at the French Open Kontaveit lost to Ajla Tomljanovic in the first round Despite this she reached a career high ranking of world No 2 on 6 June 2022 She announced her split with her coach Dmitry Tursunov following the conclusion of the tournament as he has difficulty traveling to events with her due to visa difficulties of people holding Russian citizenship 43 Kontaveit later revealed that she had COVID 19 after Stuttgart which affected her game in the next tournaments in Rome 44 and French Open 45 She played no warm up tournaments on grass in the lead up to the 2022 Wimbledon Championships 46 Kontaveit started working with a new coach German Torben Beltz 47 At the Wimbledon Championships Kontaveit played as second seed defeating Bernarda Pera in the first round but losing to unseeded Jule Niemeier in the second 48 Kontaveit received a late wildcard entry into Hamburg European Open where she defeated Irina Bara and Rebecca Peterson to reach quarterfinals Then she reached semifinals after Andrea Petkovic retired After that she beat Anastasia Potapova to reach her third final of the season and first since February In the final she lost to Bernarda Pera Pera continues winning streak faces Kontaveit in Hamburg final Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 22 July 2022 lt ref gt At the US Open Kontaveit came into the tournament as the second seed and beat Jaqueline Cristian in the first round She was then defeated in the second round by 23 time major champion Serena Williams who was making playing in her final tournament the match went three sets and lasted two and a half hours 49 It completed Kontaveit s subpar major record in 2022 having never made it past the second round the first such result since 2016 Kontaveit was the top seed at the inaugural edition of her home tournament the Tallinn Open She reached final defeating compatriot Kaia Kanepi in the semifinals before losing to seventh seed Barbora Krejcikova in straight sets 50 At the Ostrava Open Kontaveit entered as defending champion and third seed but retired after dropping the first set to unseeded Tereza Martincova in her first match 51 She announced she was ending her 2022 season due to a back injury shortly after 52 2023 Edit Kontaveit started her 2023 season at the Adelaide International week 1 where she was the sixth seed Kontaveit played Zheng Qinwen in first round where she lost in three close sets 53 failing to convert match points in a final set tiebreak 54 At the Adelaide International week 2 Kontaveit played ninth seed Paula Badosa in the first round losing in two sets 55 Seeded 16th at the Australian Open she defeated Julia Grabher in straight sets 56 posting her first win of the season and first win since the Tallinn Open in October In the second round she led by a set and a break against eventual semifinalist Magda Linette but lost in three sets 57 Playing style Edit Kontaveit swinging a backhand Kontaveit is an aggressive baseline player who uses a variety of strokes to force opponents to hit awkward shots this enables her to strike fast winners or draw quick errors 58 59 Due to her aggressive style she typically hits many winners and unforced errors Both her forehand and her two handed backhand are hit flat with relentless depth power and penetration allowing her to dictate play from the first stroke of the rally Kontaveit is also adept at hitting her backhand with slice slowing the pace of rallies she typically uses this shot while playing defensively allowing her to slow a rally s pace and reposition herself so that she can resume her aggressive style Kontaveit has a powerful first serve which peaks at 109 mph 175 km h allowing her to serve aces She also has effective kick and slice second serves which prevent her from double faulting and prevents opponents from scoring free points on second serve returns Although she typically plays from the baseline Kontaveit is adept at the net due to her doubles experience and frequently attacks the net with powerful swinging volleys which she uses to finish points quickly She typically aims to receive short balls from her opponents attacking with a high kick serve altering pace with a backhand slice and changing direction in a prolonged rally to do so 60 She is also noted for her speed around the baseline allowing her to reach most shots counterpunch effectively and hit running forehands this is aided by her exceptional footwork stamina and court coverage 59 Since hiring Nigel Sears as her coach Kontaveit has improved her service adding more power and variety such as the kick serve which has helped save break points against opponents her serve made further improvements under Dmitry Tursunov s tutelage making her a reliable server who serves multiple aces every match Kontaveit s movement also improved under Tursunov allowing her to hit powerful groundstroke winners on the run and developing a more confident positive mindset She has also become more aggressive and learned when to pull the trigger in rallies allowing her to develop into a proactive player who dominates her opponents through sheer power and aggression Endorsements EditKontaveit has been endorsed by Lacoste for clothing and apparel since 2019 she was previously endorsed by Adidas when on court she wears Nike footwear Kontaveit has used Babolat racquets since her junior career specifically using the Pure Strike range of racquets 61 Further partners include Tallink 62 Porsche Estonia 63 and Alexela Personal life EditIn 2022 Kontaveit began dating soccer player Brent Lepistu 64 Since 2023 her boyfriend lives in Romania where she has visited him 65 Career statistics EditMain article Anett Kontaveit career statistics Grand Slam performance timelines Edit Key W F SF QF R RR Q DNQ A NH W winner F finalist SF semifinalist QF quarterfinalist R rounds 4 3 2 1 RR round robin stage Q qualification round DNQ did not qualify A absent NH not held SR strike rate events won competed W L win loss record To avoid confusion and double counting these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player s participation has ended Singles Edit Tournament 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 SR W L Win Australian Open A A Q2 1R 1R 4R 2R QF 3R 2R 2R 0 8 12 8 60 French Open A Q3 Q2 1R 2R 4R 1R 1R 3R 1R 0 7 6 7 46 Wimbledon A 1R 1R 1R 3R 3R 3R NH 1R 2R 0 8 7 8 47 US Open A A 4R 1R 1R 1R 3R 4R 3R 2R 0 8 12 7 63 Win loss 0 0 0 1 3 2 0 4 3 4 8 4 5 3 7 3 6 4 3 4 1 1 0 31 36 30 55 Note Kontaveit withdrew from the 2019 US Open before her third round match which does not officially count as a loss Doubles Edit Tournament 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 SR W L Win Australian Open A A 2R 2R 1R A 0 3 2 3 40 French Open A A 3R A A A 0 1 2 1 67 Wimbledon 2R 1R 1R NH A 2R 0 4 2 4 33 US Open A A 2R A 2R A 0 2 2 2 50 Win loss 1 1 0 1 4 4 1 1 1 2 1 1 0 10 8 10 44 Note Kontaveit and Daria Kasatkina withdrew from the 2019 US Open before their second round match which does not officially count as a loss References Edit Tambur Silver 31 October 2021 VIDEO Anett Kontaveit becomes the first Estonian tennis player to qualify for WTA Finals www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament roland garros junior championships fra 2011 j ga fra 01a 2011 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Tennis Europe www tenniseurope org Retrieved 17 October 2022 www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament 10000 tallinn est 2011 w witf est 02a 2011 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Fed Cup ties Belgium meets U S Italy faces test tennis com 1 February 2011 www billiejeankingcup com https www billiejeankingcup com en draws results scorecards scorecards 2011 aspx Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament 10000 savitaipale fin 2011 w witf fin 02a 2011 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament 10000 stockholm swe 2011 w witf swe 06a 2011 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament orange bowl international tennis championship usa 2011 j ga usa 02a 2011 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament loy yang traralgon international aus 2012 j g1 aus 01a 2012 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament australian open junior championships aus 2012 j ga aus 01a 2012 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en head to head circuitCode WT amp player1Id 800311890 amp player2Id 800295954 Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament roland garros junior french championships fra 2012 j ga fra 01a 2012 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament the junior championships wimbledon gbr 2012 j ga gbr 01a 2012 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament 10000 san luis potosi mex 2012 w witf mex 05a 2012 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament us open junior tennis championships usa 2012 j ga usa 01a 2012 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament australian open junior championships aus 2013 j ga aus 01a 2013 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament miami usa 2013 w pm usa 02a 2013 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help www itftennis com https www itftennis com en tournament 25000 moscow rus 2013 w witf rus 03a 2013 draws and results Retrieved 17 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help ASB Classic 2014 Main Draw Singles PDF 25 January 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 25 January 2014 Retrieved 17 October 2022 a b c 2017 Results CBSSports com Retrieved 8 July 2017 Selgus Anett Kontaveidi tanase mangu pooleli jatmise pohjus Delfi Retrieved 7 February 2018 Kontaveit ousts seventh seed Ostapenko from Australian Open 2018 The Times of India 19 January 2018 Retrieved 22 January 2018 Carla Suarez Navarro back in Melbourne last eight eurosport com 21 January 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2018 a b c d Anett Kontaveit Matches Past Tournaments amp More wtatennis com Dramaatilise matsi voitnud Kontaveit paases esimest korda veerandfinaali ERR in Estonian 27 January 2020 Kontaveit ousts Andreescu Kasatkina upsets Swiatek in Eastbourne Kontaveit powers past Begu to win second career title in Cleveland Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 30 August 2021 Kontaveit upsets Bencic home favorite Kvitova eases into Ostrava semis Sakkari Kontaveit advance to Ostrava Open final Associated Press 25 September 2021 Sakkari ousts top seed Swiatek Kontaveit dismisses home hope Kvitova to set Ostrava final Kontaveit takes down Sakkari in Ostrava for third career title Kontaveit sweeps past Halep in Cluj Napoca for fourth title of year WTA Tennis 31 October 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Anett Kontaveit secures qualification for 2021 Akron WTA Finals Guadalajara WTA Tennis 31 October 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Kontaveit bests Pliskova to reach semifinals at WTA Finals Women s Tennis Association Kontaveit outduels Sakkari to reach WTA Finals championship Women s Tennis Association Anett Kontaveit and her remarkable turnaround this season Women s Tennis Association By the numbers The 2021 year end WTA rankings Women s Tennis Association Sydney Tennis Classic 2022 Scores Latest Scores amp Live Updates WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 16 October 2022 Insider Wrap Kontaveit hits career high ranking with St Petersburg title WTA Tennis 14 February 2022 Retrieved 15 February 2022 Qatar TotalEnergies Open 2022 Scores Latest Scores amp Live Updates WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 16 October 2022 Addicott Adam 29 June 2022 Anett Kontaveit Opens Up About COVID Battle After Wimbledon Exit UBITENNIS Retrieved 16 October 2022 Kontaveit coach Dmitry Tursunov announce split Anett Kontaveit hing laks kiiresti kinni ma ei ole veel 100 protsenti mina ise Delfi Sport Koroonast taastuv pisarais Kontaveit mul on tunne et maailma viiendal reketil pole oigust haige olla Postimees 23 May 2022 Kontaveit loobub Berliini jarel ka Eastbourne i turniirist ERR 16 June 2022 Kontaveidi uus treener ka maailma teisel reketil on piisavalt arenemisruumi ERR 20 June 2022 The Championships 2022 Scores Latest Scores amp Live Updates WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 16 October 2022 US Open 2022 Scores Latest Scores amp Live Updates WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 16 October 2022 Krejcikova sweeps past Kontaveit in Tallinn for first title of season AGEL Open 2022 2022 Scores Latest Scores amp Live Updates WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 16 October 2022 Anett Kontaveit on Instagram Hiii guys Unfortunately I won t be able to play in Guadalajara this year as my back is still hurting since Ostrava I really hope to come back to Mexico next year as I have so many good memories of my time there This means that it is the end of my 2022 season This year has had absolutely everything One of the hardest and happiest moments in my career and they all happen so we can learn from them and come out stronger on the other end Can t wait to see you all again in 2023 And I am very very grateful for everyone s continuous support Take care Anett xx Instagram Retrieved 16 October 2022 Zheng vs Kontaveit Round of 32 Adelaide International 1 2023 WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 28 January 2023 Zheng Qinwen saves match point ousts Kontaveit in Adelaide Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 28 January 2023 Kontaveit vs Badosa Round of 32 Adelaide International 2 2023 WTA Official Women s Tennis Association Retrieved 28 January 2023 Anett Kontaveit vs Julia Grabher Australian Open 19 January 2023 Retrieved 28 January 2023 Anett Kontaveit vs Magda Linette WS221 AO ausopen com Retrieved 28 January 2023 Kontaveit vanquishes Vikhlyantseva in Den Bosch for first WTA title WTATennis com 18 June 2017 Retrieved 8 July 2017 a b Pagliaro Richard 17 May 2017 Kontaveit Crushes Kerber in Rome TennisNow com Retrieved 8 July 2017 MacDonald Geoff 30 June 2017 Wimbledon 6 Players to Watch The New York Times Retrieved 8 July 2017 Anett Kontaveit professional tennis player from Estonia Anett Kontaveit professional tennis player from Estonia Retrieved 16 October 2022 Sustainability Sponsorships Tallink 16 October 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2022 Legendaarne autobrand pani Kontaveidiga leivad uhte kappi Tennis in Estonian 15 July 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2022 Anett Kontaveit makes relationship with footballer Brent Lepistu public following defeat in Tallinn Open finals Anett Kontaveit si a vizitat iubitul in RomaniaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anett Kontaveit Anett Kontaveit at the Women s Tennis Association Anett Kontaveit at the International Tennis Federation Anett Kontaveit at the Billie Jean King Cup Anett Kontaveit at Olympedia Anett Kontaveit at Olympics com Anett Kontaveit at ESBL in Estonian Official website in English and Estonian AwardsPreceded byGrit SadeikoKatrina Lehis Estonian Young Athlete of the Year20122015 Succeeded byJulia BeljajevaKelly SildaruSporting positionsPreceded by Lauren Davis Orange Bowl Girls Singles Champion Category 18 and under2011 Succeeded by Ana Konjuh Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anett Kontaveit amp oldid 1140470593, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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