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Yaroslava Shvedova

Yaroslava Vyacheslavovna Shvedova (Яросла́ва Вячесла́вовна Шве́дова; born 12 September 1987) is a Kazakhstani former professional tennis player. Before 2008, she represented her country of birth, Russia.

Yaroslava Shvedova
Shvedova at the 2016 US Open
Country (sports) Russia (2002–08)
 Kazakhstan (2008–2021)
ResidenceAstana, Kazakhstan
Born (1987-09-12) 12 September 1987 (age 36)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Turned proSeptember 2005
Retired1 October 2021
PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)
Prize moneyUS$ 6,717,223
Singles
Career record357–278 (56.2%)
Career titles1
Highest rankingNo. 25 (29 October 2012)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian Open3R (2015)
French OpenQF (2010, 2012)
WimbledonQF (2016)
US Open4R (2016)
Other tournaments
Olympic Games1R (2021)
Doubles
Career record286–187 (60.5%)
Career titles13
Highest rankingNo. 3 (22 February 2016)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian OpenQF (2012)
French OpenF (2015)
WimbledonW (2010)
US OpenW (2010)
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
Australian OpenSF (2013)
French OpenF (2010)
WimbledonSF (2016)
US OpenQF (2015, 2016, 2021)
Team competitions
Fed Cup25–18
Medal record
Women's tennis
Representing  Kazakhstan
Asian Games
2014 Incheon Team event

She won one singles title and 13 doubles titles on the WTA Tour, plus one singles and one doubles title on WTA 125 tournaments, as well as four singles and three doubles titles on the ITF Circuit. On 29 October 2012, she reached her best singles ranking of world No. 25. On 22 February 2016, she peaked at No. 3 in the doubles rankings.

Shvedova made three major singles quarterfinals: at the 2010 and the 2012 French Open, and also at the 2016 Wimbledon Championships. She won two Grand Slam women's doubles titles, at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships and the 2010 US Open, partnering American player Vania King in both. Shvedova is also one of only seven players to record a golden set in the Open era. She achieved this feat 2012 at Wimbledon in her match against Sara Errani, the only time a golden set was recorded in a Grand Slam championship.[1]

Career edit

2006–2008: Grand Slam debut, maiden WTA title, top 100 edit

In February 2007, she unexpectedly reached the final of the Bangalore Open, beating home-crowd favourite and No. 2 seed Sania Mirza in the quarterfinals. In the final, she defeated top-seeded defending champion Mara Santangelo in straight sets, to win her first WTA Tour title.[2][3] This win caused her to be in the top 100 for the first time, at 78.

At the 2007 Miami Open, she came through qualifying and impressively recorded her first-ever top 20 win over future No. 1, Ana Ivanovic, in the second round, beating her in two sets. However, Tathiana Garbin beat her in the third round.

In August 2008, she won an ITF Circuit title in Monterrey, Mexico, defeating Magdaléna Rybáriková in the final in two sets. Just over a week later, she won through the qualifying rounds for US Open, but lost to Agnieszka Radwańska in the first round.[4]

2009: French Open and US Open third rounds edit

 
Shvedova after her match against Maria Sharapova at the 2009 French Open

In 2009, Shvedova qualified for the main draw at Roland Garros, defeating Americans Shenay Perry in the first qualifying round and Angela Haynes in the second. She then beat Elena Baltacha in the final qualifying round to enter the main draw. She beat Kaia Kanepi and advanced to the third round after defeating Arantxa Rus, also a qualifier. There, she lost in a close three-sets match to former world No. 1, Maria Sharapova, returning from a long-lasting shoulder injury and then ranked 102.

At Wimbledon, she faced Monica Niculescu in the first round and defeated her with the loss of just one game, but lost to American teenager Melanie Oudin in the second. At the US Open, Shvedova pulled off the biggest win of her career by beating then No. 5 Jelena Janković in three sets, in a match where she saved two match points.[5]

2010: Two major doubles titles & one singles QF edit

Shvedova experienced a good run at the Miami Open. She gained direct entry into the main draw and won a tight first-round match against wildcard Ajla Tomljanović. She then defeated 23rd seed Sabine Lisicki in the second round after she retired whilst trailing 3–6, 1–0. In the third round, Shvedova advanced against unseeded Andrea Petkovic by winning another close match. She fell to sixth seed Agnieszka Radwańska in the fourth round, in straight sets.

At the Barcelona Open, Shvedova defeated Anabel Medina Garrigues in the first round before upsetting fourth-seeded Maria Kirilenko in the second. Next, she defeated Iveta Benešová, before falling to eventual tournament and the eventual French Open champion Francesca Schiavone in the semifinals.

Shvedova enjoyed arguably her best career result at the French Open. There, she advanced to the quarterfinals in the singles competition. She defeated eighth seed Agnieszka Radwańska, avenging her loss to her in Miami, en route to the quarterfinals. As the last unseeded player in the tournament, Shvedova was defeated by fourth seed Jelena Janković in the quarterfinal. In mixed doubles, she partnered with Julian Knowle to reach the final, beating doubles legends Cara Black and Leander Paes, the second seeds, along the way. They fell in a close final to sixth seeds Katarina Srebotnik and Nenad Zimonjić.

At the Wimbledon Championships, Shvedova entered the doubles competition unseeded with partner Vania King. The two began playing together at the start of the grass-court season two weeks before, and were only in their third event together. In a stunning string of upsets, Shvedova and King won the tournament, beating Elena Vesnina and Vera Zvonareva (who themselves beat Serena and Venus Williams in the quarterfinals) in the final.

Both Shvedova and King continued their good form onto the hardcourts of the US Open. Seeded sixth, the team continued to win match after match, before taking a spot in their second consecutive major final, this time facing Liezel Huber and Nadia Petrova. King and Shvedova won in three sets; the match was played over two days due to heavy rainfall.

2011 edit

 
Shvedova at the 2011 Washington Open

Shvedova began her season representing Kazakhstan at the Hopman Cup. She lost her first match to Ana Ivanovic in two sets. During her match against Ivanovic, Shvedova injured her right knee which caused her to pull out of the Hopman Cup.[6] Shvedova also missed the Australian Open due to the same right knee injury.

She returned from injury in February to play at Dubai where she lost in the first round to Zhang Shuai.[7] She went to play at the Qatar Open; seeded fifth for qualifying, she was defeated in the first round by wildcard Elena Vesnina. In March, she travelled to Indian Wells where she lost in the first round to Kimiko Date-Krumm.[8] At the Miami Open, after beating Sara Errani Shvedova retired in her second-round match against 28th seed Jarmila Groth due to a left thigh muscle strain.[9]

She began her clay-court season in Morocco at the Rabat Grand Prix. Seeded second, she was defeated in the second round by Anastasia Pivovarova.[10] At the Barcelona Open, Shvedova lost in the second round to sixth seed and eventual champion Roberta Vinci.[11] Playing at the Madrid Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to 10th seed Agnieszka Radwańska. At the Italian Open, she lost in the first round to qualifier Anastasia Rodionova in straight sets. In doubles, she and Vania King reached the final where they lost to Peng Shuai and Zheng Jie, also in straight sets.[12] Shvedova entered the French Open ranked No. 54 and lost in the first round to 14th seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. As a result of not defending her quarterfinalist points from the previous year, her ranking dropped to No. 115. In doubles, she and her regular doubles partner, Vania King, reached the semifinals where they fell to eventual champions Andrea Hlaváčková/Lucie Hradecká in two sets.[13]

Shvedova began grass-court season at the Birmingham Classic seeded 11th, and lost in the second round to Marina Erakovic.[14] At the Eastbourne International, she lost in the first round of qualifying to Mirjana Lučić-Baroni. Ranked world No. 123 at Wimbledon, she was easily defeated in the first round by qualifier Tamarine Tanasugarn.

Shvedova began wearing prescription sports glasses, after seeking medical advice about a nervous tic in one eye.[15]

She started her US Open Series at the Washington Open and was defeated in the first round by sixth seed Elena Baltacha.[16] In doubles, Shvedova and Sania Mirza won the title defeating Olga Govortsova/Alla Kudryavtseva in the final.[17] Ranked world No. 143 at the Vancouver Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to seventh seed Stéphanie Dubois. She then played at the Bronx Open where she reached the second round and lost to Romina Oprandi, after retiring early in the second set. Due to her ranking of 212, Shvedova had to play qualifying in order to make it into the main draw of the US Open. She lost in the first round of qualifying to Ekaterina Bychkova in two tie-breakers. In doubles, she and Vania King were the defending champions; they reached the final for a second year in a row but lost to Liezel Huber and Lisa Raymond.[18]

Seeded eighth for qualifying at the Korea Open, Shvedova qualified for the main draw beating wildcard Choi Ji-hee, Han Sung-hee, and third seed Rika Fujiwara. In the first round, she upset Tamarine Tanasugarn.[19] In the second round, Shvedova retired after losing the first set 6–7 to fourth seed Dominika Cibulková.[20] She qualified for the Japan Women's Open, defeating sixth seed Kristina Mladenovic, wildcard Risa Ozaki, and Hsieh Su-wei. Shvedova was defeated in the second round by seventh seed Chanelle Scheepers.[21] In doubles, she and Vania King advanced to the final where they lost to Date-Krumm/Zhang. Shvedova played her final tournament of the year at the Taipei Ladies Open. She reached the quarterfinals but lost to eighth seed Chang Kai-chen, in straight sets.

Shvedova ended the year as No. 206, her lowest year-end singles ranking since 2005. She also won four WTA Tour doubles titles. Her decline in form in singles was explained by a knee injury that required surgery.

2012 edit

 
Shvedova at the 2012 Wimbledon Championships

Shvedova started the year playing qualifying at the Australian Open. She lost in the first round of qualifying to Bibiane Schoofs in a marathon three-set match.[22]

She then rebounded, qualifying into the main draw at Copa Colsanitas defeating Raluca Olaru and Leticia Costas. In the main draw, Shvedova reached the quarterfinals where she fell to Tímea Babos. Receiving a wildcard to play at the Monterrey Open, she beat countrywoman Sesil Karatantcheva in the first round.[23] She lost to Mandy Minella in the second round in three sets.[24] At the Abierto Mexicano, Shvedova retired due to a left thigh injury in the final round of qualifying to top seed Edina Gallovits-Hall.[25] Seeded fourth at the $25K event in Irapuato, she reached the final where she lost to sixth seed Kiki Bertens.[26] Shvedova continued her rise in form at another $25K event in Poza Rica, where she won the title beating Monica Puig in the final.[27]

Shvedova started her clay-court season by playing qualifying at the Charleston Open. Seeded 20th for qualifying, she qualified for the main draw defeating Jessica Pegula and tenth seed Andrea Hlaváčková. In the main draw, she reached the third round after defeating Alexandra Panova and 12th seed Yanina Wickmayer. In the third round, she lost to sixth seed Sabine Lisicki.[28] Seeded seventh for qualifying at the Rabat Grand Prix, Shvedova lost in the second round of qualifying to Bianca Botto. At the Portugal Open, Shvedova was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Bianca Botto. Due to having a low ranking, Shvedova played qualifying at the French Open. She qualified into the main draw beating Ajla Tomljanović, CoCo Vandeweghe, and Elena Bogdan. In the main draw, she defeated Mandy Minella, Sofia Arvidsson, and Carla Suárez Navarro in the first three rounds. In the fourth round, she upset seventh seed and defending champion Li Na, 3–6, 6–2, 6–0 to advance to her second French Open quarterfinal.[29] This was Shvedova's biggest win of her career in singles. She lost to fourth seed and reigning Wimbledon champion, Petra Kvitová, in the quarterfinals only in three sets.[30] Due to making the quarterfinals at the French Open, Shvedova's ranking went from 142 to 62. In doubles, she and Vania King reached the quarterfinals where they lost to seventh seeds and eventual finalists Maria Kirilenko/Nadia Petrova.

On 15 June 2012, Shvedova and her partner, Sania Mirza, made a shock first-round exit from the Birmingham Classic; they lost to Iveta Benešová/Alla Kudryavtseva in two sets.[31] At the Wimbledon Championships, Shvedova received a wildcard into the main draw. There, she defeated Chanelle Scheepers and Kiki Bertens to reach the third round where she faced tenth seed Sara Errani and won the fourth "Golden Set" in the history of tennis. She won all 24 points in the fifteen-minute-long first set, blasting 14 winners and making no unforced errors before losing the first point of the second set to break the sequence. She went on to win the match in straight sets 6–0, 6–4 reaching the second week of Wimbledon for the first time.[32] In the fourth round, she was defeated by sixth seed and eventual champion Serena Williams.[33]

Representing Kazakhstan at the 2012 London Olympics, she reached the second round of the women's singles where she lost to 15th seed Sabine Lisicki.[34] In doubles, she reached the second round with partner Galina Voskoboeva.[35]

As the top seed for qualifying at the Cincinnati Open, Shvedova qualified for the main draw beating wildcard Lauren Davis and 14th seed Anna Tatishvili. She beat 16th seed Lucie Šafářová in the first round. In the second round, Shvedova was up against qualifier Urszula Radwańska and won the first set 6–4; Urszula was leading 4–1 in the second set when Shvedova retired due to heat illness.[36] At the Texas Tennis Open, Shvedova lost in the first round in a tough three set match to second seed and eventual finalist Jelena Janković.[37] Ranked 45 at the US Open, Shvedova was defeated in the second round by 20th seed and eventual quarterfinalist Roberta Vinci.

At the Pan Pacific Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to 2010 French Open champion Francesca Schiavone.[38] At the China Open, Shvedova faced 12th seed Dominika Cibulková in the first round. Shvedova won the first set 6–4 and was leading 4–1 in the second set when Cibulková retired due to a left hip injury. In the second round, she was defeated by Peng Shuai.[39] Seeded fifth at Osaka, she lost in the first round to wildcard Tamarine Tanasugarn.[40] Shvedova played her final tournament of the year at the Kremlin Cup. She beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova[41] but in the second round, she was defeated by seventh seed Maria Kirilenko.[42]

Shvedova ended the year ranked 29 in singles and 26 in doubles.

2013 edit

 
Shvedova at the 2013 French Open

Shvedova began her year at the Auckland Open. Seeded sixth, she defeated Lara Arruabarrena in the first round, but lost in the second round to Elena Vesnina.[43] In doubles, Shvedova and her partner Julia Görges both reached the final, but they lost to Cara Black/Anastasia Rodionova.[44] Seeded fourth at the Hobart International, Shvedova was defeated in the second round to eventual champion Elena Vesnina.[45] Seeded 28th at the Australian Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Annika Beck.[46]

Seeded second at the first edition of the Brasil Tennis Cup, Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Melinda Czink in three sets.[47] However, in doubles, she and her partner Medina Garrigues won the title defeating Anne Keothavong/Valeria Savinykh in the final.[48] Seeded 31st at the Indian Wells Open, Shvedova got a bye into the second round where she lost to qualifier Lesia Tsurenko.[49] At the Miami Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Zheng Jie.[50]

Shvedova started her clay-court season at the Charleston Open. As the 14th seed, she lost in the first round to qualifier Vania King.[51] At the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, Shvedova reached the quarterfinals with wins over Roberta Vinci and Carla Suárez Navarro. In the quarterfinals, she lost to third seed Angelique Kerber.[52] Shvedova stunned tenth seed and former world No. 1, Caroline Wozniacki, in the first round at the Madrid Open, 6–2, 6–4.[53] In the second round, she beat Kirsten Flipkens.[54] Shvedova withdrew from her third-round match against wildcard Medina Garrigues due to a right arm injury.[55] Seeded 27th at the French Open, Shvedova had quarterfinalist points to defend from last year. In the first round, she defeated CoCo Vandeweghe.[56] However, she was defeated in the second round by qualifier Paula Ormaechea.[57] As a result of her second-round loss at the French Open, Shvedova failed to defend her quarterfinalist points from last year, and her ranking dropped from 31 to 52.

Ranked 55 at Wimbledon, Shvedova beat Kiki Bertens[58] and then withdrew from her second-round match against 2011 Wimbledon champion, Petra Kvitová, due to an arm injury.[59]

She returned to action at the New Haven Open and retired in the final round of qualifying to fifth seed Stefanie Vögele. Ranked 78 at the US Open, Shvedova reached the third round defeating Olga Puchkova and lucky loser Patricia Mayr-Achleitner. She lost in the third round to world No. 1 and eventual champion, Serena Williams, in straight sets.[60]

Seeded eighth at the Tashkent Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Vesna Dolonc.[61] In doubles, she and Tímea Babos won the title defeating Mandy Minella/Olga Govortsova in the final.[62] At the Guangzhou International Open, she lost to Zheng Jie in the first round. Seeded seventh at the Ningbo International Open, Shvedova reached the quarterfinals defeating Tímea Babos and wildcard Zheng Saisai. She then lost in the quarterfinals to fourth seed Yvonne Meusburger.[63] Seeded tenth for qualifying at the China Open, Shvedova lost in the second round of qualifying to Sharon Fichman. At the Kremlin Cup, she was defeated in the first round by Elena Vesnina, 6–1, 6–2.[64] Competing at the first edition of the Nanjing Ladies Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to second seed Yanina Wickmayer.[65] She played her final tournament of the year at the Taipei Ladies Open. In the first round, she upset fourth seed Ayumi Morita in the first round.[66] However, in doubles, Shvedova and Caroline Garcia won the title defeating Anna-Lena Friedsam/Alison Van Uytvanck in the final.[67]

Shvedova ended the year ranked 81 in singles and 59 in doubles.

2014 edit

 
Shvedova at the 2014 Madrid Open

Shvedova began the year at the Brisbane International. As the top seed for qualifying, she lost in the second round of qualifying to Anastasia Rodionova. Seeded 12th in qualifying at the Sydney International, Shvedova was defeated in the final round of qualifying by fifth seed Christina McHale. At the Australian Open, she lost in the first round to 13th seed Sloane Stephens.[68]

At the first edition of the Rio Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Patricia Mayr-Achleitner.[69] At the Brasil Tennis Cup, Shvedova reached the semifinals with wins over Sílvia Soler Espinosa, Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová, and sixth seed Alexandra Cadanţu. She lost in the semifinals to second seed Garbiñe Muguruza.[70] In doubles, she and her partner Medina Garrigues won the title defeating Schiavone/Soler Espinosa in the final.[71]

Shvedova, as the third seed, qualified for the Indian Wells Open by beating Magda Linette and 13th seed Kimiko Date-Krumm. In the main draw, she reached the third round defeating Chanelle Scheepers and 24th seed Kaia Kanepi. In the third round, she lost to tenth seed and former world No. 1, Caroline Wozniacki.[72] At the Miami Open, Shvedova defeated 2010 French Open Champion Francesca Schiavone in the first round.[73] In the second round, Shvedova lost to world No. 1 and eventual champion, Serena Williams.[74]

Shvedova began her clay-court season at the Charleston Open. She defeated qualifier Zheng Saisai in the first round but lost in the second round to seventh seed Samantha Stosur.[75] In doubles, she and Medina Garrigues won the title defeating Chan Hao-ching/Chan Yung-jan in the final.[76] At the Portugal Open, Shvedova defeated Karin Knapp in the first round.[77] She lost in the second round to second seed Eugenie Bouchard, 4–6, 2–6.[78] Seeded seventh for qualifying at the Madrid Open, she lost in the first round to Mariana Duque Mariño. Shvedova reached the quarterfinals at the Nürnberger Versicherungscup defeating Patricia Mayr-Achleitner and sixth seed Kurumi Nara. She lost to second seed and eventual champion Eugenie Bouchard in the quarterfinals.[79] Ranked world No. 69 at the French Open, Shvedova won her first-round match over Lauren Davis.[80] In the second round, she lost to wild card Pauline Parmentier.[81]

Shvedova played at the Rosmalen Open, her only grass-court tune-up tournament before Wimbledon. She upset second seed Dominika Cibulková in the first round.[82] In the second round, she defeated in a tight match wild card Michaëlla Krajicek.[83] Shvedova lost in the quarterfinals to eighth seed Klára Koukalová, 2–6, 4–6.[84] At Wimbledon, Shvedova defeated wildcard Kristýna Plíšková in a first-round thriller.[85] In the second round, she beat last year quarterfinalist Kaia Kanepi.[86] In the third round, she faced Madison Keys. Shvedova won the first set 7–6; the second set was tied 6–6 when Keys retired due to a right thigh injury.[87][88] In the fourth round, Shvedova lost to 19th seed and last year finalist Sabine Lisicki.[89]

Seeded fourth at the Swedish Open, Shvedova was upset in the first round by qualifier Laura Siegemund.[90]

Seeded tenth for qualifying at the Western & Southern Open, she lost in the first round of qualifying to American wildcard Nicole Gibbs. At the US Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Monica Niculescu.[91]

Shvedova had a first-round loss at the Korea Open to Anna-Lena Friedsam.[92] She played her final tournament of the year at the China Open and was defeated in the first round by Roberta Vinci.[93]

Shvedova ended the year ranked 66.

2015 edit

 
Shvedova at the 2015 Wimbledon Championships

Shvedova began her 2015 year at the Brisbane International. Getting past qualifying, she beat Sabine Lisicki in the first round.[94] In the second round, she lost to top seed and eventual champion Maria Sharapova.[95] At the Sydney International, Shvedova was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Kateřina Siniaková. In Melbourne at the Australian Open, Shvedova upset 16th seed Lucie Šafářová in a first-round thriller.[96] She then beat Monica Puig in the second round.[97] In the third round, Shvedova lost to 21st seed Peng Shuai.[98]

At the Miami Open, Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Johanna Larsson.[99]

Shvedova began her clay-court season at the Charleston Open. In the first round, she beat Stefanie Vögele.[100] In the second round, Shvedova lost to thirteenth seed Irina-Camelia Begu.[101] Seeded fifth at the Copa Colsanitas, Shvedova reached her first WTA singles final since 2007 defeating Maryna Zanevska, qualifier Sachia Vickery, second seed Monica Puig, and Mariana Duque Mariño. In the final, Shvedova lost to Teliana Pereira.[102] At the Madrid Open, she lost in the first round of qualifying to Sesil Karatantcheva. However, in doubles, she and Casey Dellacqua won the title defeating Muguruza/Suárez Navarro in the final.[103] At the Nürnberger Versicherungscup, Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Kiki Bertens. Ranked 69 at the French Open, she lost in the first round to seventh seed and 2008 champion, Ana Ivanovic.[104] In doubles, she and her partner, Casey Dellacqua, reached the final where they lost to Mattek-Sands/Šafářová.[105]

Shvedova only played one grass-court warm-up tournament before Wimbledon. At the Rosmalen Open, she stunned top seed Eugenie Bouchard in the first round.[106] In the second round, she beat Marina Erakovic.[107] In the quarterfinals, Shvedova was defeated by fifth seed and eventual champion, Camila Giorgi.[108] Ranked 79 at the Wimbledon Championships, Shvedova lost in the first round to Mirjana Lučić-Baroni.[109]

At the Bucharest Open, she lost in the final round of qualifying to Cristina Dinu.[110] In Turkey at the İstanbul Cup, Shvedova lost in the first round to Bojana Jovanovski.[111]

Shvedova began her US Open series at the Rogers Cup. She lost in the second round of qualifying to Monica Puig. At the Western & Southern Open, Shvedova qualified for the main draw defeating Jarmila Gajdošová and Mariana Duque Mariño. In the first round, she upset ninth seed Garbiñe Muguruza.[112] In the second round, she was defeated by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.[113] In doubles, she and Dellacqua reached the final but lost to Chan Hao-ching/Chan Yung-jan.[114] Seeded second for qualifying at the US Open, Shvedova lost in the final round of qualifying to Tereza Mrdeža.[115] In doubles, Shvedova and Dellacqua advanced to the final where they were defeated by Hingis/Mirza.[116]

At the Korea Open, Shvedova faced Christina McHale in her first-round match. McHale won the first set 6–4; Shvedova led 2–1 in the second set when she abandoned the match.[117] At the Tashkent Open, Shvedova beat eighth seed Andreea Mitu in the first round.[118] In the second round, she lost to Evgeniya Rodina.[119] At the China Open, Shvedova lost in the final round of qualifying to eighth seed Irina Falconi.[120] After the China Open, Shvedova played for the first time at the Hong Kong Open. She beat Jarmila Gajdošová in the first round.[121] In the second round, she was defeated by eighth seed and doubles partner Alizé Cornet.[122] In doubles, Shvedova and Cornet won the title beating Lara Arruabarrena/Andreja Klepač.[123] Seeded fourth at the first edition of the Hua Hin Championships, Shvedova reached the final defeating wildcard Kamonwan Buayam, qualifier Liu Chang, Duan Yingying, and Wang Qiang. In the final, Shvedova beat Naomi Osaka for her first WTA 125 title.[124] Shvedova played her final tournament of the year at the Taipei Challenger. Seeded second, she made it to the quarterfinals beating Marina Melnikova and Amandine Hesse. In the quarterfinals, Shvedova faced fifth seed Kirsten Flipkens. Shvedova won the first set 6–4; Flipkens was leading 2–1 in the second set when Shvedova pulled out of the tournament.[125]

Shvedova ended the year ranked 82 in singles and No. 6 in doubles.

2016 edit

 
Shvedova at the 2016 French Open

Shvedova started the year at the Shenzhen Open. Coming through qualifying, she lost in the first round to Anett Kontaveit.[126] At the Sydney International, Shvedova retired during her qualifying first-round match against Sesil Karatantcheva. At the Australian Open, she won her first-round match over Tsvetana Pironkova.[127] In the second round, she lost to 15th seed Madison Keys.[128]

Getting past qualifying at the Dubai Tennis Championships, Shvedova stunned seventh seed Roberta Vinci in the first round,[129] before she was defeated by eventual champion Sara Errani.[130] At the Qatar Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Nao Hibino.[131] At the Indian Wells Open, she won her first two rounds over qualifier Kristýna Plíšková and 11th seed Lucie Šafářová. In the third round, she was defeated by qualifier Nicole Gibbs.[132] At the Miami Open, Shvedova lost in the final round of qualifying to Kristýna Plíšková. In doubles, she and Tímea Babos reached the final where they lost to Mattek-Sands/Šafářová.[133]

Shvedova started her clay-court season at the Charleston Open where she was defeated in the second round by fifth seed Sara Errani.[134] Playing at the Madrid Open, she lost in the first round of qualifying to Mariana Duque. At the Italian Open, Shvedova was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Ana Konjuh. She played her final tournament before the French Open at Internationaux de Strasbourg and lost in the first round to lucky loser Virginie Razzano.[135] At the French Open, Shvedova was defeated in the first round by 13th seed and 2009 French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova.[136]

She began her grass-court season at the Rosmalen Open where she was defeated in the first round by third seed and eventual finalist Kristina Mladenovic.[137] However, in doubles, Shvedova and Oksana Kalashnikova won the title defeating Xenia Knoll and Aleksandra Krunić in the final.[138] Playing at the first edition of the Mallorca Open, Shvedova lost in the first round to Daniela Hantuchová.[139] At the Eastbourne International, she lost in the second round of qualifying to Alison Van Uytvanck. Competing at the Wimbledon Championships, Shvedova reached the quarterfinals in singles for the first time in her career defeating Julia Görges, 17th seed Elina Svitolina, 2013 Wimbledon finalist Sabine Lisicki, and 28th seed Lucie Šafářová. In her quarterfinal match, she lost to eighth seed, five-time Wimbledon champion, and former world No. 1, Venus Williams.[140] In doubles, Shvedova and Tímea Babos reached the final upsetting top seeds Hingis/Mirza en route to the final.[141] In the final, Shvedova and Babos lost to the Williams sisters.[142] Due to her quarterfinals result at Wimbledon, Shvedova's singles ranking improved from 96 to 49.

Seeded seventh at the Swedish Open, Shvedova retired during her first-round match against Mona Barthel due to a mid-back injury.[143] Representing Kazakhstan at the 2016 Rio Olympics, Shvedova lost in the first round to Misaki Doi of Japan.[144] In doubles, she and her compatriot, Galina Voskoboeva, faced Kirsten Flipkens/Yanina Wickmayer in the first round. Flipkens/Wickmayer won the first set 6–1. The match was not continued because Shvedova and Voskoboeva pulled out of the doubles event at the Olympics.

In Cincinnati at the Western & Southern Open, Shvedova lost in the first round of qualifying to Ana Konjuh. At the US Open, Shvedova made it to the fourth round for the first time in her career defeating Lara Arruabarrena, Wang Qiang, and Zhang Shuai. In the fourth round, she was defeated by top seed Serena Williams.[145]

In China at the Wuhan Open, Shvedova reached the third round with wins over wildcard Zheng Saisai and 13th seed Roberta Vinci. She lost in the third round to fourth seed Simona Halep.[146] In Beijing at the China Open, Shvedova advanced to the quarterfinals defeating seventh seed Carla Suárez Navarro, Belinda Bencic, and Alizé Cornet. She lost in her quarterfinal match to third seed and eventual champion, Agnieszka Radwańska.[147] Seeded eighth at her final tournament of the year at the Tianjin Open, Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Naomi Osaka.[148]

She ended the year ranked 33.

2017 edit

Shvedova withdrew from the Shenzhen Open due to a left foot injury.[149] She started at the Sydney International where she lost in the first round of qualifying to Naomi Broady. At the Australian Open, she was defeated in the first round by 27th seed Irina-Camelia Begu.[150]

Competing in Russia at the St. Petersburg Trophy, Shvedova lost in the first round to Russian wildcard Natalia Vikhlyantseva.[151] At Dubai, she was defeated in the first round by Monica Puig.[152] In March, she played at the Indian Wells Open where she lost in the first round to American qualifier Varvara Lepchenko.[153] In Miami, she had her first win of the year when she beat Jelena Janković in the first round.[154] In the second round, she was defeated by 17th seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.[155]

Shvedova started on clay court at the Morocco Open where she was eliminated in the second round by Tatjana Maria.[156] At the Madrid Open, she was defeated in the first round by eighth seed Svetlana Kuznetsova.[157] In Rome, she lost in the first round to ninth seed Venus Williams.[158] Seeded seventh at the Nürnberger Versicherungscup, she retired from her quarterfinal match due to an injury after losing the first set to Misaki Doi.[159] At the French Open, she lost in the first round to fifth seed Elina Svitolina.[160]

Shvedova missed the Wimbledon Championships due to undergoing ankle surgery.[161] As a result of this surgery, she missed the rest of the season.[162]

She ended the year ranked 292.

2020: Comeback edit

Following surgery and childbirth, Shvedova began her comeback in February at the Dubai Championships. Using a protected ranking, she played doubles alongside Darija Jurak. They lost in the first round to sisters Lyudmyla/Nadiia Kichenok. Shvedova played her first singles match since 2017 at the Qatar Open where she was defeated in the first round by qualifier Laura Siegemund.[163] In doubles, she and Jurak lost in the first round to Russian team of Ekaterina Alexandrova and Anna Blinkova.

In March, she became the first player to face mandated quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic.[164]

Shvedova didn't play any more matches for the rest of the season. She ended the year without a ranking.

2021: Olympic Games & retirement edit

Shvedova started her season in Dubai at the first edition of the Abu Dhabi Open and lost in the first round to qualifier Bianca Turati.[165] At the first edition of the Yarra Valley Classic, she was defeated in her first-round match by Vera Lapko.[166] Competing at the Australian Open for the first time since 2017, she fell in the first round to Camila Giorgi.[167]

In March, Shvedova played at the Qatar Open but was eliminated in the second round of qualifying by Bethanie Mattek-Sands. At the Dubai Tennis Championships, she was beaten in the first round by Jessica Pegula.[168] Playing at the Miami Open for the first time since 2017, she again lost in round one, to qualifier Tereza Martincová.[169]

After Miami, Shvedova moved on toward the clay-court season. Playing at the Charleston Open for the first time since 2016, she was defeated in the first round by Misaki Doi.[170] Competing in Madrid for the first time since 2017, she lost her first-round match to Ons Jabeur.[171] At the Italian Open, she scored her first WTA Tour main-draw win since reaching the 2017 Nuremberg quarterfinals with a remarkable victory over Italian wildcard Martina Trevisan.[172] She then was knocked out in the second round by top seed Ashleigh Barty.[173]

Representing Kazakhstan at the Summer Olympics, Shvedova retired during her first-round match against Ajla Tomljanović due to heat illness.[174] In August, at the Cincinnati Open, she lost in the first round of qualifying to Zhang Shuai. At the first edition of the Cleveland Open, she was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Linda Fruhvirtová. And again, at the US Open, she was eliminated in the first round by Jasmine Paolini.[175]

On October 1, 2021, in a ceremony at the Astana Open, Shvedova announced her retirement from tennis. There was a celebration of her career as well.[176]

Playing style edit

Shvedova is noted for her powerful serve, groundstrokes, and proficient net play. Her favorite serve is the flat serve down the T, her weakness is her consistency on the forehand side.

Personal life edit

Shvedova was born to Russian father Vyacheslav and Bashkir mother Nurzia, who used to be a professional runner (winner of the International Association of Ultra Runners 100 km World Championships, 1992). Shvedova has one brother. She began playing tennis at age 8 when her father introduced her to the sport in Chernogolovka (Moscow region). Shvedova changed her nationality from Russian to Kazakhstani in 2008 as part of the country's attempts to boost its sporting profile.[177][178][179] Shvedova gave birth to twins in October 2018.[180]

Performance timeline edit

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RR Q# P# DNQ A Z# PO G S B NMS NTI P NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (P#) preliminary round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (Z#) Davis/Fed Cup Zonal Group (with number indication) or (PO) play-off; (G) gold, (S) silver or (B) bronze Olympic/Paralympic medal; (NMS) not a Masters tournament; (NTI) not a Tier I tournament; (P) postponed; (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.

Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Fed Cup/Billie Jean King Cup and Olympic Games are included in win–loss records.[181]

Singles edit

Russia Kazakhstan
Tournament 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 SR W–L Win%
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian Open A A Q3 2R 1R 2R A Q1 1R 1R 3R 2R 1R A A A 1R 0 / 9 5–9 36%
French Open A Q1 1R Q1 3R QF 1R QF 2R 2R 1R 1R 1R A A A A 0 / 10 12–10 55%
Wimbledon A 1R 1R Q2 2R 2R 1R 4R 2R 4R 1R QF A A A NH A 0 / 10 13–10 57%
US Open A Q3 1R 1R 3R 1R Q1 2R 3R 1R Q3 4R A A A A 1R 0 / 9 8–9 47%
Win–loss 0–0 0–1 0–3 1–2 5–4 6–4 0–2 8–3 4–4 4–4 2–3 8–4 0–2 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–2 0 / 38 38–38 50%
WTA 1000
Dubai / Qatar Open[a] NT1 2R A 1R 1R A A A A 1R 1R A A 1R 1R 0 / 7 1–7 13%
Indian Wells Open A A Q1 1R 2R 1R 1R A 2R 3R A 3R 1R A A NH A 0 / 8 5–8 38%
Miami Open A A 3R 1R A 4R 2R A 1R 2R 1R Q2 2R A A NH 1R 0 / 9 8–9 47%
Madrid Open NH A 1R 1R A 3R Q1 Q1 Q1 1R A A NH 1R 0 / 5 2–4 33%
Italian Open A A A Q1 2R 2R 1R A A A A Q1 1R A A A 2R 0 / 5 3–5 38%
Canadian Open A A A A 2R 2R A A A A Q2 A A A A NH A 0 / 2 2–2 50%
Cincinnati Open NT1 1R 2R A 2R A Q1 2R Q1 A A A A Q1 0 / 4 3–4 43%
Pan Pacific / Wuhan Open[b] A A A Q1 A 2R A 1R A A A 3R A A A NH 0 / 3 3–3 50%
China Open NT1 1R 1R A 2R Q2 1R Q2 QF A A A NH 0 / 5 4–5 44%
Career statistics
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Career
Tournaments 1 2 15 13 17 22 13 13 15 15 14 17 10 0 0 1 10 Career total: 178
Titles 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career total: 1
Finals 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career total: 2
Hard Win–loss 1–1 1–1 8–9 4–12 8–10 12–14 3–6 5–8 4–10 6–7 6–8 12–10 1–5 0–0 0–0 0–1 0–7 1 / 110 71–109 39%
Clay Win–loss 0–0 0–0 1–3 0–0 8–4 8–5 2–5 8–3 5–3 5–6 5–4 1–4 3–5 0–0 0–0 0–0 1–3 0 / 46 47–45 51%
Grass Win–loss 0–0 0–1 1–2 2–1 2–3 3–3 1–2 4–2 1–0 5–2 2–2 4–3 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0 / 22 25–21 54%
Overall win–loss 1–1 1–2 10–14 6–13 18–17 23–22 6–13 17–13 10–13 16–15 13–14 17–17 4–10 0–0 0–0 0–1 1–10 1 / 178 143–175 45%
Win% 50% 33% 42% 32% 51% 51% 32% 57% 43% 52% 48% 50% 29%  –   –  0% 9% Career total: 45%
Year-end ranking 315 132 89 91 53 39 206 29 81 66 82 33 292 433 $6,451,455

Doubles edit

Russia Kazakhstan
Tournament 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 ... 2020 2021 2022 SR W–L Win%
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian Open A A 1R 1R 1R A QF 1R 2R 2R 2R 3R A 1R 0 / 10 8–10 44%
French Open A 1R 1R 1R 1R SF QF 2R 1R F 3R 1R A A 0 / 11 15–10 56%
Wimbledon A A 2R 2R W 2R 3R A 3R QF F A NH A 1 / 8 21–7 75%
US Open A QF 1R 2R W F 3R 1R 2R F 3R A A 1R 1 / 11 24–10 71%
Win–loss 0–0 2–2 1–4 2–4 12–2 10–3 9–4 1–2 5–4 14–4 10–4 2–2 0–0 0–2 2 / 40 68–37 65%
Year-end championships
WTA Finals DNQ SF SF DNQ QF DNQ NH DNQ 0 / 3 0–3 0%
WTA 1000
Dubai / Qatar Open[a] NT1 2R A 1R 1R A A A A QF SF 1R 1R 0 / 7 5–7 42%
Indian Wells Open A A A 1R 1R QF A 2R 2R A SF 2R NH A 0 / 7 8–7 53%
Miami Open A A 2R 2R 1R 1R 2R QF QF A F QF NH 1R 0 / 10 13–10 57%
Madrid Open NH A 2R SF QF 1R SF W QF QF NH 1R 1 / 9 15–8 65%
Italian Open A A 1R SF QF F A A SF 2R QF SF A 1R 0 / 9 13–9 59%
Canadian Open A A A 2R 2R A A A 1R 1R A A NH A 0 / 5 1–5 17%
Cincinnati Open NT1 2R 2R W A A QF F QF A A 1R 1 / 5 12–5 71%
Pan Pacific / Wuhan Open[b] A A QF A 1R SF 1R A A A QF A NH 0 / 5 5–5 50%
China Open NT1 1R SF SF 2R 1R 1R SF 2R A NH 0 / 8 6–8 43%
Career statistics
Tournaments 2 4 19 21 21 17 13 15 17 13 20 10 2 11 Career total: 175
Titles 0 0 0 1 2 3 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 Career total: 13
Finals 0 0 1 1 4 6 2 3 2 5 3 1 0 0 Career total: 28
Overall win–loss 2–1 5–4 18–18 16–20 27–19 37–13 19–13 16–12 26–15 32–11 35–19 14–10 0–2 1–11 13 / 175 238–169 58%
Year-end ranking 242 111 42 49 7 5 26 59 24 6 14 37 827

Mixed doubles edit

Kazakhstan
Tournament 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 W–L Win%
Australian Open A A A 2R SF A 1R 2R A A A A 1R 5–5 50%
French Open 1R F A 1R A SF 1R 2R 2R A A NH A 9–7 56%
Wimbledon 2R QF 2R 3R A A A SF A A A NH A 9–5 64%
US Open A 2R 1R A A A QF QF A A A NH QF 7–5 58%

Significant finals edit

Grand Slam finals edit

Doubles: 6 (2 titles, 4 runner-ups) edit

Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 2010 Wimbledon Grass   Vania King   Elena Vesnina
  Vera Zvonareva
7–6(8–6), 6–2
Win 2010 US Open Hard   Vania King   Liezel Huber
  Nadia Petrova
2–6, 6–4, 7–6(7–4)
Loss 2011 US Open Hard   Vania King   Liezel Huber
  Lisa Raymond
6–4, 6–7(5–7), 6–7(3–7)
Loss 2015 French Open Clay   Casey Dellacqua   Bethanie Mattek-Sands
  Lucie Šafářová
6–3, 4–6, 2–6
Loss 2015 US Open (2) Hard   Casey Dellacqua   Martina Hingis
  Sania Mirza
3–6, 3–6
Loss 2016 Wimbledon Grass   Tímea Babos   Serena Williams
  Venus Williams
4–6, 3–6

Mixed doubles: 1 (runner-up) edit

Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 2010 French Open Clay   Julian Knowle   Katarina Srebotnik
  Nenad Zimonjić
6–4, 6–7(5–7), [9–11]

Premier Mandatory/Premier 5 finals edit

Doubles: 5 (2 titles, 3 runner-ups) edit

Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 2011 Italian Open Clay   Vania King   Peng Shuai
  Zheng Jie
2–6, 3–6
Win 2011 Cincinnati Open Hard   Vania King   Natalie Grandin
  Vladimíra Uhlířová
6–4, 3–6, [11–9]
Win 2015 Madrid Open Clay   Casey Dellacqua   Garbiñe Muguruza
  Carla Suárez Navarro
6–3, 6–7(4–7), [10–5]
Loss 2015 Cincinnati Open Hard   Casey Dellacqua   Chan Hao-ching
  Chan Yung-jan
5–7, 4–6
Loss 2016 Miami Open Hard   Tímea Babos   Bethanie Mattek-Sands
  Lucie Šafářová
3–6, 4–6

WTA career finals edit

Singles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up) edit

Finals by surface
Hard (1–0)
Grass (0–0)
Clay (0–1)
Carpet (0–0)
Result W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Opponent Score
Win 1–0 Feb 2007 Bangalore Open, India Tier III Hard   Mara Santangelo 6–4, 6–4
Loss 1–1 Apr 2015 Copa Colsanitas, Colombia International Clay   Teliana Pereira 6–7(2–7), 1–6

Doubles: 28 (13 titles, 15 runner-ups) edit

Legend
Grand Slam tournaments (2–4)
Premier 5 & M / WTA 1000 (2–3)
Premier / WTA 500 (2–2)
Tier III / International (7–6)
Finals by surface
Hard (9–9)
Grass (2–2)
Clay (2–4)
Carpet (0–0)
Result W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 0–1 Sep 2008 Cincinnati Open, United States Tier III Hard   Hsieh Su-wei   Maria Kirilenko
  Nadia Petrova
3–6, 6–4, [8–10]
Win 1–1 Feb 2009 Pattaya Open, Thailand International Hard   Tamarine Tanasugarn   Yuliya Beygelzimer
  Vitalia Diatchenko
6–3, 6–2
Loss 1–2 Apr 2010 Andalucia Experience, Spain International Clay   Maria Kondratieva   Sara Errani
  Roberta Vinci
4–6, 2–6
Loss 1–3 Jun 2010 Rosmalen Open, Netherlands International Grass   Vania King   Alla Kudryavtseva
  Anastasia Rodionova
6–3, 3–6, [6–10]
Win 2–3 Jul 2010 Wimbledon, UK Grand Slam Grass   Vania King   Elena Vesnina
  Vera Zvonareva
7–6(8–6), 6–2
Win 3–3 Sep 2010 US Open Grand Slam Hard   Vania King   Liezel Huber
  Nadia Petrova
2–6, 6–4, 7–6(7–4)
Loss 3–4 May 2011 Italian Open Premier 5 Clay   Vania King   Peng Shuai
  Zheng Jie
2–6, 3–6
Win 4–4 Jul 2011 Washington Open, U.S. International Hard   Sania Mirza   Olga Govortsova
  Alla Kudryavtseva
6–3, 6–3
Win 5–4 Aug 2011 Cincinnati Open, U.S. Premier 5 Hard   Vania King   Natalie Grandin
  Vladimíra Uhlířová
6–4, 3–6, [11–9]
Loss 5–5 Sep 2011 US Open Grand Slam Hard   Vania King   Liezel Huber
  Lisa Raymond
6–4, 6–7(5–7), 6–7(3–7)
Loss 5–6 Oct 2011 Japan Women's Open International Hard   Vania King   Kimiko Date-Krumm
  Zhang Shuai
5–7, 6–3, [9–11]
Win 6–6 Oct 2011 Kremlin Cup, Russia Premier Hard (i)   Vania King   Anastasia Rodionova
  Galina Voskoboeva
7–6(7–3), 6–3
Loss 6–7 Apr 2012 Charleston Open, U.S. Premier Clay (green)   Anabel Medina Garrigues   Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
  Lucie Šafářová
7–5, 4–6, [6–10]
Loss 6–8 May 2012 Estoril Open, Portugal International Clay   Galina Voskoboeva   Chuang Chia-jung
  Zhang Shuai
6–4, 1–6, [9–11]
Loss 6–9 Jan 2013 Auckland Open, New Zealand International Hard   Julia Görges   Cara Black
  Anastasia Rodionova
6–2, 2–6, [5–10]
Win 7–9 Mar 2013 Brasil Tennis Cup International Hard   Anabel Medina Garrigues   Anne Keothavong
  Valeria Savinykh
6–0, 6–4
Win 8–9 Sep 2013 Tashkent Open, Uzbekistan International Hard   Tímea Babos   Mandy Minella
  Olga Govortsova
6–3, 6–3
Win 9–9 Feb 2014 Brasil Tennis Cup International Hard   Anabel Medina Garrigues   Francesca Schiavone
  Sílvia Soler Espinosa
7–6(7–1), 2–6, [10–3]
Win 10–9 Apr 2014 Charleston Open, U.S. Premier Clay   Anabel Medina Garrigues   Chan Hao-ching
  Chan Yung-jan
7–6(7–4), 6–2
Win 11–9 May 2015 Madrid Open, Spain Premier M Clay   Casey Dellacqua   Garbiñe Muguruza
  Carla Suárez Navarro
6–3, 6–7(4–7), [10–5]
Loss 11–10 Jun 2015 French Open Grand Slam Clay   Casey Dellacqua   Bethanie Mattek-Sands
  Lucie Šafářová
6–3, 4–6, 2–6
Loss 11–11 Aug 2015 Cincinnati Open, U.S. Premier 5 Hard   Casey Dellacqua   Chan Hao-ching
  Chan Yung-jan
5–7, 4–6
Loss 11–12 Sep 2015 US Open Grand Slam Hard   Casey Dellacqua   Martina Hingis
  Sania Mirza
3–6, 3–6
Win 12–12 Oct 2015 Hong Kong Open International Hard   Alizé Cornet   Lara Arruabarrena
  Andreja Klepač
7–5, 6–4
Loss 12–13 Apr 2016 Miami Open, U.S. Premier M Hard   Tímea Babos   Bethanie Mattek-Sands
  Lucie Šafářová
3–6, 4–6
Win 13–13 Jun 2016 Rosmalen Open, Netherlands International Grass   Oksana Kalashnikova   Xenia Knoll
  Aleksandra Krunić
6–1, 6–1
Loss 13–14 Jul 2016 Wimbledon, UK Grand Slam Grass   Tímea Babos   Serena Williams
  Venus Williams
3–6, 4–6
Loss 13–15 Feb 2017 Qatar Open Premier Hard   Olga Savchuk   Abigail Spears
  Katarina Srebotnik
3–6, 6–7(7–9)

WTA 125 tournament finals edit

Singles: 1 (title) edit

Result W–L Date Tournament Surface Opponent Score
Win 1–0 Nov 2015 Hua Hin Challenger, Thailand Hard   Naomi Osaka 6–4, 6–7(8–10), 6–4

Doubles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up) edit

Result W–L Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 0–1 Nov 2013 Nanjing Ladies Open, China Hard   Zhang Shuai 1–6, 4–6
Win 1–1 Nov 2013 Taipei Ladies Open, Taiwan Carpet (i)   Caroline Garcia 6–3, 6–3

ITF Circuit finals edit

Singles: 7 (4 titles, 3 runner–ups) edit

Legend
$100,000 tournaments (1–0)
$75,000 tournaments (0–1)
$25,000 tournaments (1–2)
$10,000 tournaments (2–0)
Result W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Opponent Score
Win 1–0 Jun 2005 ITF Warsaw, Poland 10,000 Clay   Dominika Nociarová 6–2, 7–6(6)
Loss 1–1 Oct 2005 ITF Bolton, Great Britain 25,000 Hard (i)   Sandra Kleinová 6–0, 3–6, 3–6
Win 2–1 Mar 2006 ITF Amiens, France 10,000 Hard (i)   Julie Coin 2–6, 7–5, 6–4
Loss 2–2 Apr 2006 ITF Dinan, France 75,000 Hard (i)   Timea Bacsinszky 6–4, 5–7, 2–6
Win 3–2 Aug 2008 ITF Monterrey, Mexico 100,000 Hard   Magdaléna Rybáriková 6–4, 6–1
Loss 3–3 Mar 2012 ITF Irapuato, Mexico 25,000 Hard   Kiki Bertens 4–6, 6–2, 1–6
Win 4–3 Mar 2012 ITF Poza Rica, Mexico 25,000 Hard   Monica Puig 6–1, 6–2

Doubles: 4 (3 titles, 1 runner–up) edit

Legend
$100,000 tournaments (1–0)
$25,000 tournaments (1–1)
$10,000 tournaments (1–0)
Result W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 0–1 Jul 2005 ITF Darmstadt, Germany 25,000 Clay   Vasilisa Bardina 4–6, 2–6
Win 1–1 Mar 2006 ITF Amiens, France 10,000 Clay (i)   Olga Panova   Julie Coin
  Karla Mraz
6–4, 6–1
Win 2–1 Apr 2006 Open de Biarritz, France 25,000 Clay   Nina Bratchikova   Klaudia Jans-Ignacik
  Alicja Rosolska
6–3, 6–2
Win 3–1 Oct 2008 ITF Ortisei, Italy 100,000 Carpet   Mariya Koryttseva   Maret Ani
  Galina Voskoboeva
6–2, 6–1

Records edit

Tournament Year Record accomplished Player tied
Wimbledon 2012 Achieved a Golden Set[182] Pauline Betz (1943)
Tine Scheuer-Larsen (1995)

Best Grand Slam results details edit

Singles edit

Doubles edit

Mixed doubles edit

Top 10 wins edit

# Player Rank Event Surface Rd Score
2009
1.   Jelena Janković No. 5 US Open Hard 2R 6–3, 6–7(4), 7–6(6)
2010
2.   Agnieszka Radwańska No. 8 French Open Clay 2R 7–5, 6–3
2012
3.   Li Na No. 7 French Open Clay 4R 3–6, 6–2, 6–0
4.   Sara Errani No. 8 Wimbledon Grass 3R 6–0, 6–4
2013
5.   Caroline Wozniacki No. 10 Madrid Open Clay 1R 6–2, 6–4
2014
6.   Dominika Cibulková No. 10 Rosmalen Open Grass 1R 6–2, 3–6, 6–3
2015
7.   Garbiñe Muguruza No. 8 Cincinnati Open Hard 1R 6–4, 7–6(0)

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b The first Premier 5 event of the year has switched back and forth between the Dubai Tennis Championships and the Qatar Ladies Open since 2009. Dubai was classified as a Premier 5 event from 2009 to 2011 before being succeeded by Doha for the 2012–2014 period. In 2015, Dubai regained its Premier 5 status while Doha was demoted to Premier status. The Premier 5 tournaments were reclassified as WTA 1000 tournaments in 2021.
  2. ^ a b In 2014, the Pan Pacific Open was downgraded to a Premier event and replaced by the Wuhan Open. The Premier 5 tournaments were reclassified as WTA 1000 tournaments in 2021.

References edit

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yaroslava, shvedova, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, vyacheslavovna, family, name, shvedova, yaroslava, vyacheslavovna, shvedova, Яросла, ва, Вячесла, вовна, Шве, дова, born, september, 1987, kazakhstani, former, pr. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Vyacheslavovna and the family name is Shvedova Yaroslava Vyacheslavovna Shvedova Yarosla va Vyachesla vovna Shve dova born 12 September 1987 is a Kazakhstani former professional tennis player Before 2008 she represented her country of birth Russia Yaroslava ShvedovaShvedova at the 2016 US OpenCountry sports Russia 2002 08 Kazakhstan 2008 2021 ResidenceAstana KazakhstanBorn 1987 09 12 12 September 1987 age 36 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionHeight1 80 m 5 ft 11 in Turned proSeptember 2005Retired1 October 2021PlaysRight handed two handed backhand Prize moneyUS 6 717 223SinglesCareer record357 278 56 2 Career titles1Highest rankingNo 25 29 October 2012 Grand Slam singles resultsAustralian Open3R 2015 French OpenQF 2010 2012 WimbledonQF 2016 US Open4R 2016 Other tournamentsOlympic Games1R 2021 DoublesCareer record286 187 60 5 Career titles13Highest rankingNo 3 22 February 2016 Grand Slam doubles resultsAustralian OpenQF 2012 French OpenF 2015 WimbledonW 2010 US OpenW 2010 Grand Slam mixed doubles resultsAustralian OpenSF 2013 French OpenF 2010 WimbledonSF 2016 US OpenQF 2015 2016 2021 Team competitionsFed Cup25 18Medal record Women s tennisRepresenting KazakhstanAsian Games2014 Incheon Team eventShe won one singles title and 13 doubles titles on the WTA Tour plus one singles and one doubles title on WTA 125 tournaments as well as four singles and three doubles titles on the ITF Circuit On 29 October 2012 she reached her best singles ranking of world No 25 On 22 February 2016 she peaked at No 3 in the doubles rankings Shvedova made three major singles quarterfinals at the 2010 and the 2012 French Open and also at the 2016 Wimbledon Championships She won two Grand Slam women s doubles titles at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships and the 2010 US Open partnering American player Vania King in both Shvedova is also one of only seven players to record a golden set in the Open era She achieved this feat 2012 at Wimbledon in her match against Sara Errani the only time a golden set was recorded in a Grand Slam championship 1 Contents 1 Career 1 1 2006 2008 Grand Slam debut maiden WTA title top 100 1 2 2009 French Open and US Open third rounds 1 3 2010 Two major doubles titles amp one singles QF 1 4 2011 1 5 2012 1 6 2013 1 7 2014 1 8 2015 1 9 2016 1 10 2017 1 11 2020 Comeback 1 12 2021 Olympic Games amp retirement 2 Playing style 3 Personal life 4 Performance timeline 4 1 Singles 4 2 Doubles 4 3 Mixed doubles 5 Significant finals 5 1 Grand Slam finals 5 1 1 Doubles 6 2 titles 4 runner ups 5 1 2 Mixed doubles 1 runner up 5 2 Premier Mandatory Premier 5 finals 5 2 1 Doubles 5 2 titles 3 runner ups 6 WTA career finals 6 1 Singles 2 1 title 1 runner up 6 2 Doubles 28 13 titles 15 runner ups 7 WTA 125 tournament finals 7 1 Singles 1 title 7 2 Doubles 2 1 title 1 runner up 8 ITF Circuit finals 8 1 Singles 7 4 titles 3 runner ups 8 2 Doubles 4 3 titles 1 runner up 9 Records 10 Best Grand Slam results details 10 1 Singles 10 2 Doubles 10 3 Mixed doubles 11 Top 10 wins 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksCareer edit2006 2008 Grand Slam debut maiden WTA title top 100 edit In February 2007 she unexpectedly reached the final of the Bangalore Open beating home crowd favourite and No 2 seed Sania Mirza in the quarterfinals In the final she defeated top seeded defending champion Mara Santangelo in straight sets to win her first WTA Tour title 2 3 This win caused her to be in the top 100 for the first time at 78 At the 2007 Miami Open she came through qualifying and impressively recorded her first ever top 20 win over future No 1 Ana Ivanovic in the second round beating her in two sets However Tathiana Garbin beat her in the third round In August 2008 she won an ITF Circuit title in Monterrey Mexico defeating Magdalena Rybarikova in the final in two sets Just over a week later she won through the qualifying rounds for US Open but lost to Agnieszka Radwanska in the first round 4 2009 French Open and US Open third rounds edit nbsp Shvedova after her match against Maria Sharapova at the 2009 French OpenIn 2009 Shvedova qualified for the main draw at Roland Garros defeating Americans Shenay Perry in the first qualifying round and Angela Haynes in the second She then beat Elena Baltacha in the final qualifying round to enter the main draw She beat Kaia Kanepi and advanced to the third round after defeating Arantxa Rus also a qualifier There she lost in a close three sets match to former world No 1 Maria Sharapova returning from a long lasting shoulder injury and then ranked 102 At Wimbledon she faced Monica Niculescu in the first round and defeated her with the loss of just one game but lost to American teenager Melanie Oudin in the second At the US Open Shvedova pulled off the biggest win of her career by beating then No 5 Jelena Jankovic in three sets in a match where she saved two match points 5 2010 Two major doubles titles amp one singles QF edit Shvedova experienced a good run at the Miami Open She gained direct entry into the main draw and won a tight first round match against wildcard Ajla Tomljanovic She then defeated 23rd seed Sabine Lisicki in the second round after she retired whilst trailing 3 6 1 0 In the third round Shvedova advanced against unseeded Andrea Petkovic by winning another close match She fell to sixth seed Agnieszka Radwanska in the fourth round in straight sets At the Barcelona Open Shvedova defeated Anabel Medina Garrigues in the first round before upsetting fourth seeded Maria Kirilenko in the second Next she defeated Iveta Benesova before falling to eventual tournament and the eventual French Open champion Francesca Schiavone in the semifinals Shvedova enjoyed arguably her best career result at the French Open There she advanced to the quarterfinals in the singles competition She defeated eighth seed Agnieszka Radwanska avenging her loss to her in Miami en route to the quarterfinals As the last unseeded player in the tournament Shvedova was defeated by fourth seed Jelena Jankovic in the quarterfinal In mixed doubles she partnered with Julian Knowle to reach the final beating doubles legends Cara Black and Leander Paes the second seeds along the way They fell in a close final to sixth seeds Katarina Srebotnik and Nenad Zimonjic At the Wimbledon Championships Shvedova entered the doubles competition unseeded with partner Vania King The two began playing together at the start of the grass court season two weeks before and were only in their third event together In a stunning string of upsets Shvedova and King won the tournament beating Elena Vesnina and Vera Zvonareva who themselves beat Serena and Venus Williams in the quarterfinals in the final Both Shvedova and King continued their good form onto the hardcourts of the US Open Seeded sixth the team continued to win match after match before taking a spot in their second consecutive major final this time facing Liezel Huber and Nadia Petrova King and Shvedova won in three sets the match was played over two days due to heavy rainfall 2011 edit nbsp Shvedova at the 2011 Washington OpenShvedova began her season representing Kazakhstan at the Hopman Cup She lost her first match to Ana Ivanovic in two sets During her match against Ivanovic Shvedova injured her right knee which caused her to pull out of the Hopman Cup 6 Shvedova also missed the Australian Open due to the same right knee injury She returned from injury in February to play at Dubai where she lost in the first round to Zhang Shuai 7 She went to play at the Qatar Open seeded fifth for qualifying she was defeated in the first round by wildcard Elena Vesnina In March she travelled to Indian Wells where she lost in the first round to Kimiko Date Krumm 8 At the Miami Open after beating Sara Errani Shvedova retired in her second round match against 28th seed Jarmila Groth due to a left thigh muscle strain 9 She began her clay court season in Morocco at the Rabat Grand Prix Seeded second she was defeated in the second round by Anastasia Pivovarova 10 At the Barcelona Open Shvedova lost in the second round to sixth seed and eventual champion Roberta Vinci 11 Playing at the Madrid Open Shvedova lost in the first round to 10th seed Agnieszka Radwanska At the Italian Open she lost in the first round to qualifier Anastasia Rodionova in straight sets In doubles she and Vania King reached the final where they lost to Peng Shuai and Zheng Jie also in straight sets 12 Shvedova entered the French Open ranked No 54 and lost in the first round to 14th seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova As a result of not defending her quarterfinalist points from the previous year her ranking dropped to No 115 In doubles she and her regular doubles partner Vania King reached the semifinals where they fell to eventual champions Andrea Hlavackova Lucie Hradecka in two sets 13 Shvedova began grass court season at the Birmingham Classic seeded 11th and lost in the second round to Marina Erakovic 14 At the Eastbourne International she lost in the first round of qualifying to Mirjana Lucic Baroni Ranked world No 123 at Wimbledon she was easily defeated in the first round by qualifier Tamarine Tanasugarn Shvedova began wearing prescription sports glasses after seeking medical advice about a nervous tic in one eye 15 She started her US Open Series at the Washington Open and was defeated in the first round by sixth seed Elena Baltacha 16 In doubles Shvedova and Sania Mirza won the title defeating Olga Govortsova Alla Kudryavtseva in the final 17 Ranked world No 143 at the Vancouver Open Shvedova lost in the first round to seventh seed Stephanie Dubois She then played at the Bronx Open where she reached the second round and lost to Romina Oprandi after retiring early in the second set Due to her ranking of 212 Shvedova had to play qualifying in order to make it into the main draw of the US Open She lost in the first round of qualifying to Ekaterina Bychkova in two tie breakers In doubles she and Vania King were the defending champions they reached the final for a second year in a row but lost to Liezel Huber and Lisa Raymond 18 Seeded eighth for qualifying at the Korea Open Shvedova qualified for the main draw beating wildcard Choi Ji hee Han Sung hee and third seed Rika Fujiwara In the first round she upset Tamarine Tanasugarn 19 In the second round Shvedova retired after losing the first set 6 7 to fourth seed Dominika Cibulkova 20 She qualified for the Japan Women s Open defeating sixth seed Kristina Mladenovic wildcard Risa Ozaki and Hsieh Su wei Shvedova was defeated in the second round by seventh seed Chanelle Scheepers 21 In doubles she and Vania King advanced to the final where they lost to Date Krumm Zhang Shvedova played her final tournament of the year at the Taipei Ladies Open She reached the quarterfinals but lost to eighth seed Chang Kai chen in straight sets Shvedova ended the year as No 206 her lowest year end singles ranking since 2005 She also won four WTA Tour doubles titles Her decline in form in singles was explained by a knee injury that required surgery 2012 edit nbsp Shvedova at the 2012 Wimbledon ChampionshipsShvedova started the year playing qualifying at the Australian Open She lost in the first round of qualifying to Bibiane Schoofs in a marathon three set match 22 She then rebounded qualifying into the main draw at Copa Colsanitas defeating Raluca Olaru and Leticia Costas In the main draw Shvedova reached the quarterfinals where she fell to Timea Babos Receiving a wildcard to play at the Monterrey Open she beat countrywoman Sesil Karatantcheva in the first round 23 She lost to Mandy Minella in the second round in three sets 24 At the Abierto Mexicano Shvedova retired due to a left thigh injury in the final round of qualifying to top seed Edina Gallovits Hall 25 Seeded fourth at the 25K event in Irapuato she reached the final where she lost to sixth seed Kiki Bertens 26 Shvedova continued her rise in form at another 25K event in Poza Rica where she won the title beating Monica Puig in the final 27 Shvedova started her clay court season by playing qualifying at the Charleston Open Seeded 20th for qualifying she qualified for the main draw defeating Jessica Pegula and tenth seed Andrea Hlavackova In the main draw she reached the third round after defeating Alexandra Panova and 12th seed Yanina Wickmayer In the third round she lost to sixth seed Sabine Lisicki 28 Seeded seventh for qualifying at the Rabat Grand Prix Shvedova lost in the second round of qualifying to Bianca Botto At the Portugal Open Shvedova was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Bianca Botto Due to having a low ranking Shvedova played qualifying at the French Open She qualified into the main draw beating Ajla Tomljanovic CoCo Vandeweghe and Elena Bogdan In the main draw she defeated Mandy Minella Sofia Arvidsson and Carla Suarez Navarro in the first three rounds In the fourth round she upset seventh seed and defending champion Li Na 3 6 6 2 6 0 to advance to her second French Open quarterfinal 29 This was Shvedova s biggest win of her career in singles She lost to fourth seed and reigning Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova in the quarterfinals only in three sets 30 Due to making the quarterfinals at the French Open Shvedova s ranking went from 142 to 62 In doubles she and Vania King reached the quarterfinals where they lost to seventh seeds and eventual finalists Maria Kirilenko Nadia Petrova On 15 June 2012 Shvedova and her partner Sania Mirza made a shock first round exit from the Birmingham Classic they lost to Iveta Benesova Alla Kudryavtseva in two sets 31 At the Wimbledon Championships Shvedova received a wildcard into the main draw There she defeated Chanelle Scheepers and Kiki Bertens to reach the third round where she faced tenth seed Sara Errani and won the fourth Golden Set in the history of tennis She won all 24 points in the fifteen minute long first set blasting 14 winners and making no unforced errors before losing the first point of the second set to break the sequence She went on to win the match in straight sets 6 0 6 4 reaching the second week of Wimbledon for the first time 32 In the fourth round she was defeated by sixth seed and eventual champion Serena Williams 33 Representing Kazakhstan at the 2012 London Olympics she reached the second round of the women s singles where she lost to 15th seed Sabine Lisicki 34 In doubles she reached the second round with partner Galina Voskoboeva 35 As the top seed for qualifying at the Cincinnati Open Shvedova qualified for the main draw beating wildcard Lauren Davis and 14th seed Anna Tatishvili She beat 16th seed Lucie Safarova in the first round In the second round Shvedova was up against qualifier Urszula Radwanska and won the first set 6 4 Urszula was leading 4 1 in the second set when Shvedova retired due to heat illness 36 At the Texas Tennis Open Shvedova lost in the first round in a tough three set match to second seed and eventual finalist Jelena Jankovic 37 Ranked 45 at the US Open Shvedova was defeated in the second round by 20th seed and eventual quarterfinalist Roberta Vinci At the Pan Pacific Open Shvedova lost in the first round to 2010 French Open champion Francesca Schiavone 38 At the China Open Shvedova faced 12th seed Dominika Cibulkova in the first round Shvedova won the first set 6 4 and was leading 4 1 in the second set when Cibulkova retired due to a left hip injury In the second round she was defeated by Peng Shuai 39 Seeded fifth at Osaka she lost in the first round to wildcard Tamarine Tanasugarn 40 Shvedova played her final tournament of the year at the Kremlin Cup She beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 41 but in the second round she was defeated by seventh seed Maria Kirilenko 42 Shvedova ended the year ranked 29 in singles and 26 in doubles 2013 edit nbsp Shvedova at the 2013 French OpenShvedova began her year at the Auckland Open Seeded sixth she defeated Lara Arruabarrena in the first round but lost in the second round to Elena Vesnina 43 In doubles Shvedova and her partner Julia Gorges both reached the final but they lost to Cara Black Anastasia Rodionova 44 Seeded fourth at the Hobart International Shvedova was defeated in the second round to eventual champion Elena Vesnina 45 Seeded 28th at the Australian Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Annika Beck 46 Seeded second at the first edition of the Brasil Tennis Cup Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Melinda Czink in three sets 47 However in doubles she and her partner Medina Garrigues won the title defeating Anne Keothavong Valeria Savinykh in the final 48 Seeded 31st at the Indian Wells Open Shvedova got a bye into the second round where she lost to qualifier Lesia Tsurenko 49 At the Miami Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Zheng Jie 50 Shvedova started her clay court season at the Charleston Open As the 14th seed she lost in the first round to qualifier Vania King 51 At the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix Shvedova reached the quarterfinals with wins over Roberta Vinci and Carla Suarez Navarro In the quarterfinals she lost to third seed Angelique Kerber 52 Shvedova stunned tenth seed and former world No 1 Caroline Wozniacki in the first round at the Madrid Open 6 2 6 4 53 In the second round she beat Kirsten Flipkens 54 Shvedova withdrew from her third round match against wildcard Medina Garrigues due to a right arm injury 55 Seeded 27th at the French Open Shvedova had quarterfinalist points to defend from last year In the first round she defeated CoCo Vandeweghe 56 However she was defeated in the second round by qualifier Paula Ormaechea 57 As a result of her second round loss at the French Open Shvedova failed to defend her quarterfinalist points from last year and her ranking dropped from 31 to 52 Ranked 55 at Wimbledon Shvedova beat Kiki Bertens 58 and then withdrew from her second round match against 2011 Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova due to an arm injury 59 She returned to action at the New Haven Open and retired in the final round of qualifying to fifth seed Stefanie Vogele Ranked 78 at the US Open Shvedova reached the third round defeating Olga Puchkova and lucky loser Patricia Mayr Achleitner She lost in the third round to world No 1 and eventual champion Serena Williams in straight sets 60 Seeded eighth at the Tashkent Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Vesna Dolonc 61 In doubles she and Timea Babos won the title defeating Mandy Minella Olga Govortsova in the final 62 At the Guangzhou International Open she lost to Zheng Jie in the first round Seeded seventh at the Ningbo International Open Shvedova reached the quarterfinals defeating Timea Babos and wildcard Zheng Saisai She then lost in the quarterfinals to fourth seed Yvonne Meusburger 63 Seeded tenth for qualifying at the China Open Shvedova lost in the second round of qualifying to Sharon Fichman At the Kremlin Cup she was defeated in the first round by Elena Vesnina 6 1 6 2 64 Competing at the first edition of the Nanjing Ladies Open Shvedova lost in the first round to second seed Yanina Wickmayer 65 She played her final tournament of the year at the Taipei Ladies Open In the first round she upset fourth seed Ayumi Morita in the first round 66 However in doubles Shvedova and Caroline Garcia won the title defeating Anna Lena Friedsam Alison Van Uytvanck in the final 67 Shvedova ended the year ranked 81 in singles and 59 in doubles 2014 edit nbsp Shvedova at the 2014 Madrid OpenShvedova began the year at the Brisbane International As the top seed for qualifying she lost in the second round of qualifying to Anastasia Rodionova Seeded 12th in qualifying at the Sydney International Shvedova was defeated in the final round of qualifying by fifth seed Christina McHale At the Australian Open she lost in the first round to 13th seed Sloane Stephens 68 At the first edition of the Rio Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Patricia Mayr Achleitner 69 At the Brasil Tennis Cup Shvedova reached the semifinals with wins over Silvia Soler Espinosa Barbora Zahlavova Strycova and sixth seed Alexandra Cadanţu She lost in the semifinals to second seed Garbine Muguruza 70 In doubles she and her partner Medina Garrigues won the title defeating Schiavone Soler Espinosa in the final 71 Shvedova as the third seed qualified for the Indian Wells Open by beating Magda Linette and 13th seed Kimiko Date Krumm In the main draw she reached the third round defeating Chanelle Scheepers and 24th seed Kaia Kanepi In the third round she lost to tenth seed and former world No 1 Caroline Wozniacki 72 At the Miami Open Shvedova defeated 2010 French Open Champion Francesca Schiavone in the first round 73 In the second round Shvedova lost to world No 1 and eventual champion Serena Williams 74 Shvedova began her clay court season at the Charleston Open She defeated qualifier Zheng Saisai in the first round but lost in the second round to seventh seed Samantha Stosur 75 In doubles she and Medina Garrigues won the title defeating Chan Hao ching Chan Yung jan in the final 76 At the Portugal Open Shvedova defeated Karin Knapp in the first round 77 She lost in the second round to second seed Eugenie Bouchard 4 6 2 6 78 Seeded seventh for qualifying at the Madrid Open she lost in the first round to Mariana Duque Marino Shvedova reached the quarterfinals at the Nurnberger Versicherungscup defeating Patricia Mayr Achleitner and sixth seed Kurumi Nara She lost to second seed and eventual champion Eugenie Bouchard in the quarterfinals 79 Ranked world No 69 at the French Open Shvedova won her first round match over Lauren Davis 80 In the second round she lost to wild card Pauline Parmentier 81 Shvedova played at the Rosmalen Open her only grass court tune up tournament before Wimbledon She upset second seed Dominika Cibulkova in the first round 82 In the second round she defeated in a tight match wild card Michaella Krajicek 83 Shvedova lost in the quarterfinals to eighth seed Klara Koukalova 2 6 4 6 84 At Wimbledon Shvedova defeated wildcard Kristyna Pliskova in a first round thriller 85 In the second round she beat last year quarterfinalist Kaia Kanepi 86 In the third round she faced Madison Keys Shvedova won the first set 7 6 the second set was tied 6 6 when Keys retired due to a right thigh injury 87 88 In the fourth round Shvedova lost to 19th seed and last year finalist Sabine Lisicki 89 Seeded fourth at the Swedish Open Shvedova was upset in the first round by qualifier Laura Siegemund 90 Seeded tenth for qualifying at the Western amp Southern Open she lost in the first round of qualifying to American wildcard Nicole Gibbs At the US Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Monica Niculescu 91 Shvedova had a first round loss at the Korea Open to Anna Lena Friedsam 92 She played her final tournament of the year at the China Open and was defeated in the first round by Roberta Vinci 93 Shvedova ended the year ranked 66 2015 edit nbsp Shvedova at the 2015 Wimbledon ChampionshipsShvedova began her 2015 year at the Brisbane International Getting past qualifying she beat Sabine Lisicki in the first round 94 In the second round she lost to top seed and eventual champion Maria Sharapova 95 At the Sydney International Shvedova was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Katerina Siniakova In Melbourne at the Australian Open Shvedova upset 16th seed Lucie Safarova in a first round thriller 96 She then beat Monica Puig in the second round 97 In the third round Shvedova lost to 21st seed Peng Shuai 98 At the Miami Open Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Johanna Larsson 99 Shvedova began her clay court season at the Charleston Open In the first round she beat Stefanie Vogele 100 In the second round Shvedova lost to thirteenth seed Irina Camelia Begu 101 Seeded fifth at the Copa Colsanitas Shvedova reached her first WTA singles final since 2007 defeating Maryna Zanevska qualifier Sachia Vickery second seed Monica Puig and Mariana Duque Marino In the final Shvedova lost to Teliana Pereira 102 At the Madrid Open she lost in the first round of qualifying to Sesil Karatantcheva However in doubles she and Casey Dellacqua won the title defeating Muguruza Suarez Navarro in the final 103 At the Nurnberger Versicherungscup Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Kiki Bertens Ranked 69 at the French Open she lost in the first round to seventh seed and 2008 champion Ana Ivanovic 104 In doubles she and her partner Casey Dellacqua reached the final where they lost to Mattek Sands Safarova 105 Shvedova only played one grass court warm up tournament before Wimbledon At the Rosmalen Open she stunned top seed Eugenie Bouchard in the first round 106 In the second round she beat Marina Erakovic 107 In the quarterfinals Shvedova was defeated by fifth seed and eventual champion Camila Giorgi 108 Ranked 79 at the Wimbledon Championships Shvedova lost in the first round to Mirjana Lucic Baroni 109 At the Bucharest Open she lost in the final round of qualifying to Cristina Dinu 110 In Turkey at the Istanbul Cup Shvedova lost in the first round to Bojana Jovanovski 111 Shvedova began her US Open series at the Rogers Cup She lost in the second round of qualifying to Monica Puig At the Western amp Southern Open Shvedova qualified for the main draw defeating Jarmila Gajdosova and Mariana Duque Marino In the first round she upset ninth seed Garbine Muguruza 112 In the second round she was defeated by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 113 In doubles she and Dellacqua reached the final but lost to Chan Hao ching Chan Yung jan 114 Seeded second for qualifying at the US Open Shvedova lost in the final round of qualifying to Tereza Mrdeza 115 In doubles Shvedova and Dellacqua advanced to the final where they were defeated by Hingis Mirza 116 At the Korea Open Shvedova faced Christina McHale in her first round match McHale won the first set 6 4 Shvedova led 2 1 in the second set when she abandoned the match 117 At the Tashkent Open Shvedova beat eighth seed Andreea Mitu in the first round 118 In the second round she lost to Evgeniya Rodina 119 At the China Open Shvedova lost in the final round of qualifying to eighth seed Irina Falconi 120 After the China Open Shvedova played for the first time at the Hong Kong Open She beat Jarmila Gajdosova in the first round 121 In the second round she was defeated by eighth seed and doubles partner Alize Cornet 122 In doubles Shvedova and Cornet won the title beating Lara Arruabarrena Andreja Klepac 123 Seeded fourth at the first edition of the Hua Hin Championships Shvedova reached the final defeating wildcard Kamonwan Buayam qualifier Liu Chang Duan Yingying and Wang Qiang In the final Shvedova beat Naomi Osaka for her first WTA 125 title 124 Shvedova played her final tournament of the year at the Taipei Challenger Seeded second she made it to the quarterfinals beating Marina Melnikova and Amandine Hesse In the quarterfinals Shvedova faced fifth seed Kirsten Flipkens Shvedova won the first set 6 4 Flipkens was leading 2 1 in the second set when Shvedova pulled out of the tournament 125 Shvedova ended the year ranked 82 in singles and No 6 in doubles 2016 edit nbsp Shvedova at the 2016 French OpenShvedova started the year at the Shenzhen Open Coming through qualifying she lost in the first round to Anett Kontaveit 126 At the Sydney International Shvedova retired during her qualifying first round match against Sesil Karatantcheva At the Australian Open she won her first round match over Tsvetana Pironkova 127 In the second round she lost to 15th seed Madison Keys 128 Getting past qualifying at the Dubai Tennis Championships Shvedova stunned seventh seed Roberta Vinci in the first round 129 before she was defeated by eventual champion Sara Errani 130 At the Qatar Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Nao Hibino 131 At the Indian Wells Open she won her first two rounds over qualifier Kristyna Pliskova and 11th seed Lucie Safarova In the third round she was defeated by qualifier Nicole Gibbs 132 At the Miami Open Shvedova lost in the final round of qualifying to Kristyna Pliskova In doubles she and Timea Babos reached the final where they lost to Mattek Sands Safarova 133 Shvedova started her clay court season at the Charleston Open where she was defeated in the second round by fifth seed Sara Errani 134 Playing at the Madrid Open she lost in the first round of qualifying to Mariana Duque At the Italian Open Shvedova was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Ana Konjuh She played her final tournament before the French Open at Internationaux de Strasbourg and lost in the first round to lucky loser Virginie Razzano 135 At the French Open Shvedova was defeated in the first round by 13th seed and 2009 French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova 136 She began her grass court season at the Rosmalen Open where she was defeated in the first round by third seed and eventual finalist Kristina Mladenovic 137 However in doubles Shvedova and Oksana Kalashnikova won the title defeating Xenia Knoll and Aleksandra Krunic in the final 138 Playing at the first edition of the Mallorca Open Shvedova lost in the first round to Daniela Hantuchova 139 At the Eastbourne International she lost in the second round of qualifying to Alison Van Uytvanck Competing at the Wimbledon Championships Shvedova reached the quarterfinals in singles for the first time in her career defeating Julia Gorges 17th seed Elina Svitolina 2013 Wimbledon finalist Sabine Lisicki and 28th seed Lucie Safarova In her quarterfinal match she lost to eighth seed five time Wimbledon champion and former world No 1 Venus Williams 140 In doubles Shvedova and Timea Babos reached the final upsetting top seeds Hingis Mirza en route to the final 141 In the final Shvedova and Babos lost to the Williams sisters 142 Due to her quarterfinals result at Wimbledon Shvedova s singles ranking improved from 96 to 49 Seeded seventh at the Swedish Open Shvedova retired during her first round match against Mona Barthel due to a mid back injury 143 Representing Kazakhstan at the 2016 Rio Olympics Shvedova lost in the first round to Misaki Doi of Japan 144 In doubles she and her compatriot Galina Voskoboeva faced Kirsten Flipkens Yanina Wickmayer in the first round Flipkens Wickmayer won the first set 6 1 The match was not continued because Shvedova and Voskoboeva pulled out of the doubles event at the Olympics In Cincinnati at the Western amp Southern Open Shvedova lost in the first round of qualifying to Ana Konjuh At the US Open Shvedova made it to the fourth round for the first time in her career defeating Lara Arruabarrena Wang Qiang and Zhang Shuai In the fourth round she was defeated by top seed Serena Williams 145 In China at the Wuhan Open Shvedova reached the third round with wins over wildcard Zheng Saisai and 13th seed Roberta Vinci She lost in the third round to fourth seed Simona Halep 146 In Beijing at the China Open Shvedova advanced to the quarterfinals defeating seventh seed Carla Suarez Navarro Belinda Bencic and Alize Cornet She lost in her quarterfinal match to third seed and eventual champion Agnieszka Radwanska 147 Seeded eighth at her final tournament of the year at the Tianjin Open Shvedova was defeated in the first round by Naomi Osaka 148 She ended the year ranked 33 2017 edit Shvedova withdrew from the Shenzhen Open due to a left foot injury 149 She started at the Sydney International where she lost in the first round of qualifying to Naomi Broady At the Australian Open she was defeated in the first round by 27th seed Irina Camelia Begu 150 Competing in Russia at the St Petersburg Trophy Shvedova lost in the first round to Russian wildcard Natalia Vikhlyantseva 151 At Dubai she was defeated in the first round by Monica Puig 152 In March she played at the Indian Wells Open where she lost in the first round to American qualifier Varvara Lepchenko 153 In Miami she had her first win of the year when she beat Jelena Jankovic in the first round 154 In the second round she was defeated by 17th seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 155 Shvedova started on clay court at the Morocco Open where she was eliminated in the second round by Tatjana Maria 156 At the Madrid Open she was defeated in the first round by eighth seed Svetlana Kuznetsova 157 In Rome she lost in the first round to ninth seed Venus Williams 158 Seeded seventh at the Nurnberger Versicherungscup she retired from her quarterfinal match due to an injury after losing the first set to Misaki Doi 159 At the French Open she lost in the first round to fifth seed Elina Svitolina 160 Shvedova missed the Wimbledon Championships due to undergoing ankle surgery 161 As a result of this surgery she missed the rest of the season 162 She ended the year ranked 292 2020 Comeback edit Following surgery and childbirth Shvedova began her comeback in February at the Dubai Championships Using a protected ranking she played doubles alongside Darija Jurak They lost in the first round to sisters Lyudmyla Nadiia Kichenok Shvedova played her first singles match since 2017 at the Qatar Open where she was defeated in the first round by qualifier Laura Siegemund 163 In doubles she and Jurak lost in the first round to Russian team of Ekaterina Alexandrova and Anna Blinkova In March she became the first player to face mandated quarantine during the COVID 19 pandemic 164 Shvedova didn t play any more matches for the rest of the season She ended the year without a ranking 2021 Olympic Games amp retirement edit Shvedova started her season in Dubai at the first edition of the Abu Dhabi Open and lost in the first round to qualifier Bianca Turati 165 At the first edition of the Yarra Valley Classic she was defeated in her first round match by Vera Lapko 166 Competing at the Australian Open for the first time since 2017 she fell in the first round to Camila Giorgi 167 In March Shvedova played at the Qatar Open but was eliminated in the second round of qualifying by Bethanie Mattek Sands At the Dubai Tennis Championships she was beaten in the first round by Jessica Pegula 168 Playing at the Miami Open for the first time since 2017 she again lost in round one to qualifier Tereza Martincova 169 After Miami Shvedova moved on toward the clay court season Playing at the Charleston Open for the first time since 2016 she was defeated in the first round by Misaki Doi 170 Competing in Madrid for the first time since 2017 she lost her first round match to Ons Jabeur 171 At the Italian Open she scored her first WTA Tour main draw win since reaching the 2017 Nuremberg quarterfinals with a remarkable victory over Italian wildcard Martina Trevisan 172 She then was knocked out in the second round by top seed Ashleigh Barty 173 Representing Kazakhstan at the Summer Olympics Shvedova retired during her first round match against Ajla Tomljanovic due to heat illness 174 In August at the Cincinnati Open she lost in the first round of qualifying to Zhang Shuai At the first edition of the Cleveland Open she was defeated in the first round of qualifying by Linda Fruhvirtova And again at the US Open she was eliminated in the first round by Jasmine Paolini 175 On October 1 2021 in a ceremony at the Astana Open Shvedova announced her retirement from tennis There was a celebration of her career as well 176 Playing style editShvedova is noted for her powerful serve groundstrokes and proficient net play Her favorite serve is the flat serve down the T her weakness is her consistency on the forehand side Personal life editShvedova was born to Russian father Vyacheslav and Bashkir mother Nurzia who used to be a professional runner winner of the International Association of Ultra Runners 100 km World Championships 1992 Shvedova has one brother She began playing tennis at age 8 when her father introduced her to the sport in Chernogolovka Moscow region Shvedova changed her nationality from Russian to Kazakhstani in 2008 as part of the country s attempts to boost its sporting profile 177 178 179 Shvedova gave birth to twins in October 2018 180 Performance timeline editKey W F SF QF R RR Q P DNQ A Z PO G S B NMS NTI P NH W winner F finalist SF semifinalist QF quarterfinalist R rounds 4 3 2 1 RR round robin stage Q qualification round P preliminary round DNQ did not qualify A absent Z Davis Fed Cup Zonal Group with number indication or PO play off G gold S silver or B bronze Olympic Paralympic medal NMS not a Masters tournament NTI not a Tier I tournament P postponed 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 Only main draw results in WTA Tour Grand Slam tournaments Fed Cup Billie Jean King Cup and Olympic Games are included in win loss records 181 Singles edit Russia KazakhstanTournament 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 SR W L Win Grand Slam tournamentsAustralian Open A A Q3 2R 1R 2R A Q1 1R 1R 3R 2R 1R A A A 1R 0 9 5 9 36 French Open A Q1 1R Q1 3R QF 1R QF 2R 2R 1R 1R 1R A A A A 0 10 12 10 55 Wimbledon A 1R 1R Q2 2R 2R 1R 4R 2R 4R 1R QF A A A NH A 0 10 13 10 57 US Open A Q3 1R 1R 3R 1R Q1 2R 3R 1R Q3 4R A A A A 1R 0 9 8 9 47 Win loss 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 2 5 4 6 4 0 2 8 3 4 4 4 4 2 3 8 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 38 38 38 50 WTA 1000Dubai Qatar Open a NT1 2R A 1R 1R A A A A 1R 1R A A 1R 1R 0 7 1 7 13 Indian Wells Open A A Q1 1R 2R 1R 1R A 2R 3R A 3R 1R A A NH A 0 8 5 8 38 Miami Open A A 3R 1R A 4R 2R A 1R 2R 1R Q2 2R A A NH 1R 0 9 8 9 47 Madrid Open NH A 1R 1R A 3R Q1 Q1 Q1 1R A A NH 1R 0 5 2 4 33 Italian Open A A A Q1 2R 2R 1R A A A A Q1 1R A A A 2R 0 5 3 5 38 Canadian Open A A A A 2R 2R A A A A Q2 A A A A NH A 0 2 2 2 50 Cincinnati Open NT1 1R 2R A 2R A Q1 2R Q1 A A A A Q1 0 4 3 4 43 Pan Pacific Wuhan Open b A A A Q1 A 2R A 1R A A A 3R A A A NH 0 3 3 3 50 China Open NT1 1R 1R A 2R Q2 1R Q2 QF A A A NH 0 5 4 5 44 Career statistics2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 CareerTournaments 1 2 15 13 17 22 13 13 15 15 14 17 10 0 0 1 10 Career total 178Titles 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career total 1Finals 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Career total 2Hard Win loss 1 1 1 1 8 9 4 12 8 10 12 14 3 6 5 8 4 10 6 7 6 8 12 10 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 1 110 71 109 39 Clay Win loss 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 8 4 8 5 2 5 8 3 5 3 5 6 5 4 1 4 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 46 47 45 51 Grass Win loss 0 0 0 1 1 2 2 1 2 3 3 3 1 2 4 2 1 0 5 2 2 2 4 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 22 25 21 54 Overall win loss 1 1 1 2 10 14 6 13 18 17 23 22 6 13 17 13 10 13 16 15 13 14 17 17 4 10 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 10 1 178 143 175 45 Win 50 33 42 32 51 51 32 57 43 52 48 50 29 0 9 Career total 45 Year end ranking 315 132 89 91 53 39 206 29 81 66 82 33 292 433 6 451 455Doubles edit Russia KazakhstanTournament 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2020 2021 2022 SR W L Win Grand Slam tournamentsAustralian Open A A 1R 1R 1R A QF 1R 2R 2R 2R 3R A 1R 0 10 8 10 44 French Open A 1R 1R 1R 1R SF QF 2R 1R F 3R 1R A A 0 11 15 10 56 Wimbledon A A 2R 2R W 2R 3R A 3R QF F A NH A 1 8 21 7 75 US Open A QF 1R 2R W F 3R 1R 2R F 3R A A 1R 1 11 24 10 71 Win loss 0 0 2 2 1 4 2 4 12 2 10 3 9 4 1 2 5 4 14 4 10 4 2 2 0 0 0 2 2 40 68 37 65 Year end championshipsWTA Finals DNQ SF SF DNQ QF DNQ NH DNQ 0 3 0 3 0 WTA 1000Dubai Qatar Open a NT1 2R A 1R 1R A A A A QF SF 1R 1R 0 7 5 7 42 Indian Wells Open A A A 1R 1R QF A 2R 2R A SF 2R NH A 0 7 8 7 53 Miami Open A A 2R 2R 1R 1R 2R QF QF A F QF NH 1R 0 10 13 10 57 Madrid Open NH A 2R SF QF 1R SF W QF QF NH 1R 1 9 15 8 65 Italian Open A A 1R SF QF F A A SF 2R QF SF A 1R 0 9 13 9 59 Canadian Open A A A 2R 2R A A A 1R 1R A A NH A 0 5 1 5 17 Cincinnati Open NT1 2R 2R W A A QF F QF A A 1R 1 5 12 5 71 Pan Pacific Wuhan Open b A A QF A 1R SF 1R A A A QF A NH 0 5 5 5 50 China Open NT1 1R SF SF 2R 1R 1R SF 2R A NH 0 8 6 8 43 Career statisticsTournaments 2 4 19 21 21 17 13 15 17 13 20 10 2 11 Career total 175Titles 0 0 0 1 2 3 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 Career total 13Finals 0 0 1 1 4 6 2 3 2 5 3 1 0 0 Career total 28Overall win loss 2 1 5 4 18 18 16 20 27 19 37 13 19 13 16 12 26 15 32 11 35 19 14 10 0 2 1 11 13 175 238 169 58 Year end ranking 242 111 42 49 7 5 26 59 24 6 14 37 827Mixed doubles edit KazakhstanTournament 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 W L Win Australian Open A A A 2R SF A 1R 2R A A A A 1R 5 5 50 French Open 1R F A 1R A SF 1R 2R 2R A A NH A 9 7 56 Wimbledon 2R QF 2R 3R A A A SF A A A NH A 9 5 64 US Open A 2R 1R A A A QF QF A A A NH QF 7 5 58 Significant finals editGrand Slam finals edit Doubles 6 2 titles 4 runner ups edit Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents ScoreWin 2010 Wimbledon Grass nbsp Vania King nbsp Elena Vesnina nbsp Vera Zvonareva 7 6 8 6 6 2Win 2010 US Open Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Liezel Huber nbsp Nadia Petrova 2 6 6 4 7 6 7 4 Loss 2011 US Open Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Liezel Huber nbsp Lisa Raymond 6 4 6 7 5 7 6 7 3 7 Loss 2015 French Open Clay nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands nbsp Lucie Safarova 6 3 4 6 2 6Loss 2015 US Open 2 Hard nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Martina Hingis nbsp Sania Mirza 3 6 3 6Loss 2016 Wimbledon Grass nbsp Timea Babos nbsp Serena Williams nbsp Venus Williams 4 6 3 6Mixed doubles 1 runner up edit Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 2010 French Open Clay nbsp Julian Knowle nbsp Katarina Srebotnik nbsp Nenad Zimonjic 6 4 6 7 5 7 9 11 Premier Mandatory Premier 5 finals edit Doubles 5 2 titles 3 runner ups edit Result Year Tournament Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 2011 Italian Open Clay nbsp Vania King nbsp Peng Shuai nbsp Zheng Jie 2 6 3 6Win 2011 Cincinnati Open Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Natalie Grandin nbsp Vladimira Uhlirova 6 4 3 6 11 9 Win 2015 Madrid Open Clay nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Garbine Muguruza nbsp Carla Suarez Navarro 6 3 6 7 4 7 10 5 Loss 2015 Cincinnati Open Hard nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Chan Hao ching nbsp Chan Yung jan 5 7 4 6Loss 2016 Miami Open Hard nbsp Timea Babos nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands nbsp Lucie Safarova 3 6 4 6WTA career finals editSingles 2 1 title 1 runner up edit LegendGrand SlamWTA 1000WTA 500Tier III International 1 1 Finals by surfaceHard 1 0 Grass 0 0 Clay 0 1 Carpet 0 0 Result W L Date Tournament Tier Surface Opponent ScoreWin 1 0 Feb 2007 Bangalore Open India Tier III Hard nbsp Mara Santangelo 6 4 6 4Loss 1 1 Apr 2015 Copa Colsanitas Colombia International Clay nbsp Teliana Pereira 6 7 2 7 1 6Doubles 28 13 titles 15 runner ups edit LegendGrand Slam tournaments 2 4 Premier 5 amp M WTA 1000 2 3 Premier WTA 500 2 2 Tier III International 7 6 Finals by surfaceHard 9 9 Grass 2 2 Clay 2 4 Carpet 0 0 Result W L Date Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 0 1 Sep 2008 Cincinnati Open United States Tier III Hard nbsp Hsieh Su wei nbsp Maria Kirilenko nbsp Nadia Petrova 3 6 6 4 8 10 Win 1 1 Feb 2009 Pattaya Open Thailand International Hard nbsp Tamarine Tanasugarn nbsp Yuliya Beygelzimer nbsp Vitalia Diatchenko 6 3 6 2Loss 1 2 Apr 2010 Andalucia Experience Spain International Clay nbsp Maria Kondratieva nbsp Sara Errani nbsp Roberta Vinci 4 6 2 6Loss 1 3 Jun 2010 Rosmalen Open Netherlands International Grass nbsp Vania King nbsp Alla Kudryavtseva nbsp Anastasia Rodionova 6 3 3 6 6 10 Win 2 3 Jul 2010 Wimbledon UK Grand Slam Grass nbsp Vania King nbsp Elena Vesnina nbsp Vera Zvonareva 7 6 8 6 6 2Win 3 3 Sep 2010 US Open Grand Slam Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Liezel Huber nbsp Nadia Petrova 2 6 6 4 7 6 7 4 Loss 3 4 May 2011 Italian Open Premier 5 Clay nbsp Vania King nbsp Peng Shuai nbsp Zheng Jie 2 6 3 6Win 4 4 Jul 2011 Washington Open U S International Hard nbsp Sania Mirza nbsp Olga Govortsova nbsp Alla Kudryavtseva 6 3 6 3Win 5 4 Aug 2011 Cincinnati Open U S Premier 5 Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Natalie Grandin nbsp Vladimira Uhlirova 6 4 3 6 11 9 Loss 5 5 Sep 2011 US Open Grand Slam Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Liezel Huber nbsp Lisa Raymond 6 4 6 7 5 7 6 7 3 7 Loss 5 6 Oct 2011 Japan Women s Open International Hard nbsp Vania King nbsp Kimiko Date Krumm nbsp Zhang Shuai 5 7 6 3 9 11 Win 6 6 Oct 2011 Kremlin Cup Russia Premier Hard i nbsp Vania King nbsp Anastasia Rodionova nbsp Galina Voskoboeva 7 6 7 3 6 3Loss 6 7 Apr 2012 Charleston Open U S Premier Clay green nbsp Anabel Medina Garrigues nbsp Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova nbsp Lucie Safarova 7 5 4 6 6 10 Loss 6 8 May 2012 Estoril Open Portugal International Clay nbsp Galina Voskoboeva nbsp Chuang Chia jung nbsp Zhang Shuai 6 4 1 6 9 11 Loss 6 9 Jan 2013 Auckland Open New Zealand International Hard nbsp Julia Gorges nbsp Cara Black nbsp Anastasia Rodionova 6 2 2 6 5 10 Win 7 9 Mar 2013 Brasil Tennis Cup International Hard nbsp Anabel Medina Garrigues nbsp Anne Keothavong nbsp Valeria Savinykh 6 0 6 4Win 8 9 Sep 2013 Tashkent Open Uzbekistan International Hard nbsp Timea Babos nbsp Mandy Minella nbsp Olga Govortsova 6 3 6 3Win 9 9 Feb 2014 Brasil Tennis Cup International Hard nbsp Anabel Medina Garrigues nbsp Francesca Schiavone nbsp Silvia Soler Espinosa 7 6 7 1 2 6 10 3 Win 10 9 Apr 2014 Charleston Open U S Premier Clay nbsp Anabel Medina Garrigues nbsp Chan Hao ching nbsp Chan Yung jan 7 6 7 4 6 2Win 11 9 May 2015 Madrid Open Spain Premier M Clay nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Garbine Muguruza nbsp Carla Suarez Navarro 6 3 6 7 4 7 10 5 Loss 11 10 Jun 2015 French Open Grand Slam Clay nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands nbsp Lucie Safarova 6 3 4 6 2 6Loss 11 11 Aug 2015 Cincinnati Open U S Premier 5 Hard nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Chan Hao ching nbsp Chan Yung jan 5 7 4 6Loss 11 12 Sep 2015 US Open Grand Slam Hard nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Martina Hingis nbsp Sania Mirza 3 6 3 6Win 12 12 Oct 2015 Hong Kong Open International Hard nbsp Alize Cornet nbsp Lara Arruabarrena nbsp Andreja Klepac 7 5 6 4Loss 12 13 Apr 2016 Miami Open U S Premier M Hard nbsp Timea Babos nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands nbsp Lucie Safarova 3 6 4 6Win 13 13 Jun 2016 Rosmalen Open Netherlands International Grass nbsp Oksana Kalashnikova nbsp Xenia Knoll nbsp Aleksandra Krunic 6 1 6 1Loss 13 14 Jul 2016 Wimbledon UK Grand Slam Grass nbsp Timea Babos nbsp Serena Williams nbsp Venus Williams 3 6 4 6Loss 13 15 Feb 2017 Qatar Open Premier Hard nbsp Olga Savchuk nbsp Abigail Spears nbsp Katarina Srebotnik 3 6 6 7 7 9 WTA 125 tournament finals editSingles 1 title edit Result W L Date Tournament Surface Opponent ScoreWin 1 0 Nov 2015 Hua Hin Challenger Thailand Hard nbsp Naomi Osaka 6 4 6 7 8 10 6 4Doubles 2 1 title 1 runner up edit Result W L Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 0 1 Nov 2013 Nanjing Ladies Open China Hard nbsp Zhang Shuai nbsp Misaki Doi nbsp Xu Yifan 1 6 4 6Win 1 1 Nov 2013 Taipei Ladies Open Taiwan Carpet i nbsp Caroline Garcia nbsp Anna Lena Friedsam nbsp Alison Van Uytvanck 6 3 6 3ITF Circuit finals editSingles 7 4 titles 3 runner ups edit Legend 100 000 tournaments 1 0 75 000 tournaments 0 1 25 000 tournaments 1 2 10 000 tournaments 2 0 Result W L Date Tournament Tier Surface Opponent ScoreWin 1 0 Jun 2005 ITF Warsaw Poland 10 000 Clay nbsp Dominika Nociarova 6 2 7 6 6 Loss 1 1 Oct 2005 ITF Bolton Great Britain 25 000 Hard i nbsp Sandra Kleinova 6 0 3 6 3 6Win 2 1 Mar 2006 ITF Amiens France 10 000 Hard i nbsp Julie Coin 2 6 7 5 6 4Loss 2 2 Apr 2006 ITF Dinan France 75 000 Hard i nbsp Timea Bacsinszky 6 4 5 7 2 6Win 3 2 Aug 2008 ITF Monterrey Mexico 100 000 Hard nbsp Magdalena Rybarikova 6 4 6 1Loss 3 3 Mar 2012 ITF Irapuato Mexico 25 000 Hard nbsp Kiki Bertens 4 6 6 2 1 6Win 4 3 Mar 2012 ITF Poza Rica Mexico 25 000 Hard nbsp Monica Puig 6 1 6 2Doubles 4 3 titles 1 runner up edit Legend 100 000 tournaments 1 0 25 000 tournaments 1 1 10 000 tournaments 1 0 Result W L Date Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents ScoreLoss 0 1 Jul 2005 ITF Darmstadt Germany 25 000 Clay nbsp Vasilisa Bardina nbsp Vanessa Henke nbsp Laura Siegemund 4 6 2 6Win 1 1 Mar 2006 ITF Amiens France 10 000 Clay i nbsp Olga Panova nbsp Julie Coin nbsp Karla Mraz 6 4 6 1Win 2 1 Apr 2006 Open de Biarritz France 25 000 Clay nbsp Nina Bratchikova nbsp Klaudia Jans Ignacik nbsp Alicja Rosolska 6 3 6 2Win 3 1 Oct 2008 ITF Ortisei Italy 100 000 Carpet nbsp Mariya Koryttseva nbsp Maret Ani nbsp Galina Voskoboeva 6 2 6 1Records editTournament Year Record accomplished Player tiedWimbledon 2012 Achieved a Golden Set 182 Pauline Betz 1943 Tine Scheuer Larsen 1995 Best Grand Slam results details editSingles edit Australian Open2015 Australian OpenRound Opponent Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Lucie Safarova 16 No 16 6 4 2 6 8 6 No 662R nbsp Monica Puig No 60 6 2 7 6 8 6 3R nbsp Peng Shuai 21 No 22 6 7 7 9 3 6 French Open2010 French OpenRound Opponent Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Sara Errani No 33 6 1 7 5 No 362R nbsp Agnieszka Radwanska 8 No 8 7 5 6 33R nbsp Alisa Kleybanova 28 No 28 6 2 4 6 6 04R nbsp Jarmila Groth WC No 107 6 4 6 3QF nbsp Jelena Jankovic 4 No 4 5 7 4 62012 French Open qualifier Round Opponent Rank Score YSRQ1 nbsp Ajla Tomljanovic No 198 6 4 6 4 No 142Q2 nbsp CoCo Vandeweghe No 156 6 1 6 2Q3 nbsp Elena Bogdan No 200 6 1 6 11R nbsp Mandy Minella No 87 6 3 6 42R nbsp Sofia Arvidsson No 54 6 1 6 03R nbsp Carla Suarez Navarro No 46 6 4 7 54R nbsp Li Na 7 No 7 3 6 6 2 6 0QF nbsp Petra Kvitova 4 No 4 6 3 2 6 4 6 Wimbledon Championships2016 WimbledonRound Opponent Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Julia Gorges No 78 7 5 6 4 No 962R nbsp Elina Svitolina 17 No 20 6 2 3 6 6 43R nbsp Sabine Lisicki No 81 7 6 7 2 6 14R nbsp Lucie Safarova 28 No 29 6 2 6 4QF nbsp Venus Williams 8 No 8 6 7 5 7 2 6 US Open2016 US OpenRound Opponent Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Lara Arruabarrena No 91 6 2 6 3 No 522R nbsp Wang Qiang No 62 6 0 6 13R nbsp Zhang Shuai No 51 6 2 7 54R nbsp Serena Williams 1 No 1 2 6 3 6 Doubles edit Australian Open2012 Australian Openwith nbsp Vania King 3rd seed Round Opponents Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Kristina Barrois nbsp Anna Lena Gronefeld No 63No 53 1 6 6 3 6 1 No 52R nbsp Sacha Jones WC nbsp Bojana Bobusic WC No 958No 386 6 1 6 03R nbsp Petra Martic nbsp Kristina Mladenovic No 114No 83 6 2 2 6 6 2QF nbsp Andrea Hlavackova 7 nbsp Lucie Hradecka 7 No 14No 15 5 7 2 6 French Open2015 French Openwith nbsp Casey Dellacqua 12th seed Round Opponents Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Chan Chin wei nbsp Lauren Davis No 76No 264 6 1 6 2 No 342R nbsp Alize Cornet nbsp Magda Linette No 137No 120 6 2 6 13R nbsp Caroline Garcia 8 nbsp Katarina Srebotnik 8 No 23No 20 6 1 6 1QF nbsp Michaella Krajicek 13 nbsp Barbora Strycova 13 No 26No 31 6 3 7 5SF nbsp Ekaterina Makarova 2 nbsp Elena Vesnina 2 No 7No 7 6 3 6 2F nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands 7 nbsp Lucie Safarova 7 No 19No 18 6 3 4 6 2 6 Wimbledon Championships2010 Wimbledonwith nbsp Vania KingRound Opponents Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Alberta Brianti nbsp Alexandra Dulgheru No 220No 120 6 1 6 2 No 492R nbsp Monica Niculescu 7 nbsp Shahar Pe er 7 No 26No 37 6 0 3 6 6 23R nbsp Nadia Petrova 3 nbsp Samantha Stosur 3 No 11No 8 6 4 6 4QF nbsp Kveta Peschke 6 nbsp Katarina Srebotnik 6 No 13No 12 3 6 7 5 6 3SF nbsp Liezel Huber 5 nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands 5 No 3No 21 6 4 6 2F nbsp Elena Vesnina nbsp Vera Zvonareva No 41No 193 7 6 8 6 6 2 US Open2010 US Openwith nbsp Vania King 6th seed Round Opponents Rank Score YSR1R nbsp Jelena Kostanic Tosic nbsp Romina Oprandi No 1 001No 211 6 3 6 0 No 212R nbsp Jarmila Groth nbsp Klara Zakopalova No 328No 87 7 5 4 6 6 23R nbsp Iveta Benesova 12 nbsp Barbora Zahlavova Strycova 12 No 28No 26 7 6 11 9 3 6 7 6 11 9 QF nbsp Gisela Dulko 1 nbsp Flavia Pennetta 1 No 4No 5 6 3 6 3SF nbsp Cara Black 9 nbsp Anastasia Rodionova 9 No 6No 39 6 3 4 6 6 4F nbsp Liezel Huber 2 nbsp Nadia Petrova 2 No 1No 12 2 6 6 4 7 6 7 4 Mixed doubles edit Australian Open2013 Australian Openwith nbsp Denis IstominRound Opponents Score1R nbsp Vania King nbsp Marcelo Melo 2 6 6 4 10 7 2R nbsp Yan Zi Alt nbsp Santiago Gonzalez Alt 6 2 6 1QF nbsp Nuria Llagostera Vives nbsp David Marrero 6 4 7 5SF nbsp Jarmila Gajdosova WC nbsp Matthew Ebden WC 5 7 6 7 5 7 French Open2010 French Openwith nbsp Julian KnowleRound Opponents Score1R nbsp Yan Zi 8 nbsp Mariusz Fyrstenberg 8 6 4 6 42R nbsp Barbora Zahlavova Strycova nbsp Frantisek Cermak 6 3 6 3QF nbsp Cara Black 2 nbsp Leander Paes 2 6 3 6 7 2 7 10 7 SF nbsp Vania King nbsp Christopher Kas 6 4 6 4F nbsp Katarina Srebotnik 6 nbsp Nenad Zimonjic 6 6 4 6 7 5 7 9 11 Wimbledon Championships2016 Wimbledonwith nbsp Aisam ul Haq Qureshi 14th seed Round Opponents Score1R bye2R nbsp Zhang Shuai nbsp Julian Knowle 6 3 7 6 7 4 3R nbsp Anna Smith WC nbsp Neal Skupski WC 6 3 6 4QF nbsp Katarina Srebotnik 11 nbsp Marcin Matkowski 11 6 3 3 6 7 5SF nbsp Anna Lena Gronefeld 15 nbsp Robert Farah 15 4 6 6 2 5 7 US Open2015 US Openwith nbsp Juan Sebastian Cabal 6th seed Round Opponents Score1R nbsp Andreja Klepac nbsp Robert Farah 6 2 6 22R nbsp Lisa Raymond Alt nbsp Jamie Murray Alt 7 5 2 6 10 8 QF nbsp Bethanie Mattek Sands nbsp Sam Querrey 6 3 4 6 6 10 2016 US Openwith nbsp Bruno Soares 2nd seed Round Opponents Score1R nbsp Xu Yifan nbsp Aisam ul Haq Qureshi 6 4 3 6 10 8 2R nbsp Timea Babos nbsp Eric Butorac 6 3 7 5QF nbsp Chan Yung jan nbsp Nenad Zimonjic 6 1 3 6 11 13 2021 US Openwith nbsp Fabrice Martin Protected ranking Round Opponents Score1R nbsp Chan Hao ching 7 nbsp Michael Venus 7 6 4 3 6 10 7 2R nbsp Sachia Vickery WC nbsp Nathan Pasha WC 6 4 4 6 11 9 QF nbsp Dayana Yastremska Alt nbsp Max Purcell Alt 2 6 3 6Top 10 wins edit Player Rank Event Surface Rd Score20091 nbsp Jelena Jankovic No 5 US Open Hard 2R 6 3 6 7 4 7 6 6 20102 nbsp Agnieszka Radwanska No 8 French Open Clay 2R 7 5 6 320123 nbsp Li Na No 7 French Open Clay 4R 3 6 6 2 6 04 nbsp Sara Errani No 8 Wimbledon Grass 3R 6 0 6 420135 nbsp Caroline Wozniacki No 10 Madrid Open Clay 1R 6 2 6 420146 nbsp Dominika Cibulkova No 10 Rosmalen Open Grass 1R 6 2 3 6 6 320157 nbsp Garbine Muguruza No 8 Cincinnati Open Hard 1R 6 4 7 6 0 Notes edit a b The first Premier 5 event of the year has switched back and forth between the Dubai Tennis Championships and the Qatar Ladies Open since 2009 Dubai was classified as a Premier 5 event from 2009 to 2011 before being succeeded by Doha for the 2012 2014 period In 2015 Dubai regained its Premier 5 status while Doha was demoted to Premier status The Premier 5 tournaments were reclassified as WTA 1000 tournaments in 2021 a b In 2014 the Pan Pacific Open was downgraded to a Premier event and replaced by the Wuhan Open The Premier 5 tournaments were reclassified as WTA 1000 tournaments in 2021 References edit Wimbledon Golden set helps Yaroslava Shvedova advance The Seattle Times 30 June 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2017 Shvedova tops Santangelo in final at Sony Ericsson Retrieved 19 February 2007 eurosport com Tennis Shvedova stuns Santangelo for first WTA win Sunday February 18 2007 3 22 pm Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 19 February 2007 ITF tennis profile Activity Error strewn Jelena Jankovic crashes out in battle with Yaroslava Shvedova The Guardian London Retrieved 9 May 2009 Kazakhstan s Yaroslava Shvedova forced out of Hopman Cup with right knee injury Herald Sun 3 January 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Wozniacki pleased to avoid least favourite question 14 February 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Safarova serves up a storm in the desert ESPN 9 March 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Kim in fine form at the Sony Ericsson Open in Miami 25 March 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2017 LYNCH LAUREN 22 April 2011 Dinara Safina Cruises into Quarterfinals at Grand Prix de SAR bleacherreport com Retrieved 13 August 2017 WTA Estoril Stephens leads American exodus 27 April 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Greene Bob 16 May 2011 Novak Djokovic Keeps Winning Maria Sharapova Wins Italian Open Retrieved 14 August 2017 Sania Mirza reaches 2011 French Open Doubles final 2 June 2011 Retrieved 14 August 2017 Callow James 8 June 2011 Heather Watson sees off Misaki Doi to reach Aegon Classic last 16 The 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