List_of_Grand_Slam_girls'_singles_champions

List of Grand Slam girls' singles champions

List of Grand Slam girls' singles champions

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List of Girls' Singles Junior Grand Slam tournaments tennis champions.

Many of these junior champions went on to become major champions and world No. 1s on the senior tour including Evonne Goolagong Cawley (world No. 1 and 8-time major winner), Sue Barker (1976 French Open champion), Mima Jaušovec (1977 French Open champion), Chris O'Neil (1978 Australian Open champion), Tracy Austin (world No. 1 and two-time US Open champion), Hana Mandlikova (4-time major champion), Gabriela Sabatini (1990 US Open champion), Jennifer Capriati (world No. 1 and 3-time major champion), Lindsay Davenport (world No. 1 and 3-time major champion), Martina Hingis (world No. 1 and 5-time major winner), Amélie Mauresmo (world No. 1 and two-time major champion), Justine Henin (world No. 1 and won seven majors), Jelena Jankovic (world No. 1), Marion Bartoli (2013 Wimbledon champion), Victoria Azarenka (world No. 1 and two-time Australian Open champion), Jeļena Ostapenko (2017 French Open champion), Caroline Wozniacki (world No. 1 and 2018 Australian Open champion), Simona Halep (world No. 1 and 2-time major champion), Ashleigh Barty (world No. 1 and 3-time major champion), Iga Świątek (world No. 1 and four-time major champion), and Coco Gauff (world No. 3, world No. 1 in doubles, 2023 US Open winner.)

Other notable names who were successful on the tour were Zina Garrison (world No. 4 and 1990 Wimbledon finalist), Natasha Zvereva (1988 French Open finalist and world No. 1 in doubles), Magdalena Maleeva (world No. 4), Cara Black (world No. 1 and 10-time major champion in doubles and mixed doubles), Nadia Petrova (world No. 3 and two-time major semifinalist), Agnieszka Radwańska (world No. 2 and 2012 Wimbledon finalist), Karolína Plíšková (world No. 1 and two-time major finalist), Eugenie Bouchard (world No. 5 and 2014 Wimbledon finalist), Elina Svitolina (world No. 3), Ons Jabeur (world No. 2 and three-time major finalist), Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (world No. 11 and 2021 French Open finalist), Paula Badosa (world No. 2), Daria Kasatkina (world No. 8 and 2022 French Open semifinalist), Maria Kirilenko (world No. 10 and Olympic medallist), and Kristina Mladenovic (world No. 10, doubles world No. 1, nine-time major doubles champion).

Champions by year

More information Year, Australian Open ...
More information Legend ...
  1. On 1 March 2022, the WTA announced that players from Russia will not be allowed to compete under the name or flag of Russia following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[1]

Most Grand Slam singles titles

Note: when a tie, the person to reach the mark first is listed first.

More information Titles, Players ...

Grand Slam singles titles by country (since 1974)

28 
 United States
19 
 Australia
13 
 France
11 
 Great Britain and  Russia
7 
 Czech Republic
6 
 Poland,  Bulgaria,  Czechoslovakia,   Switzerland and  Croatia
5 
 Argentina and  Belgium
4 
 Germany,  Soviet Union,  Netherlands and  Ukraine
3 
 Romania,  Italy,  Hungary,  Belarus,  Spain and  Slovakia
2 
 South Africa,  Israel,  Zimbabwe,  Indonesia,  Canada and  Denmark
1 
 Yugoslavia,  Sweden,  Paraguay,  Slovenia,  Uzbekistan,  Serbia and Montenegro,  Estonia,  Thailand,  Tunisia,  China,  Chinese Taipei,  Colombia,  Latvia,  Andorra and  Philippines

Multiple titles in a season

Three titles in a single season

More information Player, Year ...

Surface Slam

Players who won Grand Slam titles on clay, grass and hard courts in a calendar year.

More information Player, Year ...

Channel Slam

Players who won the French Open-Wimbledon double.

More information Year, Player ...

See also


References

  1. "Joint Statement by the International Governing Bodies of Tennis". WTA Tour. 1 March 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022.

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