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Amanda Anisimova

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Amanda Anisimova
Full nameAmanda Kay Victoria Anisimova
Country (sports) United States
ResidenceAventura, Florida
Born (2001-08-31) August 31, 2001 (age 23)
Freehold Township, New Jersey
Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Turned pro2016
PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)
CoachHendrik Vleeshouwers
Prize moneyUS$ 5,098,235
Singles
Career record160–98
Career titles2
Highest rankingNo. 21 (October 21, 2019)
Current rankingNo. 39 (October 7, 2024)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian Open4R (2019, 2022, 2024)
French OpenSF (2019)
WimbledonQF (2022)
US Open3R (2020)
Doubles
Career record4–8
Career titles0
Highest rankingNo. 386 (June 24, 2019)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian Open1R (2019)
French Open2R (2019, 2021)
US Open1R (2017)
Mixed doubles
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
Australian Open2R (2020)
US Open1R (2017, 2018)
Last updated on: 12 October 2024.

Amanda Kay Victoria Anisimova (/əˈnɪsɪmvə/ ə-NIS-ih-moh-və;[1] Russian: Аманда Анисимова, IPA: [ɐˈmandə ɐˈnʲisʲɪməvə]; born August 31, 2001) is an American professional tennis player. She has a career-high singles ranking of world No. 21 by the WTA. Anisimova has won two WTA Tour titles and reached three finals in total.

With her father Konstantin as her longtime coach and her older sister also a tennis player, Anisimova began playing tennis at a very young age. Her parents decided to move to Florida when Anisimova was young to give their children better training opportunities. As a junior, Anisimova was ranked as high as No. 2 in the world. She won the 2017 US Open girls' singles title, as well as two other Grade-A titles. She was also the finalist at the French Open girls' singles event. On the WTA Tour, Anisimova rose to prominence at the 2018 Indian Wells Open, where she scored her first top-10 victory at age 16 against Petra Kvitová. She won her first WTA title at the Copa Colsanitas in April 2019 at age 17, and her second title at the Melbourne Summer Set in January 2022 at age 20.

Her first two breakthroughs at the majors came in early 2019. At the Australian Open, she defeated No. 11 Aryna Sabalenka, one of the leading contenders for the title, to reach the fourth round. At the French Open, she upset Simona Halep, the defending champion and world No. 3, to become the youngest semifinalist at the tournament in over a decade. The next time she reached the fourth round of a major was at the 2022 Australian Open where she defeated the defending champion, Naomi Osaka. In 2022, she reached her first Wimbledon Championships quarterfinal.[2][3]

Early life and background

[edit]

Amanda Anisimova was born in Freehold Township, New Jersey[4] to Olga Anisimova and Konstantin Anisimov. She has an older sister, Maria, who played college tennis for the University of Pennsylvania while attending Wharton's undergraduate business school. Her parents emigrated from Russia to the United States a few years before she was born to give their older daughter better opportunities. They worked in the finance and banking industries, and neither played competitive tennis while growing up.[5][6]

Anisimova started playing tennis at age five. She credits her sister as her inspiration for taking up the sport, saying "When I was little she was playing tennis. I always saw her playing, and I wanted to do it too. That's how I got into it and my parents got into it too."[7] Her family moved to Florida when she was very young, so Amanda and her sister would have more opportunities to train and find other coaches. Her father long acted as her primary coach while she was a junior, and her mother has also helped coach her. Additionally, she had worked with Nick Saviano starting from when she was 11 years old. Max Fomine, who has also been an assistant coach for the Bryan brothers, has served as her travelling coach.[5][6]

Juniors

[edit]
Anisimova at the 2017 French Open

Anisimova achieved a career-high ITF junior ranking of No. 2 in the world in 2016.[8] Early in her junior career she entered the 2015 Abierto Juvenil Mexicano ranked outside the top 300, but unexpectedly won the high-level Grade A tournament at age 14.[9][10] She continued to excel in 2016, winning the Grade 1 Copa del Café and reaching the final at the Grade A Copa Gerdau.[11][12] On the strength of these results Anisimova was the No. 2 seed at the French Open. In her second career junior Grand Slam tournament, she became the first American finalist at the girls' event since Ashley Harkleroad in 2002. However, she lost the final to Rebeka Masarova.[13][14] During the summer, she competed in the USTA Girls' 18s National Championship as the No. 5 seed and finished in 4th place.[15]

As a 15-year-old Anisimova won two more big titles, the first at the Grade 1 Yucatán Cup in late 2016 and the second at the Grade A Copa Gerdau in early 2017 where she had been a finalist a year earlier.[16][17] Following these titles, she played in only two more ITF junior tournaments that year, both of which were slam events.[8] She capped off her junior career by winning her first Grand Slam title at the US Open, where she defeated fellow American Coco Gauff in the final and did not drop a set during the tournament.[18][19] Anisimova was also a member of the United States team that won the 2017 Junior Fed Cup, but did not play in the final tie due to illness.[20]

Professional

[edit]

2016–17: French Open debut, ITF Circuit title

[edit]

In the middle of 2016, Anisimova received a wildcard into US Open qualifying, her first professional tournament. She won her debut match against world No. 124, Verónica Cepede Royg, at the age of 14, then lost in the following round.[21] Following her junior title at the 2017 Copa Gerdau in February, Anisimova stayed in Brazil and played in a $25k event in Curitiba. She reached her first final on the pro tour at the tournament, despite this being her first professional main draw.[22][23] A few weeks later, Anisimova was awarded a wildcard into the Miami Open, where she lost to Taylor Townsend, in three sets, in her WTA Tour main-draw debut.[24]

During the clay court season, Anisimova won the USTA French Open Wildcard Challenge by reaching back-to-back finals at the $80k event in Indian Harbour Beach and the $60k event in Dothan, Alabama the following week. These results also helped her crack the top 300 of the WTA rankings.[23] In her major debut, she lost her first-round match at the French Open to Kurumi Nara. Nonetheless, she became the youngest player to participate in the main draw since Alizé Cornet in 2005.[25] After forgoing the grass-court season, Anisimova continued to play on the ITF Pro Circuit. She broke into the top 200 by capturing her first career professional title at the $60k event in Sacramento, California towards the end of July while she was still 15 years old.[26][27]

2018: Top 100, WTA Tour final, top 10 victory

[edit]

Anisimova's first two tournaments of the year were the inaugural Challenger Series events at Newport Beach and Indian Wells. She qualified for both main draws, and her semifinal at Indian Wells helped her earn a main-draw wildcard into the WTA Tour event there the following week.[28] At the Indian Wells Open, Anisimova became the youngest player to reach the fourth round since Nicole Vaidišová in 2005. She defeated Pauline Parmentier for her first career WTA Tour match win, No. 23 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, and then No. 9 Petra Kvitová.[29] Her run ended against No. 5 Karolína Plíšková.[30] Anisimova was also awarded a wildcard into the Miami Open. She won her opening match against Wang Qiang despite injuring her right foot in the third set. This injury forced her to withdraw from the tournament and kept her out for four months.[31] At the time, she had risen to a career-high ranking of No. 128 in the world.[32]

Anisimova returned to tennis in July at the Silicon Valley Classic. She qualified for the main draw and won her first match back, which was also against Wang Qiang.[33] She then reached the third round of the Cincinnati Open to return to the top 150.[34] After losing her opening match as a wildcard at the US Open, Anisimova next entered the Japan Women's Open.[35] In her first tournament as a 17-year-old, she qualified for the main draw and made it to her first career WTA final, dropping just one set overall and none in the main draw before the final. She defeated top seed and world No. 41 Zhang Shuai in the semifinals and lost the final to Hsieh Su-wei. With this performance, she cracked the top 100 for the first time.[36][37]

2019: First WTA Tour title, French Open semifinal and top 25 debut

[edit]
Anisimova at the 2019 French Open

Anisimova played one tune-up event before the Australian Open, reaching the quarterfinals at the Auckland Open.[38] Despite having never won a singles match at a major, Anisimova made it to the fourth round of the Australian Open. She won her first three matches in straight sets, including a victory over one of the favorites for the title in world No. 11, Aryna Sabalenka, losing to eventual finalist Petra Kvitová.[39][40][41] The following two months, she did not record more than a single match win at any of her next four tournaments.[42]

Having skipped the clay court season the previous year due to injury, Anisimova entered the Copa Colsanitas in Colombia without any match wins on clay at the WTA Tour-level. Nonetheless, she won the tournament for her first WTA title. As the sixth seed, she won four of her five matches in three sets, including the final against Astra Sharma.[43] Anisimova closed out the clay-court season by becoming the youngest semifinalist at the French Open since Vaidišová in 2006.[44] During the tournament, she defeated No. 11 Sabalenka again in the second round and then upset the defending champion and world No. 3, Simona Halep, in the quarterfinals.[45][46] She did not lose a set until the semifinals when she was defeated by the eventual champion and world No. 8, Ashleigh Barty, despite coming from behind to win the first set, after losing the first five games and needing to save two set points in the sixth game.[47] With this result, she rose to No. 26 in the world.[32]

Anisimova had less success in the second half of the season. Her best result was reaching quarterfinals at the Silicon Valley Classic, where she lost to the eventual champion, Zheng Saisai.[48] She dealt with a back injury during the event, which led her to withdraw from both Premier 5 events within the next month. Late in August, she withdrew from the US Open following the death of her father.[49] She entered two more tournaments afterward, winning one match in total, and then she ended her year early. Nonetheless, she reached as high as No. 21 in the world near the end of the season.[32] She qualified for the WTA Elite Trophy, the second-tier year-end championships, but did not accept the invitation.[50]

2020–21: French and US Open third rounds, loss of form and out of top 75

[edit]

Anisimova began the year at the Auckland Open, where, after defeating Kateryna Kozlova, Daria Kasatkina, and Eugenie Bouchard, she fell to Serena Williams in the semifinals.[51]

2022: Wimbledon quarterfinal, second career title and return to top 25

[edit]

Anisimova started the season at the Melbourne Summer Set 2. She made it to the final, her first final appearance since 2019. She won her second WTA Tour singles title by defeating qualifier Aliaksandra Sasnovich in the final.[52] At the Australian Open, she stunned 22nd seed, Belinda Bencic, in the second round.[53] In the third round, she came from a set down and saved two match points in the final set to upset 2019 and 2021 champion, Naomi Osaka. This marked the second time she has beaten a defending champion at a major, having beaten Simona Halep at the 2019 French Open.[54][55] She subsequently lost in the fourth round to world No. 1 and eventual champion, Ashleigh Barty.[56][57] As a result, she moved 19 positions up in the rankings to No. 41, on 31 January 2022.

In February, Anisimova played at the Dubai Championships where she fell in the first round of qualifying to Madison Brengle. In Doha, she lost in the second round to Jeļena Ostapenko.[58] In March, she competed at Indian Wells where she beat compatriot Emma Navarro.[59] In the second round, she faced Leylah Fernandez: Anisimova won the first set 6–2, and in the second set, she had a 5–4 lead and had match points, but Fernandez saved all four match points and took the second set to a tiebreaker. Fernandez won the second-set tiebreaker 7–0. After the second set ended, Anisimova was visibly emotional and approached the chair umpire to say that she was ill and retiring from the match.[60] At the Miami Open, she was beaten in the first round by Shelby Rogers.[61]

Anisimova started her clay-court season at the Charleston Open. Seeded 15th, she stunned top seed Aryna Sabalenka in the third round.[62] She reached the semifinals where she lost to Ons Jabeur.[63] In Madrid, she upset Aryna Sabalenka, in the first round for her fifth career top-10 victory.[64] In the third round, she beat Victoria Azarenka for the tenth top-20 win of her career.[65][66] She lost in the quarterfinals to qualifier Ekaterina Alexandrova.[67] At the Italian Open, she beat Belinda Bencic in the second round.[68] She then upset Danielle Collins in the third round.[69] In the quarterfinals, she lost to Aryna Sabalenka, her first loss to Sabalenka having led their head-to-head 4–0.[70] Seeded 27th at the French Open, she defeated four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka, in the first round.[71] She reached the fourth round where she lost to Leylah Fernandez.[72]

Anisimova started her grass-court season at the Bad Homburg Open. Seeded sixth, she reached the quarterfinals where she lost to Simona Halep.[73] Seeded 20th at Wimbledon, she came from a set down to defeat Coco Gauff in the third round.[74] She defeated Harmony Tan in the fourth round to reach the quarterfinals at this major for the first time in her career[75] but lost her match again Simona Halep.[76][77]

In August, Anisimova began her US Open Series by competing at the Silicon Valley Classic in San Jose where she beat Karolína Plíšková in the second round.[78] She lost in the quarterfinals to eventual finalist Shelby Rogers.[79] At the Canadian Open in Toronto, she was defeated in the second round by 14th seed and last year finalist, Karolína Plíšková.[80] At the Western & Southern Open in Cincinnati, she ousted Daria Kasatkina in the first round.[81]

2023: Break from tennis

[edit]

Anisimova started her season in Adelaide. At the first tournament, she lost in the first round to Veronika Kudermetova.[82] At the second Adelaide event, she fell in the final round of qualifying to Jil Teichmann. However, due to Jessica Pegula withdrawing from the tournament due to change of schedule, she entered the main draw as a lucky loser.[83] She beat Liudmila Samsonova in the first round,[84] and was defeated in the second by Beatriz Haddad Maia.[85] Seeded 28th at the Australian Open, she lost in round one to Marta Kostyuk in straight sets.[86][87]

In February, Anisimova competed at the Dubai Championships defeating wildcard and two-time Grand Slam finalist, Vera Zvonareva, in the first round.[88] She was beaten in her second-round match by Victoria Azarenka despite having a 5–3 lead in the third set.[89] In March, she played at the Indian Wells Open. Seeded 31st, she lost in the second round to Linda Nosková.[90] In Miami, she retired during her first-round match against Madison Brengle.[91]

At the Madrid Open, Anisimova lost in the first round to qualifier Arantxa Rus.[92] On Friday, May 5th, she announced on her Instagram account that she will be taking an indefinite break from tennis, citing burnout and concerns for her mental health.[93][94][95]

2024: Third Australian Open fourth round, WTA 1000 final, back to top 50

[edit]

Anisimova beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in her return to tennis at the Auckland Open.[96] She returned to the Grand Slam tournaments at the Australian Open with wins over 13th seed Liudmila Samsonova,[97] Nadia Podoroska and Paula Badosa to reach the fourth round at this major.

In the beginning of her clay-court season, she entered the Charleston Open using her protected ranking and defeated Alizé Cornet.

At the beginning of the American summer hardcourt swing, at the Washington Open, she qualified for the main draw and reached the quarterfinals with wins over Sloane Stephens and seventh seed Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. Using protected ranking again, she made her first career WTA 1000 final at the Canadian Open in Toronto, defeating Caroline Dolehide, and upsetting two Russian seeds, fifth seed Daria Kasatkina[98] and tenth seed Anna Kalinskaya by retirement, and finally second seed, Aryna Sabalenka,[99] and eighth seed Emma Navarro. She was the lowest-ranked women's singles finalist at the tournament in 40 years, since Alycia Moulton in 1984.[100] Anisimova lost the final in three sets to Jessica Pegula but returned to the top 50, moving more than 80 positions up from No. 132, on 12 August 2024.

She secured a main-draw wildcard for the US Open by winning the US Open Wildcard Challenge.[101][102] but lost to seventh seed Zheng Qinwen.

At the newly upgraded WTA 500 Korea Open, she upset sixth seed Yulia Putintseva in straight sets.[103]

Playing style

[edit]

Anisimova is an aggressive baseliner, with powerful groundstrokes from both wings. Her two-handed backhand is her most potent weapon, and is hit consistently with depth, speed, and power; she produces many winners with her backhand down-the-line. Her forehand is also strong, and is hit flat with a condensed swing, allowing her to generate sharp angles with this stroke. She can hit her forehand effectively at any ball height, rendering her forehand deadly on any surface. She is fast around the court, and her footwork is quick and intricate, allowing her to extend rallies until she can create an opportunity to hit a winner. One of her greatest strengths is her return of serve, especially when returning second serves, neutralising powerful serves with a crosscourt inside-out forehand or a backhand down-the-line, making her one of the most effective returners on the WTA Tour. The cleanness of her ball-striking, point construction, and powerful groundstrokes make her a formidable opponent on any surface.

Personal life

[edit]

Anisimova is currently dating Tyler Roos, a former The Amazing Race Australia contestant and the son of Australian rules football legend Paul Roos.[104][105][106]

Endorsements

[edit]

Anisimova is sponsored by Nike for clothing and shoes,[107] and by Wilson for racquets. She is also sponsored by Gatorade and Therabody.[108][109]

Career statistics

[edit]

Grand Slam performance

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

Singles

[edit]
Tournament 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 SR W–L Win %
Australian Open A A A 4R 1R A 4R 1R 4R 0 / 5 9–5 64%
French Open A 1R A SF 3R 1R 4R A 2R 0 / 6 11–6 65%
Wimbledon A A A 2R NH 1R QF A Q3 0 / 3 5–3 63%
US Open Q2 Q1 1R A 3R 2R 1R A 1R 0 / 5 3–5 38%
Win–loss 0–0 0–1 0–1 9–3 4–3 1–3 10–4 0–1 4–3 0 / 19 28–19 60%
Career statistics
Titles 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 Career total: 2
Finals 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 Career total: 4
Year-end ranking 764 192 95 24 30 78 23 359 $4,983,645

Doubles

[edit]
Tournament 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 SR W–L
Australian Open A A 1R A A A 0 / 1 0–1
French Open A A 2R A 2R A 0 / 2 2–2
Wimbledon A A A NH A A 0 / 0 0–0
US Open 1R A A A A A 0 / 1 0–1
Win–loss 0–1 0–0 1–2 0–0 1–1 0–0 0 / 4 2–4

References

[edit]
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