Monday, October 28, 2024

Wk.43- Queen for Yet Another Day







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*WEEK 43 CHAMPIONS*
TOKYO, JAPAN (WTA 500/Hard Court Outdoor)
S: Zheng Qinwen/CHN def. Sofia Kenin/USA 7-6(5)/6-3
D: Shuko Aoyama/Eri Hozumi (JPN/JPN) def. Ena Shibahara/Laura Siegemund (JPN/GER) 6-4/7-6(3)
GUANGZHOU, CHINA (WTA 250/Hard Court Outdoor)
S: Olga Danilovic/SRB def. Caroline Dolehide/USA 6-3/6-1
D: Katerina Siniakova/Zhang Shuai (CZE/CHN) def. Katarzyna Piter/Fanny Stollar (POL/HUN) 6-4/6-1
TAMPICO, MEXICO (WTA 125/Hard Court Outdoor)
S: Marina Stakusic/CAN def. Anna Blinkova/RUS 6-4/2-6/6-4
D: Carmen Corley/Rebecca Marino (USA/CAN) def. Alina Korneeva/Polina Kudermetova (RUS/RUS) 6-3/6-3




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PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Zheng Qinwen/CHN
...Zheng is roaring as she heads into her first WTA Finals event in Riyadh, improving her record during the tour's Asian swing to 12-2 (she's on a 28-4 run starting with her pre-Olympics title run in Palermo) by claiming her third title of the season in Tokyo while dropping just one set all week.

The tournament's top seed, #7-ranked Zheng opened with a win over Moyuka Uchijima, then took down Leylah Fernandez in three sets (after an occasionally testy encounter with the Canadian in Wuhan). From there, Diana Shnaider and Sofia Kenin (Zheng put in 16 aces vs. the Bannerette) went out in straights to allow Zheng to claim her fifth career tour-level title.


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RISERS: Olga Danilovic/SRB and Caroline Dolehide/USA
...for the first time in well, ever, Danilovic is starting to take advantage of her great potential and string good results together. As a whole, 2024 has been a collective success for the 23-year old, with the back half of the season turning out to be a proving ground for what's possible for the Serb. In Guangzhou, it produced her first tour title since her orignal breakout result six years ago.

In the spring, Danilovic reached the Round of 16 at Roland Garros with wins over the likes of Trevisan, Collins and Vekic to pull off her first career second week run at a major and the first by any Serbian woman in nine years (when both Jankovic and Ivanovic did it). Since then, Danilovic's results have only improved.

Arriving off a $100K title run in her last outing earlier this month, Danilovic outpaced Erika Andreeva, Diane Parry, Mananchaya Sawangkaew, top-seeded Katerina Siniakova and Caroline Dolehide (in a 6-3/6-1 final) to claim the crown, her second tour title (in her third final) and first on hard court. She's won ten straight matches, 13 of 15, and has succeeded at a 19-5 clip since the last week of July. Guangzhou is the Serb's first WTA win since she claimed the short-lived Moscow River Cup event in 2018 as a lucky loser in her WTA MD debut appearance.

Already ranked at a career-best #86, Danilovic's title run will lift her all the way up to #52 in the new rankings.

Dolehide, Danilovic's opponent in the Guangzhou final, had quite the journey to her second WTA final (her first since a surprise run to the Guadalajara 1000 title match last fall).

After making it through qualifying, the #101-ranked Bannerette had to rally from 4-1 down in the 3rd (winning on MP #4) to advance past Marie Bouzkova in the 2nd Round, won a three-setter over Jessica Bouzas Maneiro in the QF, and saved four MP (three at triple MP down in the deciding 3rd set TB) vs. Lucia Bronzetti in the SF.

By the time the final arrived, Dolehide only had enough left to score four total games vs. Danilovic, but she still jumps 19 spots to #82 this week.


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SURPRISE: Mananchaya Sawangkaew/THA
...the 4Q Asian swing has turned out to be a bit of an introduction for Sawangkaew to the WTA. The 22-year old Thai made her tour-level MD dubut in Hua Hin as a qualifier, then repeated the pattern a week later in Bejing and posted her first tour win over Zarina Diyas.

This past week in Guangzhou. Sawangkaew was at it again, qualifying for another MD, then pulling off back-to-back victories over Ella Seidel, both in the final Q-round *and* then again in the 1st. She followed up with another over Yuan Yue to reach her maiden WTA QF, where she fell to eventual champion Olga Danilovic

Sawangkaew will crack the Top 150 in the rankings. This weekend, she made it through qualifying yet again to reach the Week 44 MD in Jiujiang.


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VETERANS: Katerina Siniakova/Zhang Shuai, CZE/CHN
...when does the Doubles Player of the Year not even enter into the discussion when it comes to the Doubles *Team* of the Year? When it's 2024 and Katerina Siniakova is gathering up co-pilots while she stays aloft well above the rest of the doubles field, that's when.

In Guangzhou, world WD #1 Siniakova teamed with Zhang to pick up her fifth title of the year with a fifth different partner (sixth if you count her MX Gold medal run), taking the 250 crown (the Czech's smallest since winning in Monastir two years ago) without dropping a set. The top seeds, with Siniakova playing after having retired from her singles SF match, completed their title march with a 6-4/6-1 win in the final over Katarzyna Piter & Fanny Stollar.

So far in 2024, Siniakova has won a pair of major titles (w/ Coco Gauff and Taylor Townsend), as well as three other tournaments with Storm Hunter, Golden Career Slam partner Barbora Krejcikova and now Zhang. It's the future Hall of Famer's 28th career title.

Even while spreading the wealth all season long, Siniakova is set to play the WTAF alongside *one* of her '24 partners: Wimbledon co-champion Townsend.

Meanwhile, while Zhang's singles results have improved of late, this is the 35-year old's 14th career WD title, but her first of '24 in her fourth final appearance of the season.


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COMEBACK: Sofia Kenin/USA
...Kenin must be feeling something of a sense of deja vu. A year ago, the former slam champ finished off a lackluster season with a strong final leg that included back-to-back finals at 500 San Diego and 1000 Guadalajara. But the momentum didn't carry over into 2024.

Kenin came into the Tokyo 500 stuck on ten match wins for the season (10-24 overall, with a 9-match losing streak between January-April, though her disappointing campaign has included 3r results at Rome and RG), and off a shocking 1st Round exit in Osaka (a loss to a debuting Aoi Ito). A wild card entrant, Kenin ran off early wins over Wuhan semifinalist Wang Xinyu and Clara Tauson (via a 3rd set TB), then posted her second Top 10 win of the season (w/ Jabeur in Rome) against Ningo champ Dasha Kasatkina, her first on hard court since knocking out then-#1 Ash Barty at the AO in 2020 en route to the title.

In her maiden SF of '24, Kenin handled Katie Boulter in straights to get the chance to play in her first final since Guadalajara last September. She put up a fight vs. a (still) in-form Zheng Qinwen, but lost a tight, well-contested title match 7-6(5)/6-3.

Ranked #155 heading into Tokyo, Kenin leaves with her ranking back inside the Top 100 with a big leap all the way up to #88.


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FRESH FACES: Marina Stakusic/CAN and Sayaka Ishii/JPN
...Canadian teenager Stakusic, a BJK Cup Finals breakout star less than a year ago, has gone on this season to crack the Top 150, make her slam debut (Wimbledon), record her first tour-level match win (Toronto) and notch her maiden Top 20 win (Ostapenko) en route to her first WTA QF (Guadalajara). But she had her best run yet in Week 43 in Tampico, Mexico.

At a WTA 125 event, the 19-year old qualified with a victory from a set down vs. Iryna Shymanovich, then rans off MD wins over Robin Montgomery, Lucrezia Stefanini, Sara Sorribes Tormo and, in her biggest career final, Anna Blinkova in another three-set affair.

The win improves Stakusic's mark in pro singles finals to 4-0 when combined with her 3-0 record in ITF finals in 2023. She'll rise to #134 in the new rankings, just six spots off her previous career high.

In Week 42, it was Japanese newcomers Sara Saito and Aoi Ito making nice runs in their tour debuts. This past week it was 19-year old countrywoman Ishii following suit in *her* maiden tour MD event.

The world #279 played her way into the MD with a 1-6/7-5/7-5 win in the final round of qualiflying over Clara Tauson (Ishii had trailed 6-1/3-1), then posted her first tour-level victory vs. Saito. Ishii followed up with another over Zeynep Sonmez to (like both Saito and Ito before her, though the latter reached the Osaka *SF*) get to the QF stage in her WTA debut event. Unfortunately, Ishii handed Diana Shnaider a walkover in the round and didn't get a chance to play for more.

Ishii cracks the Top 200 in the new rankings.


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ITF PLAYERS: Anastasia Zakharova/RUS and Renata Zarazua/MEX
...in Week 43 on the ITF circuit, the mark of "Z" was felt in both Spain and Texas.

In Les Franqueses del Valles (ESP), 22-year old Zakharova won an all-Hordette battle in the final against Alina Charaeva, taking the title by a 6-3/6-1 score to improve to 15-3 in career ITF finals, winning her second straight challenger title this month and second $100K (w/ one in July) this season.

Zakharova had gotten past Dalma Galfi (QF) and Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (SF) to reach the final.



Meanwhile, in Tyler, Texas, 24-year old Zarazua added another nice result to what has been a career year. The top ranked Mexican has already played in the MD of all four majors for the first time and become the first woman from Mexico to crack the Top 100 since Angelica Gavaldon in 1996.

After reaching a $100K challenger in August (a loss), Zarazua reversed that result this week, defeating teen Bannerette Iva Jovic 6-4/6-2 to claim her second-biggest career title, behind only her WTA 125 crown won last December, and lift her ranking from one career high (#71) to a another career high (#62).


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JUNIOR STAR: Jana Kovackova/CZE
...to catch up a bit, there was another big junior tournament in Week *42* in addition to the Junior Finals event won by Emerson Jones in Chengdu. In Sanxenxo, Spain, the Crusher Kovackova sisters -- 14-year old Jana and 16-year old Alena -- faced off for the same J300 crown that Alena had claimed a year ago.

This time, it was the younger sibling who prevailed, winning 6-4/6-2 to win her *fifth* consecutive junior singles title dating back to August (a stretch which also included the Czech Republic's win in the ITF 14s team event). It's her second J300 crown in October alone. Jana has gone 40-1 in junior competition since the spring, and is 56-4 in '24 with eight singles titles.

The sisters teamed up to win the doubles title, Jana's seventh on the year.
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DOUBLES: Shuko Aoyama/Eri Hozumi, JPN/JPN
...Tokyo's Pan Pacific Open welcomed just the second all-JPN doubles champions (w/ Kato/Ninomiya in 2018) in the event's 40-year history, as Aoyama & Hozumi came out on top in a trio of MTB (including over #1 seeds Dabrowski/Routliffe and #4 Bucsa/Niculescu) to reach the final, then defeated Ena Shibahara & Laura Siegemund (making back-to-back finals in Japan, after winning in Week 42 in Osaka) 6-4/7-6(3) to claim their first title as a pair.

For Aoyama, 36, it's her 20th career title, and first since winning in Montreal last year with Shibahara (the longtime WD partners won 10 tour titles together), while it's win #6 for 30-year old Hozumi. The Japanese duo reached the Cleveland final earlier this year.


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1. Guangzhou SF - Caroline Dolehide def. Lucia Bronzetti
...6-3/3-6/7-6(9). A potential spot in the final was passed around like a hot potato in the final set by Dolehide and Bronzetti.

Dolehide led 3-0 and 5-2, and served for the win at 5-3; while Bronzetti got her chance at 6-5. As things went to a deciding TB, Bronzetti took a triple MP lead at 6-3, and even held a fourth. But it turned out to be Dolehide, on her third MP of the breaker, who prevailed with an 11-9 win.



The win is Dolehide's second this season after facing down MP, while it's the second Bronzetti has lost after having held MP.
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2. Tokyo 1st Rd. - Moyuka Uchijima def. Mika Stojsavljevic
...6-4/6-7(7)/7-6(6). 15-year old Stojsavljevic, the U.S. Open girls' champ who just days earlier had reached the Junior Finals semis in Chengdu, makes her WTA MD debut a memorable one.

Uchijima rallied from 3-1 down to win the 1st, then saw Stojsavljevic save two MP at 6-5 in the 2nd, and a third in a TB. In the 3rd set, the Brit led 5-2 and served for her maiden win at 5-3, but Uchijima forced a deciding breaker and *finally* put away the victory on a third MP in the TB (sixth overall on the day).

If this is the British teen's *first* tour-level match, what fun does the future hold?


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3. Guangzhou 2nd Rd. - Caroline Dolehide def. Marie Bouzkova
...6-7(3)/6-4/7-6(6). Dolehide's route to the final was lined in the early rounds by this 3:21 drama after which Bouzkova fell to 0-3 in '24 matches that have lasted over three hours.

The Czech had taken the 1st. She'd led 5-3, saved a Dolehide SP at 6-5, then finally put away a 7-3 TB on SP #4 after racing out to a 6-0 advantage.

In the 3rd, Bouzkova led 4-1, only to see Dolehide surge back and twice serve for the win, holding a MP at 5-4, then two more at 6-5. Bouzkova broke to force a deciding TB, where the Bannerette finally put away her sixth MP to win 8-6.
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4. Tokyo 2nd Rd. - Sofia Kenin def. Clara Tauson
...6-7(8)/6-4/7-6(6). Kenin's final run included a narrow escape vs. the lucky loser Dane, who'd already lost a tight battle in qualifying (to Sayaka Ishii) in which she'd led 6-1/3-1.

Kenin held a SP in the 1st, but Tauson rallied to take the lead on her own third SP and win a 10-8 TB. In the 3rd, Kenin held a MP at 6-5 before Tauson forced another (deciding) breaker. On her third MP, Kenin finally won 8-6.
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5. Tokyo Final - Zheng Qinwen def. Sofia Kenin
...7-6(5)/6-3. With the help of an increasingly more effective first serve (she had 16 aces on the day, in a season in which she's already had a pair of 20+ matches), Zheng broke away from a tight 1st set TB (5-5) to ultimately put away Kenin in straight sets and win the Tokyo title two years after reaching her first tour-level final at age 19 in the same event (a loss to Liudmila Samsonova).

Zheng joins Swiatek, Sabalenka, Rybakina and Shnaider with at least three tour singles titles this season, improving to 3-1 in '24 finals. Her fifth career title breaks a tie with Zheng Jie for the second most WTA titles by a Chinese woman, behind only Hall of Famer Li Na's nine.


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6. Guangzhou Final - Olga Danilovic def. Caroline Dolehide
...6-3/6-1. Danilovic's second career title comes more than six years after her first in Moscow in July 2018. The six year, three month gap between WTA titles matches the longest by any player on tour (Vondrousova, Biel/April '17 to Wimbledon/July '23) since Sorana Cirstea finally ended her monster, 12-and-a-half-year title drought in Istanbul in April 2021.


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7. Tampico 125 Final - Marina Stakusic def. Anna Blinkova
...6-4/2-6/6-4. Though she came up short in the final (despite holding a break lead twice in the 3rd set), Blinkova's eleventh hour "season flip/early start to '25" continues.

A few weeks ago, the Russian was enduring a ten-match losing streak. Since then, she's gone 12-2 and strung together a trio of results -- a 125 SF, $100K W (after saving MPs) and 125 RU -- that should at least launch her (w/ a bit of optimism) into the same early season stretch in '25 where she shined so brightly at the start of *this* year.
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8. Tokyo 1st Rd. - Sayaka Ishii def. Sara Saito
...6-1/6-1. A week after both Saito did the same in Osaka, qualifier Ishii, 19, makes her tour MD debut match (vs. LL Saito) a successful venture.

In the week of the start of the World Series in the U.S., it's noteworthy that Ishii's father is a professional baseball player in Japan.


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9. Tokyo Q2 - Hailey Baptiste def. Kyoka Okamura 6-3/7-5
Tokyo 1st Rd.- Kyoka Okamura def. Hailey Baptiste 7-6(4)/6-3
...ten years after making her tour-level qualifying debut (in Osaka), 29-year old Okamura -- as a lucky loser -- finally gets her maiden WTA MD singles win in Tokyo, defeating Baptiste immediately after having lost to the Bannerette in the final round of qualifying.




Guangzhou Q2 - Mananchaya Sawangkaew def. Ella Seidel 6-1/6-3
Guangzhou 1st Rd.- Mananchaya Sawangkaew def. Ella Seidel 6-1/2-6/6-2
...the Q/1st Round rematch trick is a fairly rare occurrence over the course of the season, but both of Week 43's WTA events featured such "second chances."

While Kyoka Okamura made the most of her "do-over" against Hailey Baptiste in Tokyo, Sawangkaew doubled up vs. Ella Seidel in Guangzhou.
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10. Guangzhou 1st Rd. - Shi Han def. Jessika Ponchet
...6-1/6-7(4)/6-3. Yep, it's that time of the year, when a series of local wild cards either make their WTA MD debuts or notch their first victories. 19-year old Han did the latter in Guangzhou, just a few weeks after having played in her maiden tour-level MD match in Beijing.
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11. Tokyo Q2 - Sayaka Ishii def. Clara Tauson
...1-6/7-5/7-5. In order to make her tour MD debut, 19-year old Ishii staged a comeback from 6-1/3-1 down to nip the Dane with a pair of back-to-back 7-5 set victories.
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12. Guangzhou 1st Rd. - Zhang Shuai def. Kamilla Rakhimova
...6-2/6-1. Yaaaaawn. I guess we're now officially to the point when Zhang *winning* matches elicits little more than a shrug.

She lost in the 2nd Round to Bernarda Pera, but improved to 5-4 in her last nine (even w/ a post-24 straight, additional three-match losing streak), and is up to #219.
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13. Tokyo 1st Rd. - Zeynep Sonmez def. Magdalena Frech
...1-6/6-4/6-3. The Turk adds a Top 25 victory to her first season of note on the WTA tour, where the 22-year old has made her tour-level, major (at RG, becoming the first woman from Turkey to play in Paris since 2017) and 1000 debuts and reached her maiden QF (Monastir).


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14. Guangzhou 2nd Rd. - Wang Xiyu def. Wei Sijia
...3-6/6-0/7-5. Wei, 20, led 5-3 in the 3rd and served for the win at 5-4. But Wang rallied, as she had after dropping the 1st set, against her countrywoman and broke Wei on MP #4 to secure the win.

Wei had recorded her first tour-level MD win a few weeks ago in Hua Hin, and got her first Top 100 victory in the 1st Round over Rebecca Sramkova in Guangzhou.
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15. $75K Saguenay QUE Final - Petra Marcinko def. Anouk Koevermans
...6-3/4-6/7-6(3). 18-year old Marcinko, the '22 AO girls' champ, came up short in a WTA 125 final in September, but improves to 7-0 in finals on the ITF circut with a 3rd set TB win over 20-year Dutch player Koevermans.


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HM- $15K Villena ESP Final - Joy de Zeeuw def. Adrienn Nagy
...7-6(7)/6-3. The 18-year old Dutch teen picks up her maiden pro singles title in her second $15K final appearance in Spain this month.


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1. Tampico 125 Final - Carmen Corley/Rebecca Marino def. Alina Korneeva/Polina Kudermetova
...6-3/6-3. Quietly, Marino has been having quite a successful year. Already with a pair of $100K singles titles under her belt in '24, the 33-year old Canadian reached the semis in a 125 in Mexico this past week (w/ wins over Maria Carle and Maya Joint before a three-set loss to Anna Blinkova), pushing her season match win total over 50 for the first time in her career.

She ended her week with a doubles title alongside the younger half of the Corley sisters (w/ Ivana, the Oklahoma University products made their slam debut at this year's U.S. Open and won a 1st Round match).


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*2024 WTA SINGLES TITLES*
5 - Iga Swiatek, POL = Slam, 1000(4)
4 - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR = Slam(2), 1000(2)
3 - Elena Rybakina, KAZ = 500(3)
3 - Diana Shnaider, RUS = 500,250(2)
3 - ZHENG QINWEN, CHN = Oly,500,250

*MOST WTA FINALS in 2024*
7 - Aryna Sabalenka (4-3)
6 - Dasha Kasatkina (2-4)
5 - Iga Swiatek (5-0)
5 - Elena Rybakina (3-2)
4 - ZHENG QINWEN (3-1)
4 - Jessie Pegula (2-2)

*2024 LOW-RANKED WTA CHAMPIONS*
#151 - Sonay Kartal (Monastir)
#125 - Suzan Lamens (Osaka)
#108 - Diana Shnaider (Hua Hin 1)
#102 - Rebecca Sramkova (Hua Hin 2)
#98 - McCartney Kessler (Cleveland)
#86 - OLGA DANILOVIC (Guangzhou)
#85 - Camila Osorio (Bogota)
#81 - Peyton Stearns (Rabat)

*2024 QUALIFIERS IN FINALS*
Dubai - Anna Kalinskaya, RUS
Monastir - Sonay Kartal, GBR (W)
Osaka - Kimberly Birrell, AUS
Osaka - Suzan Lamens, NED (W)
Guangzhou - CAROLINE DOLEHIDE, USA

*MOST CAREER WTA TITLES - CHN*
9 - Li Na (2004,'08,2010-14)
5 - ZHENG QINWEN (2023-24)
4 - Zheng Jie (2005-06,'12)
3 - Zhang Shuai (2013,'17,'22)
2 - Peng Shuai (2016-17)
2 - Wang Qiang (2018)

*2024 LOW-RANKED WTA FINALISTS*
#228 - Bianca Andreescu (Rosmalen, lost to Samsonova)
#190 - Ajla Tomljanovic (Birmingham, lost to Putintseva)
#155 - SOFIA KENIN (Tokyo, lost to Zheng Q.)
#152 - Olivia Gadecki (Guadalajara, lost to Frech)
#151 - Sonay Kartal (Monastir, def. Sramkova)
#150 - Kimberly Birrell (Osaka, lost to Lamens)

*2024 FINALISTS BY COUNTRY (F/W)*
17 (11) - USA (Dolehide,Kenin)
16 (8) - RUS
9 (7) - POL
8 (4) - BLR,CHN (Zheng)
8 (2) - CZE
6 (4) - KAZ
3 (3) - GBR
3 (1) - ITA
3 (0) - AUS,UKR
2 (2) - LAT
2 (1) - BRA,SVK
2 (0) - CAN,CRO
1 (1) - COL,ESP,NED,SRB (Danilovic)
1 (0) - BEL,EGY,GER,GRE,NZL,ROU

*2024 CHAMPIONS - LONGEST SINCE LAST WTA TITLE*
6y,3m = OLGA DANILOVIC [7/18 Moscow >> 10/24 Guangzhou]
4y,1m = Karolina Pliskova [1/20 Brisbane >> 2/24 Cluj-Napoca]
3y = Camila Osorio [4/21 Bogota >> 4/24 Bogota]
2y,7m = Danielle Collins [8/21 San Jose >> 3/24 Miami]

*2024 WTA DOUBLES TITLES*
6 - Irina Khromacheva
5 - Anna Danilina
5 - KATERINA SINIAKOVA
4 - Cristina Bucsa
4 - Sara Errani
4 - Jasmine Paolini

*CAREER WTA DOUBLES TITLES - active*
35 - Hsieh Su-Wei (2024: 3)
33 - Latisha Chan
32 - Sara Errani
30 - Bethanie Mattek-Sands
28 - Kristina Mladenovic
28 - KATERINA SINIAKOVA (5)
25 - Timea Babos
22 - Venus Williams
21 - Chan Hao-ching (1)
21 - Elise Mertens (3)
20 - SHUKO AOYAMA (1)

*2024 YOUNGEST WTA 125 FINALISTS*
18 - Maya Joint (Warsaw)
18 - Taylah Preston (Canberra)
18 - Petra Marcinko (Montreux)
19 - Diana Shnaider (Charleston)
19 - Anca Todoni (Bari)-W
19 - MARINA STAKUSIC (TAMPICO)-W

*DIFF. WS #1s IN A SEASON (CAPS: 1st-time #1)*
2013: 2 = Azarenka-S.Williams
2014: 1 = S.Williams
2015: 1 = S.Williams
2016: 2 = S.Williams-KERBER
2017: 5 = Kerber-S.Williams-KA.PLISKOVA-MUGURUZA-HALEP
2018: 1 = Halep-Wozniacki
2019: 3 = Halep-OSAKA-BARTY
2020: 1 = Barty
2021: 1 = Barty
2022: 2 = Barty-SWIATEK
2023: 2 = Swiatek-SABALENKA
2024: 2 = Swiatek-Sabalenka






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All for now.

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