Magdalena Maleeva

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Magdalena Maleeva
Magdalena Maleeva at U.S. Open 2000
Country Flag of Bulgaria Bulgaria
Residence Sofia, Bulgaria
Date of birth April 1, 1975 (1975-04-01) (age 33)
Place of birth Sofia, Bulgaria
Height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
Weight 59 kg (130 lb/9.3 st)
Turned pro April 1989
Plays Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
Career prize money $4,398,582
Singles
Career record: 439-290
Career titles: 10 WTA, 1 ITF
Highest ranking: No. 4 (January 29, 1996)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open 4r (1991, 1993-94, 2002)
French Open 4r (1993, 1996, 2003-04)
Wimbledon 4r (2001-02, 2004-05)
US Open QF (1992)
Doubles
Career record: 121-133
Career titles: 5 WTA, 1 ITF
Highest ranking: No. 13 (February 2, 2004)

Infobox last updated on: May 14, 2007.

Magdalena Maleeva (Bulgarian: Магдалена Малеева) (born April 1, 1975) is a Bulgarian former tennis player. She has played in the WTA tour, competing in singles and doubles, since April 1989. Her best position in the WTA Tour was number 4 between January 29 to February 4 1996.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born in Sofia, Maleeva was the youngest of the three children of Yulia Berberyan and Georgi Maleev. Yulia, who came from a prominent Armenian family which found refuge in Bulgaria after the 1896 Armenian massacres in the Ottoman Empire, was the best Bulgarian tennis player in the 1960s. After she retired from professional tennis in the 1970s, Berberyan started on a coaching career. She trained all of her three daughters, Magdalena, Katerina and Manuela, each of whom eventually became WTA top six players.

In 1988 Madgalena Maleeva became the youngest ever national tennis champion of Bulgaria, at the age of 13 years and four months. She turned professional in 1989, reaching the final of her first professional tournament at ITF/Bari-ITA. In her Grand Slam debut at the French Open in 1990, she passed the qualifications and reached the third round. In 1992 Maleeva snatched her first Tour event victory in San Marino. The following year she reached the fourth round at the Australian, the French and the US Open, as well as the third round of Wimbledon. That same year, she was the opponent of Monica Seles at a tournament in Hamburg, Germany when a deranged fan stabbed Seles in the back on the court. In 1995 Maleeva won a total of three tournaments – in Moscow, Chicago, Oakland, which allowed her to reach a career-high number 4 the WTA rank list in January 1996.

In June 1998 Maleeva underwent shoulder surgery, which forced her off the Tour for the next eleven months. She started competing again in May 1999 and reached Top Twenty again in 2001. In 2002 she won the prestigious Kremlin Cup in Moscow, defeating three Top Ten players on her way (Venus Williams, Amélie Mauresmo and Lindsay Davenport). In 2004 she married her long-standing boyfriend, Lubomir Nokov.

Since the start of her professional carrier, Maleeva has won a total of ten WTA Tour titles in singles and five in doubles. She is the recipient of the 1993 WTA Tour Most Improved Player Award and was nominated for the 1990 WTA Tour Most Impressive Newcomer Award. She has taken part in the Olympics in Barcelona, Atlanta and Athens.

In October 2005, Magdalena Maleeva retired from professional tennis, after 16 seasons in the tennis elite, ending the era of the Maleeva Sisters.

In the early hours of 27th June 2007, Magdalena gave birth to her first child - a girl named Julia.

[edit] WTA titles

[edit] Singles

Legend
Grand Slam (0)
WTA Championships (0)
Tier I (2)
Tier II (2)
Tier III (3)
Tier IV & V (3)
ITF Titles (1)
No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score
1. July 26, 1992 Flag of San Marino San Marino Clay Flag of Italy Federica Bonsignori 7–6, 6–4
2. September 25, 1994 Flag of Russia Moscow Carpet (I) Flag of Italy Sandra Cecchini 7–5, 6–1
3. October 9, 1994 Flag of Switzerland Zürich Carpet (I) Flag of Belarus Natasha Zvereva 7–5, 3–6, 6–4
4. February 12, 1995 Flag of the United States Chicago Carpet (I) Flag of the United States Lisa Raymond 7–5, 7–6
5. September 24, 1995 Flag of Russia Moscow Carpet (I) Flag of Russia Elena Makarova 6–4, 6–2
6. November 5, 1995 Flag of the United States Oakland Carpet (I) Flag of Japan Ai Sugiyama 6–3, 6–4
7. November 21, 1999 Flag of Thailand Pattaya City Hard Flag of Luxembourg Anne Kremer 4–6, 6–1, 6–2
8. December 5, 1999 Flag of France Cergy-Pontoise Hard (I) Flag of the Netherlands Seda Noorlander 6–1, 6–4
9. April 22, 2001 Flag of Hungary Budapest Clay Flag of Luxembourg Anne Kremer 3–6, 6–2, 6–4
10. October 6, 2002 Flag of Russia Moscow Carpet (I) Flag of the United States Lindsay Davenport 5–7, 6–3, 7–6
11. June 15, 2003 Flag of the United Kingdom Birmingham Grass Flag of Japan Shinobu Asagoe 6–1, 6–4

[edit] Doubles

[edit] Life after tennis

Maleeva retired from professional tennis in October 2005. She now lives in Sofia, Bulgaria. She has been very active with the environmental organization 'Gorichka.bg', which works to create public awareness about urgent environmental problems. Maleeva also has created a brand for organic foods distributed in Bulgaria and is a partner at the Maleeva tennis club.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links