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List of women's doubles Grand Slam tennis tournament champions: The only pairing to complete the Grand Slam is the team of Martina Navratilova and Pam Shriver in 1984, and their eight consecutive major win-streak remains the all-time record. [1] [2] Maria Bueno in 1960 and Martina Hingis in 1998 also won the Grand Slam, though with multiple ...
She was a member of the Los Angeles Tennis Club and attained a best national ranking of sixth. In 1938 she was a singles quarter-finalist at the Australian Championships and made the final of the women's doubles, with Dorothy Bundy. Her doubles partnership with Bundy, known as "Dodo" and "Do", included multiple Pacific Southwest Championships ...
This is a list of the women's doubles tennis champions at the Grand Slam tournaments, the WTA championships, the Olympic Games, and the WTA Tier I/Premier (Premier Mandatory and Premier 5)/1000 tournaments since 1990.
Dorothy Edith Round (13 July 1909 – 12 November 1982), was a British tennis player who was active from the late 1920s until 1950. She achieved her major successes in the 1930s. She achieved her major successes in the 1930s.
Dorothy Stevenson: No tournament 1934: Enid Chrystal Edna McColl: No tournament 1935: Dorothy Stevenson Nancye Wynne: No tournament 1936: Mary Carter Margaret Wilson: No tournament 1937: Ida Webb Joan Prior: No tournament 1938: Joyce Wood Alison Burton: No tournament 1939: Joyce Wood Alison Burton: No tournament 1940: Joyce Wood Alison Burton ...
First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals 1 Wakana Sonobe Mika Stojsavljevic: 6: 6: Ksenia Efremova Lea Nilsson 1 2 1 W Sonobe M Stojsavljevic
The 1972 US Open was a tennis tournament that took place on the outdoor grass courts at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, Queens, in New York City, USA. The tournament ran from 28 August until 10 September. It was the 92nd staging of the US Open, and the fourth Grand Slam tennis event of 1972. [4]
The doubles event was held in various locations; Newport (1881–1914), Forest Hills (1915–1916, 1942–1945, 1968–1977), Longwood (1917–1933, 1935–1941, 1946–1967) and Germantown, Philadelphia (1934) before it settled in 1978 at the USTA National Tennis Center, now the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York City.