Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Martina Navratilova is a nine-time singles champion, a Grand Slam record in the Open Era for women (Margaret Court won the Australian 11 times). She won six consecutive titles from 1982 to 1987. She won six consecutive titles from 1982 to 1987.
Winning the Year-end Championship also having won a Golden Slam is referred to as a "Super Slam". [2] [3] [4] Winning the four majors in all three disciplines a player is eligible for–singles, doubles, and mixed doubles–is considered winning a "boxed set" of Grand Slam titles.
Singles Doubles Men Women Quad Men Women Quad 2005: No competition: No competition: No competition: Michaël Jérémiasz Jayant Mistry: No competition: No competition: 2006: Satoshi Saida Shingo Kunieda: 2007: Robin Ammerlaan Ronald Vink (x2) 2008: 2009: Stéphane Houdet Michaël Jeremiasz Korie Homan Esther Vergeer: 2010: Robin Ammerlaan ...
Martina Navratilova has won 18 major titles, tied for the fifth most with Chris Evert. This article details the list of women's singles Grand Slam tournaments tennis champions. Some major changes have taken place in history and have affected the number of titles that have been won by various players.
For those, see Open Era tennis records – Women's singles. Grand Slam tournaments ... Wimbledon: 1978–79, 1982–87, 1990 ... Most titles won in a season in Open Era
Winning a Wimbledon title is a big deal — after all, it’s one of the most prestigious and difficult tennis tournaments in the world. The annual Wimbledon championships will begin on July 1 ...
1969 US Open—1970 Wimbledon: Martina Navratilova: 1983 Wimbledon—1984 French Open: Steffi Graf: 1993 French Open—1994 Australian Open: Serena Williams: 2002 French Open—2003 Australian Open: Serena Williams(2) 2014 US Open—2015 Wimbledon: all four major titles consecutively (not in a calendar year)
The total prize money at Wimbledon has reached £50m for the first time ahead of the 2024 Championships.. The winner of the men’s and women’s singles titles will take home a record £2.7m each ...