Ashley Harkleroad born May 2, 1985, is an American tennis player. Born in Rossville, Georgia, Harkleroad reached a career-high ranking of No. 39 on June 9, 2003. Her career prize money to date is $1,022,094. Harkleroad was the second WTA tennis player after Vanessa Menga (Brazil, February 2001) to pose naked for the American men's magazine Playboy.
Contents
* 1 Career
* 2 2006
* 3 2007
* 4 2008
* 5 2010 comeback
* 6 Personal
* 7 US Playboy's first professional tennis player
* 8 Titles
o 8.1 Singles wins (0 WTA, 8 ITF)
* 9 Grand Slam Singles Timeline
* 10 Grand Slam Doubles Timeline
* 11 References
* 12 External links
Career
Harkleroad turned pro on June 12, 2000, and was quickly billed as the next American tennis star. Her debut was at the ITF tournament in Largo, Florida, in 1999. The following year she played her first WTA qualifying event in Miami, Florida and her first Grand Slam at the U.S. Open. In 2001, she returned to the same events while improving her status on the ITF Circuit. In 2002 she won her first tour matches, reaching the second round at San Diego, Hawaii, and Bratislava, where she made her first doubles semi-final with partner María Emilia Salerni. She ended 2002 in the top 200 for the first time in her career.
Her breakthrough year was in 2003, when at Charleston she defeated three top 20 players at the time (No. 16 Elena Bovina, No. 19 Meghann Shaughnessy, and No. 9 Daniela Hantuchová), losing just 11 games along the way to reach her first tour semi-final before losing to Justine Henin-Hardenne. She became the lowest-ranked semi-finalist (No. 101) in the event's history since unranked Jennifer Capriati reached the finals in 1990.
After that performance, on April 14, 2003 she broke out from No. 101 to climb to a No. 56 ranking. Subsequently she reached the semi-finals again at Strasbourg and scored her second Top 10 win and second over Daniela Hantuchová at Roland Garros while reaching the 3rd round and for the second time winning past the first round at a grand slam. On June 9, 2003 she soared into the Top 50 at No. 39 and reached the final in doubles at the Japan Open in Tokyo.
In 2004, she made her career first Tour final (at Auckland) before losing to defending champion Eleni Daniilidou. For most of the 2005 season, Harkleroad sat out due to various injuries and an illness in the family, but the time she was on court was spent on the ITF Women's circuit winning 2 titles. She did however reach a tour doubles final at Quebec City.
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
ashley harkleroad
No comments:
Post a Comment