Lindsay Davenport, Lindsay, Davenport, Lindsay Davenport Wimbledon, US Open Tennis, womens tennis, atp tour, sport, photos of Lindsay Davenport, biography of Lindsay Davenport, News on Lindsay Davenport, Information on Lindsay Davenport, Lindsay Davenport.
Lindsay Davenport, Lindsay, Davenport, Lindsay Davenport Wimbledon, US Open Tennis, womens tennis, atp tour, sport, photos of Lindsay Davenport, biography of Lindsay Davenport, News on Lindsay Davenport, Imformation on Lindsay Davenport.
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Lindsay Davenport Photos, Information, Results and News
Lindsay Davenport

1991 - Received WC into San Diego qualifying and Schenectady (d. Testud to reach 2r; l. to world No. 16 A. Huber) and US Open main draws
1992 - Reached 2r in Miami, l. to world No. 5 and eventual winner Sanchez-Vicario 64 64; reached 2r at US Open and played qualifying rounds at nine other Tour events
1993 - Following QF finish at Indian Wells, turned pro, and the following week upset world No. 5 Sabatini en route to QF at Delray Beach; won first Tour title at Lucerne aged 16 years, 11 months; reached 3r at Australian Open (l. to world No. 12 Pierce) and 4r at US Open (d. No. 15 seed Coetzer, l. in 3s to world No. 6 Sabatini); had first Top 20 season-ending rank of No. 20, up 139 spots in 12 months
1994 - Won two singles titles at Brisbane and Lucerne; reached first Grand Slam QF at Australian Open (l. to Graf) and Wimbledon (l. to C. Martinez); debuted at season-ending Championships in singles and doubles (w/Raymond), reaching singles final, demolishing in-form players: A. Huber (Filderstadt-Phildalphia champion) 62 63, No. 4 seed Novotna (Leipzig-Brighton-Essen champion) 62 62 and No. 5 seed Pierce (Leipzig-Filderstadt-Philadelphia runner-up) 63 62 before falling to Sabatini; was first debutante to reach Championships final since Jaeger in 1981; finished season inside Top 10 for the first time at No. 6
1995 - As No. 1 seed, claimed title in Strasbourg; runner-up in Sydney and Tokyo [Pan Pacific]; reached QF at Australian Open for second consecutive year
1996 - Season highlighted by singles Gold Medal at Atlanta Olympics; d. four Top 10 players en route to victory (No. 5 Huber, No. 4 Majoli, No. 7 MJ. Fernandez and No. 3 Sanchez-Vicario); won two additional titles at Strasbourg (d. Paulus to defend title) and Los Angeles (d. No. 1 seed Graf and No. 2 seed Huber in straight sets); runner-up in Sydney (l. to Seles after holding mp); semifinalist at Indian Wells and Miami (l. to Graf both times), and Filderstadt (l. to eventual champion Hingis in 3s); reached first QF at Roland Garros (d. No. 7 seed Date 8-6 final set); in QF of season-ending Championships, l. to world No. 1 Graf 64 76(11), featuring longest tie-break of the year; won first Grand Slam doubles title at Roland Garros (w/MJ. Fernandez); second Top 10 finish
1997 - Won six titles, Oklahoma City, Indian Wells, Amelia Island (d. Pierce), Atlanta, Zurich (d. world No. 2 Novotna) and Chicago, dropping only two sets en route (to world No. 211 V. Williams in Indian Wells QF and to Po-Messerli in Oklahoma City QF); at US Open, reached career-first Grand Slam SF, saving mp vs. Novotna in QF before falling to Hingis; d. world No. 1 Hingis en route to Los Angeles final (l. to Seles in 3s holding mp); also runner-up at Philadelphia (d. No. 2 Novotna before falling 76 third set to No. 1 Hingis); result lifted Davenport’s ranking to No. 2 for first time but was upset at season-ending Championships by MJ. Fernandez 76 third set after holding mp; cracked Top Five on May 5 and would remain there uninterrupted from October 20, 1997 until April 21, 2002; won US Open doubles title (w/Novotna); first Top 5 finish at No. 3 and first time to earn more than $1 million in season earnings
1998 - Became No. 1-ranked player on October 12, the eighth player to capture the top ranking since WTA Rankings began in November 1975; became third American-born player to be ranked No. 1; ended Hingis’ initial and longest reign at No. 1 (80 weeks); was the sixth different player since 1975 to end the season ranked No. 1 and first American-born player since Evert in 1981; captured career-first Grand Slam singles title at US Open on her mother’s birthday; d. No. 1 seed and defending champion Hingis 63 75 in final, the first American-born US Open champion since Evert in 1982; runner-up at season-ending Championships, d. Graf in SF (l. to Hingis in 4s in best-of-five-sets final); won Tour-high six titles, reaching final of eight of her last 10 events, winning five; season earnings exceeded $3 million for the first time
1999 - Won seven titles, including second Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon; d. defending champion Novotna in QF and seven-time champion Graf in final, becoming third American-born woman to win Wimbledon in Open Era; also won doubles title w/Morariu; at US Open, saved 2 mp to d. Pierce and advance to SF before falling in 3s to eventual winner S. Williams; won season-ending Championships, d. world No. 1 Hingis in final; reached final at Philadelphia for third straight year, winning for first time, d. world No. 3 V. Williams in SF and No. 1 Hingis in final; withdrew from Miami before QF with sprained left wrist suffered during practice several days earlier; injury caused her to withdraw from Hilton Head, 1r of Fed Cup, Filderstadt and Zurich; finished at No. 2
2000 - Third year to win a Grand Slam; appeared in 11 singles finals (winning four titles), including three Grand Slams; captured Australian Open, ending world No. 1 Hingis’ 27-match, three-title win-streak at the tournament and becoming first American-born woman to win there since Evert in 1984; at Scottsdale, became seventh woman player to cross $10-million mark in career prize money; on April 17, became fourth player since computer rankings began in 1975 to simultaneously hold world No. 1 ranking in singles and doubles, joining Navratilova, Sanchez-Vicario and Hingis; won 36 of 38 matches from September 1999 to May 2000, including a 21-match win-streak; undefeated in Fed Cup play in 1999 and 2000, leading United States to title both years; withdrew from Amelia Island and Hilton Head with a left ankle injury suffered in SF win at Miami; suffered lower back strain while warming up for 3r match at Italian Open, withdrawing from it and Madrid the following week; suffered back spasms in second set of 1r loss to Van Roost at Roland Garros, becoming only second No. 2 seed to lose 1r since 1925 and marking her first Grand Slam 1r defeat in seven years; second straight No. 2 finish
2001 - Won Tour-leading seven singles titles (two Tier Is and five Tier IIs); finished season with 15 match-win streak (including three titles in consecutive weeks — only second player since Navratilova in 1988 and herself in 1998 to do so); season interrupted by injury, forced off Tour for two-and-a-half months after QF retirement vs. Dementieva with right knee bone bruise; missed all events in April and May, including Roland Garros; returned to win Eastbourne and reach SF at Wimbledon; also won Tokyo [Pan Pacific] over world No. 1 Hingis, Scottsdale (avenging Australian Open SF loss to Capriati), Los Angeles (third title there and ninth straight win over Seles; moved back up to No. 2 for first time since March), and in consecutive weeks, Filderstadt (first title in Germany in 12 career attempts), Zurich (d. new No. 1 Capriati in SF — her 11th over a current No. 1) and Linz (d. Dokic in final); at season-ending Championships, was two points from defeat vs. No. 3 seed Clijsters in SF before winning 76 third set to move 10 ranking points ahead of Capriati for No. 1 ranking in closest race for season-ending No. 1 since 1980; re-injured right knee in last two points of SF and withdrew from Championships final vs. S. Williams; earlier, withdrew from the Canadian Open after aggravating left wrist tendonitis; had fifth consecutive Top 3 finish and second at No. 1
2002 - Withdrew from tournaments, including Australian Open, Roland Garros and Wimbledon, due to right knee injury aggravated during SF match at 2001 season-ending Championships; underwent arthroscopic knee surgery on January 11 to correct a full thickness cartilage defect; spent nine weeks on crutches; played first competitive tennis of the year representing the USA in Fed Cup, winning two singles rubbers in its win over Israel to secure a spot in the World Group in 2003; returned to WTA Tour at Stanford, where she was provided with a special seeding of co-No. 3 for first nine events (average ranking during 2001); reached SF with a 62 62 win over world No. 6 Dokic in 48 minutes; in SF, led world No. 5 defending champion Clijsters by a set and 4-2 before losing in 3s; a week later in San Diego, again reached SF, d. Rubin in 3s before falling to V. Williams; in Los Angeles, reached first final of 2002 in her third event; served for the title at 5-4 second set vs. Rubin but fell 57 76(5) 63; reached second straight final at New Haven, l. to V. Williams; led 5-3 before Williams won 10 straight games and the match 75 60; semifinalist at US Open, her first Grand Slam tournament of the year, l. to No. 1 S. Williams, after leading Williams 5-2 second set and later held three set points before falling 63 75; reached Tier I final at Moscow in debut appearance, falling 57 63 76(4) to unseeded Mag. Maleeva; reached QF in Filderstadt where she was defending champion, l. to eventual winner Clijsters in 3s; avenged loss to world No. 5 Clijsters the following week in Zurich QF and d. Henin in SF (second time in career to defeat both Belgians in same tournament after 2000 US Open; Hingis also did it at 2000 Filderstadt); in final, l. to Schnyder after holding 1 mp at 7-6 in second set tie-break and officially qualified for season-ending Championships (after only eight tournaments); withdrew from Linz with right lower shin strain; playing ninth consecutive season-ending Championships, l. 1r to Seles 36 76(6) 63 after holding 7 mp; marked second time in three years she l. 1r in the event after holding mp (l. to Dementieva in 2000); season-ending ranking of No. 12, first time outside Top 10 in seven years

 
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