Karen Cross

Karen Cross (born 19 February 1974) is a left-handed British former tennis player who competed at eight Wimbledon Championships during the 1990s and early 2000s, as well as for the Great Britain Fed Cup team in both 1994 and 1998.[1] During the course of her career Cross managed to win six titles on the ITF circuit (3 in singles and 3 in doubles) and she achieved her highest Women's Tennis Association singles ranking of world number 134 on 22 June 1998.[2][3] She is currently a part-time tennis coach at the Roehampton Club and since retirement from the professional circuit she has regularly competed on the ITF senior circuit, reaching a career-high ranking of world no.4 in the women's over-35's age group.[4][5]

Karen Cross
Country (sports) Great Britain
Born (1974-02-19) 19 February 1974
Exeter, Devon
Turned pro1993
Retired2001
Prize moneyUS$196,033
Singles
Career record156–184
Career titles0 WTA, 3 ITF
Highest rankingNo. 134 (22 June 1998)
Grand Slam Singles results
Australian OpenQ1 (1999)
French OpenQ3 (1998)
Wimbledon3R (1997)
US OpenQ1 (1997, 1998, 1999)
Doubles
Career record76–102
Career titles0 WTA, 3 ITF
Highest rankingNo. 196 (5 October 1998)
Grand Slam Doubles results
Wimbledon1R (1998, 1999)
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles results
Wimbledon1R (1999)

At the Grand Slams, Cross's best result came at Wimbledon in 1997 when she won three matches to qualify before defeating Linda Wild and María Sánchez Lorenzo to reach the third round where she was defeated by the reigning French Open champion, Iva Majoli, in three close sets.[6]

Cross managed to gain victories over a number of players who would go on to achieve (or had already experienced) great success on the WTA tour, the most notable being future two-time Australian Open champion and world number 2 Li Na (in December 1999)[7] and future multiple Grand Slam doubles champion and doubles world number 1, Roberta Vinci (in July 2000).[8] Other notable defeated opponents included future two-time WTA titlist and world number 19 Sybille Bammer,[9] future world number 32 Jelena Kostanić,[10] future one-time WTA titlist and world number 48 Milagros Sequera[11] and former one-time WTA titlist and world number 56, Monique Javer.[12]

ITF circuit finals

Singles (3–0)

Finals by category
$100,000 tournaments (0/0)
$75,000 tournaments (0/0)
$50,000 tournaments (0/0)
$25,000 tournaments (0/0)
$10,000 tournaments (3/0)
Finals by surface
Hard (0/0)
Clay (2/0)
Grass (1/0)
Carpet (0/0)
Result Date Category Tournament Surface Opponent Score
Winner 26 July 1993 ITF $10,000 Istanbul, Turkey Clay Gülberk Gültekin 4–6, 7–5, 7–6(7–4)
Winner 8 May 1995 ITF $10,000 Lee-on-Solent, Great Britain Clay Jo Durie 6–4, 6–4
Winner 8 July 1997 ITF $10,000 Felixstowe, Great Britain Grass Surina De Beer 6–1, 7–5

Doubles (3–3)

Finals by category
$100,000 tournaments (0/0)
$75,000 tournaments (0/0)
$50,000 tournaments (0/0)
$25,000 tournaments (1/0)
$10,000 tournaments (2/3)
Finals by surface
Hard (1/1)
Clay (1/1)
Grass (1/1)
Carpet (0/0)
Result Date Category Tournament Surface Partnering Opponents Score
Runner-up 24 April 1995 ITF $10,000 Edinburgh, United Kingdom Clay Lizzie Jelfs Robyn Mawdsley
Lorna Woodroffe
3–6, 1–6
Winner 8 May 1995 ITF $10,000 Edinburgh, United Kingdom Clay Lizzie Jelfs Kaye Hand
Claire Taylor
3–6, 6–3, 6–0
Winner 7 August 1995 ITF $10,000 Southsea, United Kingdom Grass Jane Wood Nataly Cahana
Oshri Shashua
6–4, 7–5
Runner-up 14 July 1997 ITF $10,000 Frinton, United Kingdom Grass Natalia Egorova Joanne Ward
Lorna Woodroffe
4–6, 6–2, 0–6
Runner-up 29 September 1997 ITF $10,000 Nottingham, United Kingdom Hard (i) Lizzie Jelfs Lucie Ahl
Joanne Ward
6–7(8–6), 2–6
Winner 12 April 1999 ITF $25,000 Cagnes-sur-Mer, France Hard Amanda Grahame Louise Pleming
Catherine Tanvier
6–4, 3–6, 7–6(8–6)

Performance timelines

Singles

Tournament199319941995199619971998199920002001W–LSR
Grand Slam Tournaments
Australian Open A Q1 A 0–0 0 / 0
French Open A Q3 Q1 Q1 A 0–0 0 / 0
Wimbledon 1R 1R 1R Q1 3R 2R 2R 1R 2R 5–8 0 / 8
US Open A Q1 Q1 Q1 A 0–0 0 / 0
Win–Loss 0–1 0–1 0–1 0–0 2–1 1–1 1–1 0–1 1–1 5–8 0 / 8
Year-End Ranking 325[13] 295[2] 241[14] 305[15] 146[16] 162[17] 198[18] 311[19] UNR[20]

Doubles

Tournament1991199219931994199519961997199819992000W–LSR
Grand Slam Tournaments
Australian Open A 0–0 0 / 0
French Open A 0–0 0 / 0
Wimbledon Q2 A Q2 A Q1 A 1R 1R Q1 0–2 0 / 2
US Open A 0–0 0 / 0
Win–Loss 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–1 0–1 0–0 0–2 0 / 2

Mixed doubles

Tournament1999W–LSR
Grand Slam Tournaments
Australian Open A 0–0 0 / 0
French Open A 0–0 0 / 0
Wimbledon 1R 0–1 0 / 1
US Open A 0–0 0 / 0
Win–Loss 0–1 0–1 0 / 1

Fed Cup

1994 Federation Cup Europe/Africa Zone
DateVenueSurfaceRoundOpponentsFinal match scoreMatchOpponentRubber score
20 Apr 1994 Bad Waltersdorf Clay RR  Russia 2–1 Doubles(with Julie Pullin) Lutrova/Panova 5–7, 5–7 (L)
1998 Federation Cup Europe/Africa Zone
14–16 Apr 1998 Murcia Clay RR  Portugal 1–2 Singles Sofia Prazeres 6–2, 2–6, 4–6 (L)
 Poland 1–2 Singles Magdalena Grzybowska 1–6, 2–6 (L)
 Madagascar 3–0 Singles Faratiana Rasoarilalao 6–1, 6–3 (W)
gollark: I mean, I mentioned recursive descent parsing on APIONET beforehand, it's approximately in my overly-onelinery and bad-variable-namey style, it's a technically working lisp but weird and broken in a few ways (negative number parsing!), I think some of the comments are vaguely inaccurate or at least not how someone more experienced with lisps would describe things, and the thing ignored Python idioms a fair bit.
gollark: Thus, leave.
gollark: *May* be, I think.
gollark: Anyway, I'm kind of surprised that nobody got that my lisp interpreter was me, although maybe I'm sinthorionizing slightly.
gollark: It should be a program which hijacks your computer and uses it for bee deployment.

References

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