Results

Wimbledon Women 06/25 14:55 15 [99] Rebeka Masarova v Nina Stojanovic [172] 5-7,4-6
Wimbledon Women 06/24 10:00 14 [99] Rebeka Masarova v Alina Korneeva [284] 6-0,7-5
WTA Berlin 06/19 12:05 26 [1] Aryna Sabalenka v Rebeka Masarova [112] 6-2,7-6
WTA Berlin 06/16 12:45 25 [29] Sofia Kenin v Rebeka Masarova [112] 3-6,2-6
WTA Berlin 06/15 11:05 19 [109] Ella Seidel v Rebeka Masarova [114] 5-7,1-6
WTA Berlin 06/14 13:30 45 [114] Rebeka Masarova v Maria Sakkari [85] 7-6,7-5
WTA Ilkley 06/10 11:55 25 [114] Rebeka Masarova v Iva Jovic [115] 6-3,3-6,4-6
WTA Birmingham 06/08 11:00 28 [121] Rebeka Masarova v Greet Minnen [77] 6-3,6-7,6-7
WTA Birmingham 06/06 14:30 27 [121] Rebeka Masarova v Robin Montgomery [115] Retired
WTA Birmingham 06/05 13:00 26 [78] Viktorija Golubic v Rebeka Masarova [121] 2-6,6-7
WTA Birmingham 06/03 16:50 25 [151] Daria Snigur v Rebeka Masarova [121] 6-3,2-6,4-6
French Open Women 05/22 12:40 19 [124] Rebeka Masarova v Tamara Korpatsch [148] 2-6,6-7

Wikipedia - Rebeka Masarova

Rebeka Masarova (Slovak: Rebeka Masárová, pronounced [ˈrebeka ˈmasaːrɔʋa]; born 6 August 1999) is a Swiss professional tennis player. She has career-high WTA rankings of No. 62 in singles and No. 125 in doubles achieved in 2023. She is the current No. 4 Swiss player. Masarova won the juniors' 2016 French Open.

History

Junior Grand Slam performance

Singles:

  • Australian Open: F (2017)
  • French Open: W (2016)
  • Wimbledon: 3R (2016)
  • US Open: 1R (2015)

Doubles:

  • Australian Open: 2R (2017)
  • French Open: -
  • Wimbledon: -
  • US Open: 2R (2015)

In 2016, Masarova reached the juniors semifinals of the Australian Open, where she lost to defending champion Tereza Mihalíková. Later that year, she won the French Open junior title by defeating top-seed Olesya Pervushina in the semifinals and second-seed Amanda Anisimova in the final. Masarova was beaten by British wildcard Gabriella Taylor in the third round of the junior tournament at Wimbledon.


2016: Professional debut

Masarova made her WTA Tour singles main-draw debut in 2016 at the Gstaad Ladies Championship beating former world No. 1, Jelena Janković, in the first round.


2021–2022: Major debut, WTA 125 doubles title

Masarova made her Grand Slam debut at the 2021 US Open as a qualifier. On her major debut, she reached the second round defeating Ana Bogdan 6–7(9), 7–6(2), 7–6(9) in the longest women's match at this major in the Open Era. She lost to fifth seed Elina Svitolina in the second round.

Partnering with Aliona Bolsova, Masarova won the doubles at the Open Internacional de Valencia, defeating Alexandra Panova and Arantxa Rus in the final.

2023–2024: WTA Tour final and 1000 debut

Masarova reached her first tour final at the 2023 Auckland Open as a qualifier, where she lost to Coco Gauff. This catapulted her into the top 100 for the first time in her career. At the Dubai, she qualified for the main draw but lost to Aliaksandra Sasnovich in the first round.

Masarova received a wildcard for the main draw of the WTA 1000 Madrid Open where she reached the third round with wins over compatriot Cristina Bucșa and 20th seed Donna Vekić. She lost to ninth seed Maria Sakkari

She was runner-up at the 2022 Swedish Open, losing to Jang Su-jeong in the final. Masarova defeated eighth seed Maria Sakkari in the first round at the 2023 US Open, before losing her next match to Anna Karolína Schmiedlová.

In 2024, Masarova qualified into the main draw of the WTA 1000 Indian Wells Open but lost in the first round to Emma Raducanu.

2025: Miami and Madrid third rounds

As a qualifier at the Madrid Open, Masarova defeated Ajla Tomljanovic and 22nd seed Yulia Putintseva to reach the third round, where she lost to Peyton Stearns. The following week she was runner-up at the WTA 125 Catalonia Open, losing to Dalma Gálfi in the final.