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In 2002, Martina Hingis returned from injury. At the Australian Open, Hingis played in both finals, losing to Jennifer Capriati in singles and winning her ninth Grand Slam with Kournikova. In total, Hingis won two titles in singles and doubles. The athlete took part in 12 singles and 5 doubles tournaments. Her performance this year was 34-10 and 17-1, respectively [11].
On October 14, 2002, Martina dropped to number 11 in the world rankings and left the top ten for the first time since October 6, 1996. The consequences of injuries, despite several operations, continued to affect the game and well-being of the tennis player, and Martina Hingis left tennis, becoming a tennis commentator on the Eurosport channel and the Australian sports channel Channel 7.
In 2001, Martina Hingis, together with compatriot Roger Federer, won the prestigious team trophy for Switzerland at the Hopman Cup. She has also won three singles tournaments and one doubles tournament. So many times she lost in the final. In total this year, Hingis took part in 18 singles and 6 doubles tournaments, the result of her meetings is 60-15 in singles and 18-3 in doubles [11].
An injury at the tournament in Filderstadt (rupture of the ligaments of the right leg) deprived Martin of the opportunity to compete in the final competition of the year - the final WTA Championship in Munich. Hingis underwent ligament repair surgery and lost her lead in the world rankings.
In 2000, Martina Hingis once again won Tokyo, but, having lost several fights at the beginning of the year to Lindsay Davenport, including the final of the Australian Open, she temporarily lost her first place in the WTA rankings. However, a month later, Hingis won the 29th title of her career and returned to the first line in the world rankings. In November, Martina Hingis won the main trophy at the final tournament in New York in both singles and doubles (paired with Kournikova) and once again finished the season on the first line in the rankings.
In singles, Hingis won 77 wins and 10 losses in a season. This allowed her to win 9 titles out of 20 in which she took part[10]. In doubles, Hingis won 49 meetings, losing only six. Out of 15 tournaments, she won seven [
The year 1999 marked new victories and achievements, including a third consecutive singles and doubles titles at the Australian Open, first career tournament wins in Berlin and Montreal, and a return to 1st place in the WTA rankings. Few could have imagined that the victory at the Australian Open would be the last for the 18-year-old Hingis in her career at the Grand Slam tournaments in singles. Martina Hingis teamed up with Anna Kournikova to win the final WTA tournament. In the individual category, Hingis lost in the final to Lindsay Davenport. Significant was the meeting of Martina Hingis in the final of Roland Garros with her predecessor on the tennis throne, Steffi Graf. Hingis was a clear favorite and led during the match, but she could not cope with the psychological mood and lost to the tennis legend.
In total, Martina Hingis won 71 matches in singles and 34 in doubles in the season, lost 13 and 2, respectively. Hingis won 7 titles in singles and 6 in doubles (20 and 9 participations respectively [9]). The Hingis-Kournikova pair was recognized as the best couple of the year by the WTA
1998 in singles was a little worse than the previous one: out of 18 tournaments, Hingis won five, lost three more times in the final. Of the Grand Slam tournaments, only the Australian Open was submitted to her, at the US Open she reached the final, and at Roland Garros and Wimbledon she lost in the semi-finals. Hingis for the first time managed to win the final tournament of the WTA tour, but she lost the title of the first racket of the world at the end of the season, losing it to Lindsay Davenport. The total score of her matches: 67-13.
What Martina Hingis hadn't been able to do on her own the previous year, she did in pairs: she won all four Grand Slams, thus setting a personal best and becoming the fourth tennis player in history to win a Grand Slam in doubles. In total, Hingis played in 13 tournaments, winning nine of them. The couple Hingis-Novotna received the WTA award as the best couple of the year. Score of Hingis matches in the season: 52-5.
Martina Hingis became a professional in the fall of 1994. From that moment on, her rapid ascent to fame began - by the end of the year, she was ranked 87th in the ranking, and on June 12, 1995, she entered the top twenty tennis players on the planet. Hingis made her debut as a professional player at the same tournament that her great namesake Martina Navratilova then declared the last of her career.
1993
In 1993, Hingis took part in one adult tournament under the auspices of the ITF[7] and won it with 5 wins. This tournament was held in Switzerland and did not belong to the category of major ones: Hingis' rivals were in the 6-7 hundred WTA rankings, but this does not detract from the success of the young tennis player (at that time she was only 13 years old), because she did not yet have the status of a professional and, respectively, rating in general.
Martina started playing sports very early. At the age of 2 she got a tennis racket[6], at the age of 3 she started skiing for the first time, and at the age of 5 she took part in her first tennis tournament under the guidance of her mother Melanie Molitor, who was also Martina's coach. After a divorce and remarriage (the new husband is Andreas Zogg, a computer specialist), Melanie and her daughter, who at that time was 7 years old, move to Trubbach, a small town in northern Switzerland.
Martina Hingis was born on September 30, 1980 in the Slovak city of Kosice into a tennis family: mother - Czech Melanie Molitorova (Czech. Melanie Molitorová), father - Slovak Hungarian Karol Hingis (Slovak. Karol Hingis), and was named after Martina Navratilova. Martina's mother played tennis, was the 10th racket of Czechoslovakia and coached her daughter.
Martina Hingis (Slovak Martina Hingisová, German Martina Hingis; September 30, 1980, Kosice, Czechoslovakia) is a Swiss tennis player of Czech-Hungarian origin, the first racket of the world in 1997, 1999, 2000 (209 weeks in total), five-time winner of the Big Slam in singles, Grand Slam in doubles in 1998 (the last Grand Slam in any category except for wheelchair users), world No. 1 in doubles, 2016 Olympic silver medalist in doubles, winner "career" Grand Slam in mixed doubles, winner of more than 100 WTA tournaments (43 of them in singles), member of the International Tennis Hall of Fame since 2013.
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