Li Na: Difference between revisions
→2011: Fixed Grammar |
m punct |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{short description|Chinese tennis player}} |
|||
{{chinese-name|[[Li (李)]]}}<ref>The official Chinese naming system states that the family name, Li (李), goes first before the equivalent of a first name in some other nations. Her name offcourt in China is Li Na. When listed on the [http://www.sonyericssonwtatour.com WTA Tour website], she is known as Na Li. However, in the match, the commentators call her Li Na, and when her full name is listed in text oncourt, it is also written as Li Na.</ref> |
|||
{{about|the tennis player|other people}} |
|||
{{family name hatnote|[[Li (surname)|Li]] ({{noitalic|{{linktext|lang=zh|李}}}})|lang=Chinese}} |
|||
{{Infobox tennis biography |
{{Infobox tennis biography |
||
|name = Li Na<br />{{nobold|{{lang|zh-hans|李娜}}}} |
|||
|playername = Li Na |
|||
|image |
|image= Li Na January 2015.jpg |
||
|caption = Li at the [[2015 Australian Open]] |
|||
|country = {{PRC}} |
|||
|country = {{CHN}} |
|||
|residence = [[Wuhan]], [[Hubei]], China |
|||
|residence = [[Wuhan]], Hubei |
|||
|birth_date = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1982|2|26}} |
|||
|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1982|2|26|df=yes}} |
|||
|birth_place = Wuhan, Hubei, China |
|||
|birth_place = Wuhan, Hubei |
|||
|height = {{height|m=1.72}} |
|height = {{height|m=1.72}} |
||
|college = [[Huazhong University of Science and Technology]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]]) |
|||
|weight = {{convert|65|kg|lb st|abbr=on}} |
|||
|turnedpro = 1999 |
|turnedpro = 1999 |
||
|retired = April 2002–May 2004;<br />19 September 2014 |
|||
|plays = Right handed (two-handed backhand) |
|||
|plays = Right-handed (two-handed backhand) |
|||
|careerprizemoney = $6,444,632 |
|||
|coach = Jiang Shan (2006–2012)<br />[[Thomas Högstedt]] (2009–2010)<br />[[Michael Mortensen]] (2011)<br />[[Carlos Rodríguez (tennis coach)|Carlos Rodríguez]] (2012–2014) |
|||
|singlesrecord = 383–141 |
|||
|careerprizemoney = $16,709,074<ref>{{cite web |url=https://wtafiles.wtatennis.com/pdf/rankings/All_Career_Prize_Money.pdf |title=Career Prize Money Leaders |publisher=WTA Tour |access-date=30 January 2024}}</ref> |
|||
|singlestitles = 5 WTA, 19 ITF |
|||
* <small>[[WTA Tour records#WTA career prize money leaders|30th in all-time rankings]]</small> |
|||
|highestsinglesranking = No. 4 (June 6, 2011) |
|||
|tennishofyear = 2019 |
|||
|currentsinglesranking = No. 4 (June 6, 2011) |
|||
|tennishofid = li-na |
|||
|AustralianOpenresult = F ([[2011 Australian Open – Women's Singles|2011]]) |
|||
|singlesrecord = {{tennis record|won=503|lost=188}} |
|||
|FrenchOpenresult = '''W''' ([[2011 French Open - Women's Singles|2011]]) |
|||
|singlestitles = 9 |
|||
|Wimbledonresult = QF ([[2006 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Singles|2006]], [[2010 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Singles|2010]]) |
|||
|highestsinglesranking = No. 2 (17 February 2014) |
|||
|USOpenresult = QF ([[2009 US Open – Women's Singles|2009]]) |
|||
|AustralianOpenresult = '''W''' ([[2014 Australian Open – Women's singles|2014]]) |
|||
|doublesrecord = 120–49 |
|||
|FrenchOpenresult = '''W''' ([[2011 French Open – Women's singles|2011]]) |
|||
|doublestitles = 2 WTA, 16 ITF |
|||
|Wimbledonresult = QF ([[2006 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|2006]], [[2010 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|2010]], [[2013 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|2013]]) |
|||
|highestdoublesranking = No. 54 (August 28, 2006) |
|||
|USOpenresult = SF ([[2013 US Open – Women's singles|2013]]) |
|||
|grandslamsdoublesresults = yes |
|||
|Othertournaments = yes |
|||
|AustralianOpenDoublesresult = 2R (2006, 2007) |
|||
|WTAChampionshipsresult= F ([[2013 WTA Tour Championships|2013]]) |
|||
|FrenchOpenDoublesresult = 2R (2006, 2007) |
|||
|Olympicsresult = SF – 4th ([[Tennis at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Women's singles|2008]]) |
|||
|WimbledonDoublesresult = 2R (2006) |
|||
|doublesrecord = {{tennis record|won=121|lost=50}} |
|||
|USOpenDoublesresult = 3R (2005) |
|||
|doublestitles = 2 |
|||
|updated = May 16, 2011 |
|||
|highestdoublesranking = No. 54 (28 August 2006) |
|||
|AustralianOpenDoublesresult = 2R ([[2006 Australian Open – Women's doubles|2006]], [[2007 Australian Open – Women's doubles|2007]]) |
|||
|FrenchOpenDoublesresult = 2R ([[2006 French Open – Women's doubles|2006]], [[2007 French Open – Women's doubles|2007]]) |
|||
|WimbledonDoublesresult = 2R ([[2006 Wimbledon Championships – Women's doubles|2006]]) |
|||
|USOpenDoublesresult = 3R ([[2005 US Open – Women's doubles|2005]]) |
|||
|OthertournamentsDoubles = yes |
|||
|OlympicsDoublesresult = 2R ([[Tennis at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Women's doubles|2012]]) |
|||
|medaltemplates = |
|||
{{Medal|Country | {{flagu|China}} }} |
|||
{{Medal|Sport | Women's [[tennis]]}} |
|||
{{Medal|Competition|[[Universiade]]}} |
|||
{{Medal|Gold | [[2001 Summer Universiade|2001 Beijing]]|[[Tennis at the 2001 Summer Universiade|Singles]]}} |
|||
{{Medal|Gold| 2001 Beijing|Doubles}} |
|||
{{Medal|Gold| 2001 Beijing|Mixed doubles}} |
|||
{{Medal|Competition|[[Asian Games]]}} |
|||
{{Medal|Gold | [[2010 Asian Games|2010 Guangzhou]]|[[Tennis at the 2010 Asian Games – Women's Team|Team]]}} |
|||
{{Medal|Bronze | [[2006 Asian Games|2006 Doha]]|[[Tennis at the 2006 Asian Games – Women's singles|Singles]]}} |
|||
}} |
|||
{{Infobox Chinese |
|||
| title = Li Na |
|||
| collapse = no |
|||
| c = {{linktext|lang=zh|李|娜}} |
|||
| p = Lǐ Nà |
|||
| w = li<sup>3</sup> na<sup>4</sup> |
|||
| mi = {{IPAc-cmn|l|i|3|-|n|a|4}} |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
{{MedalTableTop}} |
|||
{{MedalCountry | {{CHN}} }} |
|||
{{MedalSport | Women's [[Tennis]]}} |
|||
{{MedalCompetition|[[Universiade]]}} |
|||
{{MedalGold | [[2001 Summer Universiade|2001 Beijing]]|[[Tennis at the 2001 Summer Universiade|Singles]]}} |
|||
{{MedalGold| 2001 Beijing|Doubles}} |
|||
{{MedalCompetition|[[Asian Games]]}} |
|||
{{MedalGold | [[2010 Asian Games|2010 Guangzhou]]|[[Tennis at the 2010 Asian Games – Women's Team|Team]]}} |
|||
{{MedalBronze | [[2006 Asian Games|2006 Doha]]|[[Tennis at the 2006 Asian Games – Women's singles|Singles]]}} |
|||
{{MedalBottom}} |
|||
'''Li Na''' ({{zh|c=李娜|p=Lǐ Nà}}; born February 26, 1982) is a [[Mainland China|Chinese]] professional [[tennis]] player. Li has won 5 [[Women's Tennis Association|WTA]] and 19 [[International Tennis Federation|ITF]] singles titles. She is currently ranked World No. 4 by WTA.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wtatennis.com/news/20110604/li-na-asias-first-ever-grand-slam-champion_2256076_2371604|title=Li Na: Asia's First Ever Grand Slam Champion|date=June 4, 2011|accessdate=June 5, 2011}}</ref> |
|||
'''Li Na''' (born 26 February 1982) is a Chinese former professional [[tennis]] player. She achieved a career-high [[WTA rankings|ranking]] of world No. 2. In her career, Li won nine singles titles, including two [[Grand Slam (tennis)|major]] titles at the [[2011 French Open – Women's singles|2011 French Open]] and [[2014 Australian Open – Women's singles|2014 Australian Open]]. Those victories made her the first Grand Slam singles champion from Asia, male or female. She was also the first player representing an Asian country to appear in a major singles final, finishing as the runner-up at the [[2011 Australian Open – Women's singles|2011 Australian Open]]. Li was the runner-up at the [[2013 Australian Open – Women's singles|2013 Australian Open]] and [[2013 WTA Tour Championships]], a three-time quarterfinalist at [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] and a semifinalist at the [[Tennis at the 2008 Summer Olympics|2008 Beijing Olympics]]<ref>{{cite Sports-Reference}}</ref> and [[2013 US Open – Women's singles|2013 US Open]]. Among her other most notable achievements, she was the [[Tennis in China|first Chinese player]] to win a [[WTA Tour]] title at the [[Guangzhou International Women's Open]] in 2004, the first to reach a major singles quarterfinal at the [[2006 Wimbledon Championships]], and the first to break into the world's top ten. |
|||
Li won the [[2011 French Open]] singles title, becoming the first player from Asia to win a [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] in singles. She was also a finalist at the [[2011 Australian Open]], becoming the first Asian player to make a major singles final. |
|||
==Off the court== |
|||
Li Na was born on February 26, 1982, in [[Wuhan]], Hubei, China. Her father Li Shengpeng (李盛鹏) was an amateur badminton player who could not turn professional because of the [[Cultural Revolution]]; he died from cardiovascular disease when Li Na was 14.<ref name="qnb0">{{cite news| url=http://sports.163.com/11/0131/09/6RNE178U00051CDG.html | work=青年报 | title=她最爱吃妈妈煮的面 | date=Jan 31, 2011 | accessdate=Jun 3, 2011}}</ref> |
|||
By 2013, Li's accomplishments had made her the most successful Asian tennis player in history, landing her on ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine's list of [[Time 100|100 Most Influential People in the World]]. She is credited with growing [[tennis in China]], with former world No. 1 [[Chris Evert]] writing: "Tennis has exploded in China. The country now has some 15 million tennis players; 116 million watched Li win the French Open. That kind of exposure is crucial to our sport, and it never would have happened without Li." |
|||
When Li was 6 years old, she became a [[badminton]] player, but her coach kept noticing that she looked as if she were playing tennis. By the time she was 8, her coach asked her parents if she could switch to tennis, which she did at the age of 9.<ref name="nytimes0909">{{cite news| url=http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/08/sports/tennis/08lina.html | work=The New York Times | title=China's Li Na Finds a Taste of Home in New York | first=John | last=Branch | date=September 8, 2009 | accessdate=May 7, 2010}}</ref> Li joined China's National Tennis Team in 1997 and turned pro in 1999. |
|||
Li retired from tennis in September 2014, at age 32. In 2019, she was inducted into the [[International Tennis Hall of Fame]]. |
|||
At the end of 2002, Li left the national tennis team to study at [[Huazhong University of Science and Technology]], where she completed her bachelor degree in journalism in 2009. The Chinese media mostly cited the conflict between her and the national team as the reason she quit. Some reported that the relationship between her and her teammate, future husband Jiang Shan (姜山), was opposed by the national team,<ref name="yahoochina0">{{cite news| url=http://sports.cn.yahoo.com/09-10-/324/2au8z.html | work=Yahoo China | title=李娜—09中国网球公开赛参赛选手简介 | date=Oct 2, 2009 | accessdate=Jun 3, 2011}}</ref> some reported that her national coach Yu Liqiao (余丽桥) was too strict towards her and her teammates, which was claimed by Li afterwards,<ref name="whwb0">{{cite news| url=http://sports.titan24.com/tennis/2010-10-10/86508.html | work=武汉晚报 | title=李娜自曝当年退役缘由 称:余丽桥不懂得表扬队员 | date=Oct 10, 2010 | accessdate=Jun 3, 2011}}</ref> others reported that she asked for a personal coach rather than a shared coach but was rejected.<ref name="163com0">{{cite news| url=http://sports.163.com/11/0129/20/6RJH9E6400051CDG.html | work=[[163.com]] | title=个性李娜单飞后屡获成功 映射举国体制之尴尬 | date=Jan 29, 2011 | accessdate=Jun 3, 2011}}</ref> |
|||
==Tennis career== |
|||
However, Li returned to the national team in 2004. Jiang Shan married Li and became her personal coach in 2006. Li quit the national team<ref name="ft0">{{cite news| url=http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5ddeef38-2ae9-11e0-a2f3-00144feab49a.html | work=[[Financial Times]] | title=Li Na serves an ace by flying solo | date=Jan 28, 2011 | accessdate=Jun 3, 2011}}</ref> as well as the sports system of the Chinese government in 2008 under an experimental reform policy for tennis players, the incident was called "Fly Alone" (单飞) by Chinese media,<ref name="ft1">{{cite news| url=http://www.ftchinese.com/story/001036772 | work=Financial Times Chinese | title=分析:李娜单飞的意义 | date=Jan 28, 2011 | accessdate=Jun 6, 2011}}</ref> she became free to select her own coaches and kept more of her winnings.<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/tennis/french11/news/story?id=6625484 Li Na tops Francesca Schiavone for title]. ESPN. June 4, 2011. Accessed 2011-06-06.</ref> Now, 8–12% of her winnings go to the government; previously, it was 65 percent.<ref>[http://www.cnn.com/2011/SPORT/tennis/06/03/china.li.na/ Cnn.com: "Li Na: China's tennis rebel is people's idol" 4 June 2011]</ref> |
|||
At age six, Li followed her father's footsteps and started playing badminton, which honed her reflexes.<ref>{{cite web |last=Johnson |first=Christopher |date=26 January 2011 |title=One-on-one with Chinese tennis ace Li Na |url=http://travel.cnn.com/shanghai/play/one-one-chinese-tennis-ace-li-na-896676 |access-date=22 September 2014 |work=CNN}}</ref> Just before she turned eight, Li was persuaded to switch to tennis by coach Xia Xiyao of the Wuhan youth tennis club.<ref name="nytimes0909">{{cite news |last=Branch |first=John |date=8 September 2009 |title=China's Na Li Finds a Taste of Home in New York |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/08/sports/tennis/08lina.html |access-date=7 May 2010 |work=The New York Times}}</ref> Her instructors taught tennis through negative reinforcement, which affected Li's confidence in later years.<ref>{{cite news |last=[[Shaun Assael|Assael]] |first=Shaun |date=22 April 2014 |title=For self or for country |url=https://www.espn.com/tennis/story/_/id/10781334/wta-ranked-tennis-players-li-na-peng-shuai-launch-new-policy-china-espn-magazine |access-date=23 September 2014 |work=ESPN}}</ref> Li joined China's National Tennis Team in 1997. The following year, Li, sponsored by [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]], went to John Newcombe Academy in Texas to study tennis.<ref name="nike athletes" /> She studied there for ten months and returned to China.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Wertheim |first=Jon |date=26 May 2014 |title=Words with...Li Na: A sit-down interview with China's tennis star |url=https://www.si.com/tennis/2014/09/18/li-na-interview-wertheim-china-tennis-star |access-date=19 September 2014 |magazine=Sports Illustrated}}</ref> Growing up, her favourite tennis player was [[Andre Agassi]].<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Nguyen |first=Courtney |date=19 September 2014 |title=The best of Li Na quotes: Funny, witty and memorable |url=https://www.si.com/tennis/2014/09/18/li-na-best-quotes |access-date=20 September 2014 |magazine=Sports Illustrated}}</ref> She turned professional in 1999 at the age of sixteen. |
|||
At the end of 2002, Li left the national tennis team to study part-time at [[Huazhong University of Science and Technology]] (HUST), where she completed her bachelor's degree in journalism in 2009. The Chinese media cited various reasons for this. Some reported that the relationship between her and her teammate and future husband, Jiang Shan ({{zh|labels=no|c=姜山}}), was opposed by the national team's management,<ref name="wsj2011">{{cite news |last1=Bhattacharya |first1=Abheek |last2=Zhong |first2=Raymond |date=27 August 2011 |title=For the Love of Prize Money |url=https://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424053111904787404576528394247261876 |access-date=19 September 2014 |newspaper=The Wall Street Journal}}</ref> some reported that her coach, [[Yu Liqiao]] ({{zh|labels=no|s=余丽桥}}), was too strict and demanding, while other reports claimed that her request for a personal coach did not go through.<ref name="whwb0" /><ref name="yahoochina0" /> However, some regarded that it was just the health problem leading to the retirement.<ref name="163com0" /> The ''New York Times'' reported that one of the reasons was that a team leader wanted her to play through by taking hormone medicine<ref name="nyt2013">{{cite news |last=Larmer |first=Brook |date=22 August 2013 |title=Li Na, China's Tennis Rebel |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/25/magazine/li-na-chinas-tennis-rebel.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0 |access-date=19 September 2014 |newspaper=The New York Times}}</ref> as Li struggled with her performance due to hormone imbalance.<ref>{{cite news |last=Powell |first=Sian |date=21 December 2014 |title=Match points |url=http://www.smh.com.au/sport/tennis/match-points-20131216-2zfwh.html |access-date=23 September 2014 |newspaper=The Sydney Morning Herald}}</ref> She later told ''[[CNN]]'' that she had felt sick every day and didn't want her life to be only for tennis.<ref name="cnn2010">{{cite news |date=17 February 2010 |title=Li Na: Taking Chinese tennis to the top |url=http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/02/14/li.na/ |access-date=19 September 2014 |work=CNN}}</ref> |
|||
==Career== |
|||
{{BLP sources section|date=June 2011}} |
|||
{{Over detailed|section=yes|date=June 2011}} |
|||
[[File:Na-li-2009usopen.png|thumb|left|Li Na playing at the 2009 US Open]] |
|||
Between 1999 and 2004, Li won 20 women's singles titles: 19 ITF events and one—the first ever won by a Chinese woman—on the WTA Tour. In January 2008, she won her second WTA Tour title after a drought of over three and a quarter years. |
|||
Li returned to the national team in 2004 to "give back" for their help during her earlier career.<ref name="cnn2010" /> On January 27, 2006, Li married Jiang Shan who then became her personal coach. Li quit the national team<ref name="ft0">{{cite news |last=Dyer |first=Geoff |date=28 January 2011 |title=Li Na serves an ace by flying solo |url=http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5ddeef38-2ae9-11e0-a2f3-00144feab49a.html |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221211181249/https://www.ft.com/content/5ddeef38-2ae9-11e0-a2f3-00144feab49a |archive-date=11 December 2022 |access-date=3 June 2011 |work=Financial Times}}</ref> as well as the state-run sports system in 2008 under an experimental reform policy for tennis players. This change was called "Fly Solo" ({{zh|labels=no|s=单飞}}) by Chinese media.<ref name="wsj2011" /><ref name="ft1">{{cite news |date=28 January 2011 |script-title=zh:分析:李娜单飞的意义 |url=http://www.ftchinese.com/story/001036772 |access-date=6 June 2011 |work=Financial Times Chinese}}</ref> As a result, Li had the freedom to hire her own coaching staff and she would be solely responsible for the cost of training and coaching and tour expense. She could keep more of her winnings,<ref>{{cite news |date=4 June 2011 |title=Li Na tops Francesca Schiavone for title |url=https://www.espn.com/sports/tennis/french11/news/story?id=6625484 |access-date=6 June 2011 |work=ESPN}}</ref> with only twelve percent of her winnings going to the [[Chinese Tennis Association]] development fund as opposed to 65 percent previously.<ref name="cnn2010" /> In the summer of 2012, the requirement of contribution to the Chinese tennis development fund was lifted and Li kept all her prize money.<ref>{{cite news |date=28 January 2014 |script-title=zh:1400万奖金 李娜只带走840万 |url=http://news.xinhuanet.com/overseas/2014-01/28/c_126072788.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140326232023/http://news.xinhuanet.com/overseas/2014-01/28/c_126072788.htm |archive-date=March 26, 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 |language=zh |agency=Xinhua News}}</ref> |
|||
Li also frequently enters doubles tournaments at events alongside singles, and has won two WTA doubles titles and 16 further ITF doubles events. Her early success in doubles came mostly with [[Li Ting (tennis)|Li Ting]] (no relation); but more recently she has made a habit of forming temporary women's doubles partnerships with players with whom she has previously enjoyed a healthy rivalry through repeated head-to-head meetings in singles tournaments, notably [[Liu Nan-Nan]], [[Nicole Pratt]], [[Yan Zi]], [[Jelena Janković]], and [[Peng Shuai]]. |
|||
On 5 June 2016, Li was commissioned by [[Special Olympics]] as a Global Ambassador.<ref>{{cite press release |url=https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/special-olympics-announces-chinese-tennis-player-li-na-as-global-ambassador-300279816.html |title=Special Olympics Announces Chinese Tennis Player Li Na as Global Ambassador |first=Special |last=Olympics |website=www.prnewswire.com}}</ref> |
|||
Her career has been plagued by injuries and other troubles that have prevented her from playing for lengthy periods. She suffered a two-year hiatus from competition in her early 20s, lost several months at the height of the 2005 season to an ankle injury, and lost the second half of 2007 to a rib injury. |
|||
===1999–2002=== |
===1999–2002: Dominance on the ITF Circuit=== |
||
Li turned professional in 1999, and |
Li turned professional in 1999, and won three of the first four singles tournaments she entered on the ITF Circuit, two at Shenzhen and one at Westende, Belgium. She also won all of her first seven ITF doubles tournaments she entered. |
||
In 2000, she won |
In 2000, she won 52 singles matches on the ITF Circuit, more than any other player, notching another eight tournament titles, including one at the $50k level, two at $25k, and a run of four $10k tournament wins in March and April. |
||
Notable individual victories in the course of the year included wins over [[Flavia Pennetta]], [[Emmanuelle Gagliardi]], [[Maria Elena Camerin]], [[Tamarine Tanasugarn]] and [[Yayuk Basuki]]. |
Notable individual victories in the course of the year included wins over [[Flavia Pennetta]], [[Emmanuelle Gagliardi]], [[Maria Elena Camerin]], [[Tamarine Tanasugarn]] and [[Yayuk Basuki]]. |
||
In June, after Li's world ranking had risen to No. 136 on the strength of her ITF performances alone, she gained direct entry into her first [[WTA Tour]] event at |
In June, after Li's world ranking had risen to No. 136 on the strength of her ITF performances alone, she gained direct entry into her first [[WTA Tour]] event at Tashkent. Despite winning the first set, Li lost her first WTA singles match to [[Anna Zaporozhanova]] in three sets, but she captured the women's doubles title at Tashkent with [[Li Ting (tennis, born 1980)|Li Ting]] against Zaporozhanova and [[Iroda Tulyaganova]]. |
||
By the end of 2000, Li had won four WTA singles matches, |
By the end of 2000, Li had won four WTA Tour singles matches, this brought her cumulative ITF singles title count up to eleven. That year, she also won seven more ITF doubles events, six of them with Li Ting. |
||
Li was mostly absent from the tour in 2001. She won two |
Li was mostly absent from the tour in 2001. She further won two $25k singles tournaments, defeating [[Roberta Vinci]] in the final at Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and Liu Nannan in the final at Guangzhou in July, but then played only one further match for the rest of the year, leading her ranking to fall to No. 303 by the year's close. |
||
She won her |
She won her 15th career ITF doubles tournament at Hangzhou in March. |
||
In 2002, she came through qualifying to win her first $ |
In 2002, she came through qualifying to win her first $75k singles tournament at Midland, United States in February, defeating [[Laura Granville]], [[Tatiana Perebiynis]], and [[Mashona Washington]] en route to the title, the 14th of her career. But she then played only one more match (a loss to [[Zuzana Ondrášková]] in the $50k event at Dinan, France that April), followed by a lengthy absence from the circuit for the next 25 months. |
||
Sources vary as to the causes of this absence, the Chinese media mostly cited the conflict between her and the China's National Tennis Team's administration and coaching staff.<ref name="whwb0">{{cite news |date=10 October 2010 |script-title=zh:李娜自曝当年退役缘由 称:余丽桥不懂得表扬队员 |url=http://sports.titan24.com/tennis/2010-10-10/86508.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110705065817/http://sports.titan24.com/tennis/2010-10-10/86508.html |archive-date=5 July 2011 |access-date=3 June 2011 |language=zh |script-work=zh:武汉晚报}}</ref><ref name="yahoochina0">{{cite news |date=2 October 2009 |script-title=zh:李娜—09中国网球公开赛参赛选手简介 |url=http://sports.cn.yahoo.com/09-10-/324/2au8z.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110420041206/http://sports.cn.yahoo.com/09-10-/324/2au8z.html |archive-date=20 April 2011 |access-date=3 June 2011 |work=Yahoo China |language=zh}}</ref><ref name="163com0">{{cite news |author1=网易 |date=29 January 2011 |script-title=zh:个性李娜单飞后屡获成功 映射举国体制之尴尬 |url=http://sports.163.com/11/0129/20/6RJH9E6400051CDG.html |access-date=3 June 2011 |work=[[163.com]] |language=zh}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.si.com/tennis/beyond-baseline/2014/02/11/li-na-book-review |title=Li Na offers candid, revealing look at historic career in autobiography |magazine=Sports Illustrated |date=11 February 2014 |first=Courtney |last=Nguyen |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Some claimed that she just wanted a break from professional tennis so she could concentrate on her studies at university. |
|||
Sources vary as to the causes of this absence, the Chinese media mostly cited the conflict between her and the China's National Tennis Team.<ref name="yahoochina0" /><ref name="whwb0" /><ref name="163com0" /> However, she took a break from professional tennis to study at university. |
|||
===2004–2005: Successful return to professional tennis=== |
|||
===2004=== |
|||
[[File:Li Na at the 2009 US Open 02.jpg|thumb|left|Li Na at the 2009 US Open]] |
|||
In May 2004, she returned to the circuit unranked, and won her first twenty-six successive matches of the season to notch up three further $25,000 tournament wins and another $50,000 title, increasing her career singles title count to ''eighteen'', only to have her winning streak finally snapped by [[Evgenia Linetskaya]] in the semi-final of the $50,000 Bronx tournament that August. But at least she won her sixteenth ITF doubles tournament at the same event, the ''seventeenth'' overall doubles title of her career. |
|||
In May 2004, Li returned to competition after having not played since 2002. Although she was unranked, she won 26 successive matches to notch three further $25k tournament wins and another $50k title, increasing her career singles title count to 18, only to have her winning streak finally snapped by [[Evgenia Linetskaya]] in the semifinal of the $50k Bronx tournament that August. However, she won her 16th ITF doubles tournament at the same event, the 17th overall doubles title of her career. |
|||
That September, she lost in the final of a $ |
That September, she lost in the final of a $25k tournament to compatriot [[Zheng Jie]], before returning to the WTA Tour, thanks to a wildcard entry into qualifying at [[China Open (tennis)|Beijing]]. There, she defeated [[Antonella Serra Zanetti]], [[Marta Domachowska]], and [[Nicole Pratt]] before losing in the deciding-set tie-break after a very close second-round main-draw tussle against newly crowned US Open Champion [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]], during which she held match points against Kuznetsova. The Russian afterwards praised her Chinese opponent, stating that she had felt as though she was up against a top-five player. |
||
The very next week, Li battled her way through qualifying into the WTA event at [[Guangzhou International Women's Open|Guangzhou]] (a Tier IV event at the time, though since |
The very next week, Li battled her way through qualifying into the WTA Tour event at [[Guangzhou International Women's Open|Guangzhou]] (a Tier IV event at the time, though since has been upgraded to Tier III), then beat [[Vera Dushevina]], [[Jelena Janković]], [[Kristina Brandi]], and Li Ting in the main draw to reach the final, where she overcame [[Martina Suchá]] to win her first WTA Tour title. By doing so, Li became the [[Tennis in China|first Chinese player]] to win a WTA event.<ref name="reutersuk">{{cite news|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/tennis-li-china-women-idUKL3N0RJ4J420140919 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305171657/http://uk.reuters.com/article/tennis-li-china-women-idUKL3N0RJ4J420140919 |url-status=dead |archive-date=March 5, 2016 |title=FACTBOX – Tennis – The rise of China's women |agency=Reuters UK |date=19 September 2014 |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref> |
||
On the back of the ranking points accrued through this result, on |
On the back of the ranking points accrued through this result, on 4 October 2004, she broke into the WTA top 100 for the first time. |
||
To cap off her most successful year as a singles player yet, she competed in two $ |
To cap off her most successful year as a singles player yet, she competed in two $50k tournaments at Shenzhen, winning the first outright to bring her the 19th ITF singles title and 20th overall singles title of her career, but losing in the quarterfinals of the second to lower-ranked country-woman [[Yan Zi (tennis)|Yan Zi]]. These results elevated Li Na to world No. 80 by the close of the year, a year in which she won 51 singles matches and lost just four. |
||
2005 saw Li finally abandoning the ITF Circuit to focus solely on tour-level events. She began the year with a second-round performance at Gold Coast and a semifinal showing at Hobart, but losing to fellow Chinese player and eventual tournament champion Zheng Jie. She then made her Grand Slam debut at the [[2005 Australian Open]], advancing to the third round with wins over Laura Granville and [[Shinobu Asagoe]] before losing to [[Maria Sharapova]]. In early February, she reached the quarterfinals at Hyderabad and qualified for Doha where she was narrowly beaten by [[Patty Schnyder]] in the first round of the main draw. After a victory over [[Ai Sugiyama]] in the first round at Dubai the following week, it was Schnyder once again who stopped her from reaching the later stages of the event. |
|||
===2005=== |
|||
2005 saw Li finally abandoning the ITF circuit to focus solely on WTA-level events. |
|||
After taking a month off from competition, Li returned at Estoril in late April, defeating [[Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro]], [[Nicole Pratt]], [[Dally Randriantefy]], and then crushing [[Dinara Safina]] to reach her second WTA Tour final. Li was denied the title by Czech qualifier [[Lucie Šafářová]], who prevailed in a close three-set match. At Rabat in May, Li reached the semifinal stage, but further success ultimately proved elusive for her. With the score leveled at 3–3, she retired due to a right ankle sprain while clashing with Zheng Jie. Reaching this semifinal propelled her to a career-high singles ranking of world No. 33, but the injury she had sustained was destined to keep her out of action for the next three months. On her return at Los Angeles in August, she fell in the first round to [[Anna Chakvetadze]] of Russia. The following week, however, at the Canadian Open, she once more beat Jelena Janković and [[María Vento-Kabchi]], before losing to [[Nadia Petrova]] in the third round. |
|||
She began the year in January with a second-round performance (losing to [[Nadia Petrova]]) at Gold Coast and a semi-final showing at Hobart (beating [[Amy Frazier]] and [[Marta Domachowska]] but losing to fellow Chinese player and eventual tournament champion [[Zheng Jie]]), then reached the third round at the [[Australian Open]], where she defeated [[Laura Granville]] and [[Shinobu Asagoe]] before losing to [[Maria Sharapova]] 0–6, 2–6. |
|||
It was [[Lindsay Davenport]] who proved her undoing in her next two tournaments, beating her in the first round of the [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]], and at the semifinal stage in Bali in September, but not before Li Na had avenged her previous year's defeat by Yan Zi in the second round of the same tournament. The following week, another highly ranked American player, [[Jill Craybas]], narrowly defeated Li Na in a close three-set first-round match at Beijing. Li commenced her defense of her Guangzhou title; but she was prevented from completing it in the quarterfinals by eventual champion Yan Zi, who thereby edged out in front in their head-to-head record once again. This second loss in three head-to-heads against Yan proved to be Li's last match of 2005; and in her absence from the Shenzhen $50k tournaments where she had notched up some ranking points late the previous year, she found herself slipping further in the rankings from the high point of No. 33 that she had reached in the spring before her injury break, to No. 56 at the year's close. |
|||
In early February, she reached the quarter-final at Hyderabad (losing to Russian [[Maria Kirilenko]]). But after qualifying for Doha with wins over [[Ekaterina Bychkova]] and [[Virginia Ruano Pascual]] she was narrowly beaten 5–7, 6–3, 5–7 by [[Patty Schnyder]] in the first round of the main draw. After a victory for the Chinese player over [[Ai Sugiyama]] in the first round at Dubai the following week, it was Schnyder once again who stopped her from reaching the latter stages of the event, this time winning 6–3, 7–6. |
|||
===2006: First Chinese major quarterfinalist=== |
|||
After taking a month off from competition, Li returned at Estoril in late April, defeating [[Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro]], [[Nicole Pratt]], [[Dally Randriantefy]] and [[Dinara Safina]], whom she vanquished 6–1, 6–1 to reach her second WTA Tour final, only to be denied the title by Czech qualifier [[Lucie Šafářová]], who prevailed in a close three-set match 7–6(4), 4–6, 3–6. |
|||
With nearly all her remaining ranking points to defend concentrated in a little over the first four months of the year, Li began the year faced with the challenge of equaling her strong results from the early part of 2005 in order to maintain her position in the middle reaches of the WTA top 100. Early-round draws against high-ranked players towards the beginning of 2006 took a heavy toll on Li's singles ranking, bringing it slipping down to No. 71 by the end of February. |
|||
She returned with a career-best performance at Tier I events by reaching the semifinal at Berlin. On the way there, she achieved her first victory over a current top-10-ranked player as she ousted Patty Schnyder for the first time at the quarterfinal stage. However, this match left her with a muscle sprain, and she lost to Nadia Petrova in the semifinal. Nonetheless, her performance at this high-level tournament saw her ranked No. 39. Joining the WTA Tour grass-court season for the first time at the Birmingham Classic in June, she managed another third-round finish with wins over Mashona Washington and grass-court specialist [[Eleni Daniilidou]], both in straight sets, then lost for the third time in three meetings to Maria Sharapova. Her ranking following this tournament was No. 30, which was at that time the highest ever ranking achieved by a Chinese woman. |
|||
At Rabat in May, Li reached the semi-final stage, but further success proved ultimately elusive for her, as she retired hurt with a right ankle sprain from her clash against [[Zheng Jie]] with the score level at 3–3. Reaching this semi-final propelled her to a career-high world ranking of 33, but the injury she had sustained was destined to keep her out of action for the next three months. |
|||
At the same event, partnering Jelena Janković, she notched up her second career WTA doubles title, almost exactly six years from her first at Tashkent. An early retirement against [[Alona Bondarenko]] in the first round of the Ondina Open at 's-Hertogenbosch the following week curtailed her final competitive preparations for her debut appearance at [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]]. But with an entry ranking of 30th, she found herself seeded 27th after some withdrawals, and thus achieved another first for her country in becoming the [[Tennis in China|first Chinese woman ever to be seeded]] for entry into a Grand Slam tournament. |
|||
On her return at Los Angeles in August, she fell in the first round to [[Anna Chakvetadze]] of Russia. The following week, however, at the Canadian Open, she once more beat [[Jelena Janković]], and also defeated [[María Vento-Kabchi]], before suffering her second loss of the year to [[Nadia Petrova]] at the quarter-final stage. |
|||
At [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], she reached the fourth round with comfortable straight-sets wins over respected grass-court players [[Virginie Razzano]] and recent Birmingham semifinalist [[Meilen Tu]], followed by victory against 10th seeded [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]], resulting in her being the first Chinese player ever to reach any Grand Slam quarterfinal.<ref name="reutersuk" /> Li rose to a new career-high WTA ranking of No. 20 following the tournament, even though she ultimately lost her quarterfinal match against Kim Clijsters in two close sets. She reached the quarterfinals at Stockholm, and the fourth round at the [[2006 US Open (tennis)|US Open]], where, as the 24th seed, she was beaten by eventual champion Maria Sharapova in two sets. She then reached the quarterfinals at the China Open, where she was beaten by Svetlana Kuznetsova, and in Guangzhou. |
|||
It was [[Lindsay Davenport]] who proved her undoing in her next two tournaments, beating her 6–4, 6–4 in the first round of the [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] and 6–2, 6–2 at the semi-final stage in Bali in September, but not before Li Na had avenged her previous year's defeat by [[Yan Zi]] in the second round of the same tournament, in addition to recording victories over [[Nuria Llagostera Vives]] and [[Alona Bondarenko]]. |
|||
===2007–2009=== |
|||
The following week, another highly ranked American player, [[Jill Craybas]], narrowly defeated Li Na in a close three-set first round match at Beijing. |
|||
[[File:Li Na 2008.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Li Na at the 2008 Luxembourg Open]] |
|||
Li started the year by participating at Tier III event in Gold Coast, Australia, where she reached the second round. The next week, she competed in Sydney. She defeated [[Francesca Schiavone]] in the first round, [[Elena Dementieva]] in the second, saving five match points, and [[Katarina Srebotnik]] in the quarterfinal. Then, she made it to the semifinals, losing a tough match to Kim Clijsters, 5–7 in the third set. However, she rose to a career high of No. 16 afterwards. |
|||
Li Na followed her strong showing at Sydney with an equally strong showing at the [[2007 Australian Open|Australian Open]], where she advanced to the fourth round. Seeded 19th, Li dispatched [[Elena Bovina]] and [[Lourdes Domínguez Lino]] in straight sets through the first two rounds, leading to a matchup with No. 9 Dinara Safina. The match was postponed due to rain, but Li handily beat Safina to advance to the fourth round to play Swiss star, No. 6 [[Martina Hingis]]. Due to a rain delay and the fact that Hingis played on [[Rod Laver Arena]], a roofed court, on the originally scheduled day, Hingis had an extra day of rest. The match the previous day seemed to have no effect, as Li took the first set from Hingis. However, Na faded as the match went on and lost while committing 69 unforced errors. Despite the loss, the tournament was a success for Li, as it marked the third straight time in a Grand Slam that she advanced at least to the fourth round. |
|||
On September 26, Li Na commenced her defence of her Guangzhou title; but she was prevented from completing it in the quarter-finals by eventual champion [[Yan Zi]], who thereby edged out in front in their head-to-head record once again. This second loss in three head-to-heads against Yan proved to be Li's last match of 2005; and in her absence from the Shenzhen $50,000 tournaments where she had notched up some ranking points late the previous year, she found herself slipping further in the rankings from the high-point of 33 that she had reached in the Spring before her injury break to 56 at the year's close. |
|||
At the Tier I [[Pan Pacific Open]] in Tokyo, Li advanced to the second round, defeating [[Lilia Osterloh]] before losing to [[Samantha Stosur]] in two sets, converting zero of eleven break points. At the important Indian Wells Open in California, Li made a strong showing, advancing to the semifinals. She lost to [[Daniela Hantuchová]] in the semifinal. She continued her good form at the [[Miami Open (tennis)|Miami Open]], losing just three games in her first two matches against [[Tamira Paszek]] and Katarina Srebotnik, before stunning fourth-seeded Kim Clijsters in three sets. She then lost in the quarterfinals to [[Anna Chakvetadze]]. |
|||
===2006=== |
|||
[[File:Na-li.jpg|thumb|right|Li Na in 2010]] |
|||
With nearly all her remaining ranking points to defend concentrated in a little over the first four months of the year, Li Na began the year faced with the challenge of equalling her strong results from the early part of 2005 in order to maintain her position in the middle reaches of the WTA Top 100. |
|||
She then moved onto the green clay of [[Bausch & Lomb Championships|Amelia Island]], where she suffered a shock second-round exit, after receiving a first round bye, to former top-20 player [[Karolina Šprem]] in straight sets. At the [[Family Circle Cup]] held in Charleston, South Carolina, she fell in the third round to [[Anabel Medina Garrigues]]. After losing in a grass tune-up event in Birmingham, Li pulled out of every tournament she was to play in the summer, including Wimbledon and the US Open, citing a rib injury. |
|||
In January, the 23-year-old Chinese entered the Australian Open and was drawn to play [[Serena Williams]] in the first round. She took the match to a deciding set by whitewashing Williams in the second-set tie-break, but failed to sustain that momentum in the final set, finally yielding the match 3–6, 7–6 (7–0), 1–6 to the American. |
|||
[[File:Li na wim08 1.JPG|thumb|right|upright|Li Na at the 2008 Wimbledon Championships]] |
|||
Other early-round draws against high-ranked players towards the beginning of 2006 conspired with her recent first-round tie against [[Serena Williams]] at the Australian Open to take a heavy toll on Li's singles ranking, bringing it slipping down to No. 71 by the end of February. |
|||
Li had not played a professional match in half a year and had resultantly slipped to No. 29 in the WTA rankings when she returned from her rib injury in January 2008 to compete at the [[2008 Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts|Australian Women's Hardcourts]] in Gold Coast. In the first round, she narrowly defeated seventh seed [[Sybille Bammer]]. After a comfortable second round victory over [[wild card (tennis)|wildcard]] [[Monique Adamczak]], she was drawn to meet the top seed [[Nicole Vaidišová]] in the quarterfinals. Li won their encounter in straight sets, advancing to the semifinals, where she edged past Patty Schnyder.<ref name="Safina's Golden Reign Comes To An End">{{cite news | author = Women's Tennis Association | title = Safina's Golden Reign Comes To An End | url = http://www.sonyericssonwtatour.com/1/newsroom/stories/?ContentID=1938 | date = 3 January 2008 | access-date = 3 January 2008 | publisher = Women's Tennis Association | archive-date = 7 January 2008 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080107041244/http://www.sonyericssonwtatour.com/1/newsroom/stories/?ContentID=1938 | url-status = dead }}</ref> |
|||
In the final, she narrowly prevailed against [[Victoria Azarenka]], not only ending her three-year title drought (since Guangzhou 2004) but scoring her second career singles title. |
|||
Despite rising back up to world No. 24 following this victory, she then withdrew from the 2008 Sydney International, after suffering a right knee injury. Her failure to defend her previous year's semifinal performance at this event cost her 125 ranking points, which dipped her ranking back down to No. 30 for the week beginning 14 January. Going into the 2008 Australian Open, she had a further 140 ranking points to defend from her fourth-round performance in 2007. Faced with a relatively lenient draw in the early rounds, she survived a close three-set tussle with [[Séverine Brémond]] in the first round, before surpassing [[Maria Elena Camerin]] in straight sets in round two. A revitalised [[Marta Domachowska]] remained between her and the defence of her ranking points, and although Li won the first set convincingly, she faltered thereafter and finally ceded the match to her Polish opponent by a single break of serve in the closely fought deciding set. |
|||
At Gold Coast, she defeated [[Roberta Vinci]] in the first round only to lose to Top-20 player [[Flavia Pennetta]] in Round Two. Although she avenged this defeat in the first round at Sydney the very next week, ousting the Italian 6–4, 6–1, she lost heavily to [[Kim Clijsters]] in the second round. |
|||
Having slipped three places to world No. 33 by the time she entered the Tier II tournament at Antwerp in early February, she nonetheless progressed to the semifinals with back-to-back-to-back straight-sets wins over Russian veteran [[Elena Likhovtseva]], Slovak world No. 45 [[Dominika Cibulková]], and on-form Swedish world No. 66 [[Sofia Arvidsson]]. However, she withered in the semifinals against world No. 47, [[Karin Knapp]], despite having taken an early lead with a break of service in the first set, ultimately ceding the match to her Italian opponent in two sets. This tournament brought her back up within the top 30 at world No. 29. |
|||
An easier draw on paper faced her at Pattaya in early February, but it was not to be a good week for Li, as she lost in three sets to Canadian qualifier [[Aleksandra Wozniak]] in the first round. |
|||
The next week at the Tier I [[2008 Qatar Total Open|Qatar Open]], Li met Likhovtseva again in the first round. This time, after taking the first set comfortably, she was challenged to a much tougher battle, but eventually won in three sets. In round two, she scored her second straight-sets victory in four career head-to-heads against Russian world No. 6 Anna Chakvetadze, saving a set point in the first set tie-break, before recovering to win. In the third round, she enjoyed a more comfortable victory over Israeli world No. 17, [[Shahar Pe'er]], recovering from a 1–3 deficit in the second set. In the quarterfinals, she met her old rival and friend, world No. 4 Jelena Janković, coming into the match with a winning 3–1 head-to-head record to her credit against the Serbian player. By defeating Janković she extended this record to 4–1 and moved into the semifinals, where she played Vera Zvonareva, against whom she had won both of her previous encounters. Despite taking the first set, Li lost the second by the same scoreline; and although she was 3–2 up in the final set, she then ceded four successive games to her opponent to lose the match. |
|||
A second successive first-round defeat, this time to the opposition of [[Daniela Hantuchová]], followed in Dubai, although the score-line of 6–3, 4–6, 6–7 demonstrated that the match was close despite the difference of more than fifty places between the two players' rankings. |
|||
Her ranking having risen back to No. 23 on the strength of this performance, she was prevented from consolidating on this recovery by suffering a right knee injury, which forced her to pull out of her scheduled entries into both the Tier II event at Bangalore in early March and the Tier I tournament at Indian Wells in the middle of the month. She returned to action at the [[International Women's Open]] in Eastbourne, winning one round before losing to Nadia Petrova. She then contested Wimbledon, defeating [[Anastasia Rodionova]] before losing to [[Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova]]. |
|||
A repeat match with Hantuchová in the second round at the [[Qatar Total Open]] in Doha the following week saw the Slovak this time taking a commanding lead, 6–4, 5–1, but Li saved several match points and broke back twice en route to a second-set tie-break, which she won, before running away with the third set 6–1. Although Li's next opponent in this tournament [[Nadia Petrova]], who was destined to win the entire tournament, had the upper hand for the third time in three head-to-head contests, narrowly prevailing 6–4, 6–4, the fact of Li Na reaching the quarter-final stage at Doha, after earlier beating [[Vera Zvonareva]], spared her a further decline in her world ranking and brought it back up slightly to No. 70. |
|||
At the [[2008 Summer Olympics|Beijing Olympics]], following early-round victories against world No. 3 Svetlana Kuznetsova, [[Ayumi Morita]], and [[Kaia Kanepi]], she went on to defeat one of the favourites, Venus Williams, in the quarterfinals. Li was trailing 1–4 in the first set, but managed to strengthen her game to win in straight sets. Li lost her semifinal match to sixth seed Dinara Safina and was then defeated in the bronze final by Vera Zvonareva. At the following US Open, Li was defeated by the Beijing Olympics gold medalist Elena Dementieva in the fourth round. |
|||
At Indian Wells in March, she started with a comfortable 6–1, 6–3 win over former Top-40 player Anne Kremer of Luxembourg (despite ceding one break of service), then defeated Czech World No. 39 [[Iveta Benešová]] by the one-sided scoreline of 6–1, 6–0 in Round Two. She was 6–2, 5–1 up against [[Vania King]] in Round Three before the American wildcard won three successive games, forcing Li to close out the closely tied second set 6–4, having lost her own serve twice during the set. In the fourth round, she played Russian World No. 8 [[Elena Dementieva]] for the first time, and found herself struggling to hold her own service throughout the match, as she was broken five times while breaking Dementieva's serve just twice, and was ultimately defeated 6–3, 6–2, although overall she won 50 points against the Russian's 63. Still, she earned 45 ranking points from the tournament; and with none to defend from the previous March, this assured her of a rise of ten places back up to World No. 60. |
|||
In the 2008 [[Porsche Tennis Grand Prix|Stuttgart Grand Prix]], the unseeded Li defeated top ranked Serena Williams in the second round in three sets. Li thus became only the second Chinese player to defeat a world No. 1 player, following Zheng Jie's victory over [[Ana Ivanovic]] at [[2008 Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] in 2008. |
|||
The Miami draw saw her scheduled to be pitted in the second round against [[Maria Sharapova]], the winner at Indian Wells, who in their only previous meeting had crushed her for the loss of just two games at the Australian Open in 2005. In Round One, Li easily overcame [[Akiko Morigami]] 6–1, 6–2, allowing her to take home 19 ranking points. But against the Russian No. 1 she went down 2–6, 4–6. In the second set, she broke Sharapova's service twice, but ultimately lost her own three times, and thus the match. |
|||
[[File:Li Na at the 2009 US Open 01.jpg|thumb|Li Na at the 2009 US Open]] |
|||
At Estoril in May, Li defended her previous year's final-round performance with a solid run of straight-sets victories, including wins over [[Gisela Dulko]] and clay-court specialist [[Émilie Loit]], only to retire hurt at one-set all during a close-fought final against her compatriot [[Zheng Jie]], with the score at 7–6 (5), 5–7. |
|||
Li withdrew from both the inaugural [[Brisbane International]], where she was defending champion (as she won the title at Gold Coast in 2008), and the [[2009 Australian Open]] because of a right-knee injury. She made her comeback at the [[2009 Open GDF Suez|Paris Indoors]]. In the first round, she beat [[Ágnes Szávay]], but in the second round she lost to second-seeded Jelena Janković. |
|||
In the first round of the [[2009 Dubai Tennis Championships – Women's singles|Dubai Championships]], Li lost to [[Elena Vesnina]] in three sets. Unseeded at the [[2009 Monterrey Open|Monterrey Open]], she defeated world No. 10 and top seed [[Agnieszka Radwańska]] in a first round match that lasted over two hours. In the second round, she beat [[Petra Cetkovská]] and then advanced to the semifinals after defeating Lucie Šafářová. Li then moved into her fifth career tour final, after beating sixth-seeded [[Iveta Benešová]]. However, Li lost to second-seeded [[Marion Bartoli]] in the final in straight sets. She played in the Premier event at Indian Wells, where she defeated Tamarine Tanasugarn, Patty Schnyder, and[Amélie Mauresmo, all in straight sets, to advance to the fourth round, where she lost to eventual champion Vera Zvonareva. |
|||
With her previous year's points from Rabat cut from under her feet as the tournament was scheduled several weeks later this year and clashed with a higher-level event in which she chose to participate instead, Li Na found herself ranked at No. 61, down five places on the beginning of the year, as the defence of her results in early 2005 came to its end. |
|||
She then reached the quarterfinals of the Premier event in Miami, where she beat qualifier [[Urszula Radwańska]] in the first round and upset 29th seed [[Aleksandra Wozniak]] to reach the third round, where she caused a big upset by defeating the previous week's Indian Wells champion, sixth-seeded Vera Zvonareva in three sets. This victory was particularly important for Li, as she had been beaten by Zvonareva the week before at Indian Wells. She then faced unseeded Russian [[Ekaterina Makarova]] in the fourth round and beat her in three sets to set up a quarterfinal match with the top seed and world No. 1, Serena Williams, a match which she lost in a tight three-setter. Because of her strong performance, her ranking went up to world No. 29 from world No. 40. |
|||
Her second injury-related retirement in two successive meetings against Zheng would not prove to prevent Li from continuing to compete over the remainder of the Spring, a period in which she had no ranking points to defend at all, and which therefore presented her with a ready opportunity to advance back upwards in the rankings. |
|||
Li's next event was the second Grand Slam of the year, the French Open in Paris. As the 25th seed, she won her first round against [[Marta Domachowska]]. She then defeated [[Timea Bacsinszky]] and [[Olga Govortsova]]. She then lost to unseeded former world No. 1, Maria Sharapova, in the fourth round. After this impressive result, she jumped up to No. 20. She started her grass-court season as the fourth seed at the [[2009 Aegon Classic – Singles|Birmingham Classic]] and advanced to the final with a win over Maria Sharapova in the semifinals. However, Na was defeated by [[Magdaléna Rybáriková]] in the final. Li was seeded 19th at the [[2009 Wimbledon Championships]]. She defeated [[Galina Voskoboeva]] in the first round and Olga Govortsova in the second round, but lost to No. 11 Agnieszka Radwańska in the third round. |
|||
She returned with a career-best performance at Tier I events the very next week by reaching the semi-final at Berlin. On the way there, she achieved her first ever victory over a current Top-10-ranked player as she ousted [[Patty Schnyder]] for the first time in their three head-to-head meetings, 2–6, 7–6, 7–6, at the quarter-final stage. But this match left her with a muscle sprain, and she subsequently suffered an uncharacteristically easy loss to [[Nadia Petrova]] in the semi-final, 1–6, 0–6. Nonetheless, her performance at this high-level tournament propelled her ranking back up inside the WTA Top 40 for the first time that year, leaving her ranked #39, and also elevated her up inside the Top 20 in the 2006 WTA race to the championships. |
|||
At the [[2009 Bank of the West Classic]], she lost to Serena Williams in the first round, and at the [[2009 LA Women's Tennis Championships|LA Women's Championships]], she withdrew due to injury during her match with Urszula Radwańska of Poland. Seeded 18th at the [[2009 US Open (tennis)|US Open]], she reached her first US Open quarterfinals, where she lost to eventual champion Kim Clijsters. En route to the quarterfinals, she defeated [[Raluca Olaru]], [[Michelle Larcher de Brito]], [[Maria Kirilenko]], and Francesca Schiavone all in straight sets. Seeded 15th at the [[Pan Pacific Open]], Li won her opening match against Alizé Cornet. She then defeated [[Vera Dushevina]] before beating [[Kateryna Bondarenko]]. In the quarterfinal, she defeated Victoria Azarenka in three sets, two of which were tiebreaks, though she failed in serving for the match twice in the last set. Li lost in the semifinals to Jelena Janković and finished the year at world No. 15, her then-career-high year-end ranking. |
|||
At Strasbourg in late May, she scored a second-round victory over Top-30 player [[Nathalie Dechy]] of France, 6–3, 7–6, but although she then took an early lead against rival-turned-doubles-partner [[Jelena Janković]] in Round Three, she failed to sustain it, losing to Janković for the first time in three career meetings. Her ranking improved just one place to 38th. |
|||
===2010: First major semifinal & ascent to top 10=== |
|||
In her first ever appearance at Roland Garros, she toughed out hard-fought victories against perennial campaigner [[Amy Frazier]] and young Russian [[Anna Chakvetadze]] to earn herself a third round spot, then put up an ultimatey unsuccessful fight against eventual finalist [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]], going down by a final scoreline of 3–6, 6–7. She emerged from the tournament with a personal best WTA ranking of 32, as several players previously ranked comfortably above her failed to adequately defend their ranking points from the previous year. |
|||
[[File:Li Na Photo by Sascha Grabow.jpg|thumb|Li Na at the [[2010 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix]]]] |
|||
Li's first tournament of 2010 was the [[2010 ASB Classic|Classic in Auckland]], where she was seeded second. She was defeated by Kaia Kanepi in the first round. In Sydney, she defeated fourth seed Caroline Wozniacki but lost to Flavia Pennetta in the second round. |
|||
Li was seeded 16th at the [[2010 Australian Open|Australian Open]]. She defeated world No. 4 Caroline Wozniacki in the fourth round and then came from a set and 3–5 down to defeat world No. 6 Venus Williams, in her first Australian Open quarterfinal and only her third [[Grand Slam (tennis)|major]] quarterfinal. In the semifinals, she lost to Serena Williams in two highly competitive tiebreaks. As a result of this performance, Li was the first Chinese woman ever to be ranked in the top ten of women's professional tennis.<ref name="reutersuk" /> |
|||
Joining the WTA grass court season for the first time at the DFS Classic tournament at Birmingham in June, she managed another third-round finish with wins over [[Mashona Washington]] and grass-court specialist [[Eleni Daniilidou]], both in straight sets, then lost for the third time in three meetings to [[Maria Sharapova]], this time by a scoreline of 2–6, 4–6. But her third consecutive third-round performance in tournaments where she had no ranking points to defend from the previous year was enough to lift her ranking to No. 30, which was at that time the highest ever ranking achieved by a Chinese woman. |
|||
At the Dubai Championships, Li, the eighth seed, defeated [[María José Martínez Sánchez]] in the second round. She then came from a 6–3, 5–2 deficit to defeat Marion Bartoli in the third round. Li was forced to retire in her quarterfinals match against Shahar Pe'er. Li continued her season at the inaugural [[Malaysian Open (tennis)|Malaysian Open]]. As second seed, she fell to [[Tatjana Malek]] in the first round. As seventh seed at the [[2010 BNP Paribas Open|Indian Wells Open]], Li fell to [[Elena Baltacha]] in round two. Li was eighth seed at the [[2010 Sony Ericsson Open|Miami Open]], but fell to Timea Bacsinszky in the second round. |
|||
At the same event, partnering [[Jelena Janković]], she notched up her second career WTA doubles title, almost exactly six years on from her first at Tashkent. |
|||
At the [[2010 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix|Stuttgart Grand Prix]], Li defeated defending champion Svetlana Kuznetsova in the second round, before falling to eventual runner-up Sam Stosur in the quarterfinals. Li was 11th seed at the [[2010 French Open|French Open]]. She fell to eventual champion and world No. 17 Francesca Schiavone in the third round. Li was seeded first at the [[2010 Aegon Classic|Birmingham Classic]]. She defeated 4th seed [[Aravane Rezaï]] in the semifinals, and second-seeded Maria Sharapova in the final to win the tournament. With the win, Li returned to the top 10 in the WTA rankings. Seeded seventh at [[2010 Aegon International|Eastbourne]], Li retired in the first round with a knee injury after winning the first set against Elena Baltacha. Li was seeded ninth at [[2010 Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]]. She defeated seventh seed Agnieszka Radwańska to advance to the quarterfinals at Wimbledon for the second time in her career, where she lost to world No. 1 and defending champion Serena Williams. In doing so Li once again returned to the top 10 in the WTA rankings. |
|||
An early retirement against [[Alona Bondarenko]] in the first round of the Ondina Open at Hertogenbosch the following week curtailed her final competitive preparations for her debut appearance at [[The Championships, Wimbledon|Wimbledon]]. But with an entry ranking of 30th, she found herself seeded 27th after some withdrawals, and thus achieved another first for her country in becoming the first Chinese woman ever to be seeded for entry into a Grand Slam tournament. |
|||
At the [[2010 US Open (tennis)|US Open]], she started off as the eighth seed, but fell at the first hurdle to Kateryna Bondarenko. Li was an alternate at the [[2010 WTA Tour Championships|WTA Championships]], but did not receive a chance to play. Instead, she played at the [[2010 Commonwealth Bank Tournament of Champions|Tournament of Champions]] as the first seed. However, she was defeated by Japanese [[Kimiko Date-Krumm]] in the first round, putting an end to her 2010 season, her best season to date. She finished just outside the top 10 at world No. 11. At the end of the year, Li's coach [[Thomas Högstedt]] chose to leave her in order to coach Maria Sharapova. |
|||
Taking advantage of her hard-earned [[The Championships, Wimbledon|Wimbledon]] seeding, she cruised to the third round with comfortable straight-sets victories over respected grass-court players [[Virginie Razzano]] and recent [[Birmingham]] semi-finalist [[Meilen Tu]] to set up her second consecutive third-round Grand Slam tie against [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]]. |
|||
===2011: Major breakthrough & historic victory at French Open=== |
|||
After two close defeats in two career head-to-heads against Kuznetsova, Li Na finally scored her first victory over the 5th-seeded Russian World No. 6 almost two years after squandering match points against her in their first encounter. To seal this breakthrough win, which was also her second career victory over a current Top-10-ranked player, Li had to fight back from a set down, but ultimately vanquished the Russian 3–6, 6–2, 6–3, so becoming the second Chinese player to reach the fourth round (last 16) at a Grand Slam tournament (the first having been [[Jie Zheng]] at the 2004 [[French Open]]). |
|||
[[File:Li Na 2011 French Open.jpg|thumb|right|Li Na in 2011 French Open semifinal]] |
|||
Li played in the [[2011 Medibank International Sydney|Sydney International]] as the eighth seed, making fast work of Australian wildcard [[Anastasia Rodionova]] and winning a tough three-set match against [[Virginie Razzano]] in the first two rounds. In the quarterfinals she met two-time Grand Slam winner Svetlana Kuznetsova and came through with a win. She defeated surprise qualifier [[Bojana Jovanovski]] in the semifinals to advance to her eighth WTA final.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.medibankinternational.com.au/2011/01/li-defeats-clijsters-to-take-womens-singles#more-5399 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110117024322/http://www.medibankinternational.com.au/2011/01/li-defeats-clijsters-to-take-womens-singles |archive-date=2011-01-17 |url-status=usurped |title=Li defeats Clijsters to take women's singles}}</ref> Li faced world No. 3 Kim Clijsters in the final, and despite trailing 5–0 in the first set, Li went on to defeat Clijsters, capturing the fourth WTA title of her career. |
|||
Li was the ninth seed at the [[2011 Australian Open – Women's singles|Australian Open]], where she reached her first Grand Slam singles final, the first tennis player representing an East Asian and Asian country to achieve that feat. On the way she ousted eighth seed Victoria Azarenka in straight sets. She defeated world No. 1, Caroline Wozniacki, in the semifinals to reach the final, after saving a match point in the second set. She faced No. 3 seed Kim Clijsters (whom she had defeated at the Sydney International). Although Li claimed the first set, Clijsters was able to rally back and claim the championship. Despite the loss, Li's ranking rose to a career high of world No. 7.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/30/sports/tennis/30tennis.html |title=Clijsters, While Not at Her Best, Is Still Too Much for Li |work=The New York Times |date=29 January 2011 |first=Christopher |last=Clarey |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
She then went on to defeat 10th-seeded Czech player [[Nicole Vaidišová]] 4–6, 6–1, 6–3 in the fourth round, to reach her first Grand Slam quarter-final, surpassing Zheng's achievement by becoming the first Chinese player ever to reach any Grand Slam quarter-final. With 174 ranking points to her credit from this performance, and none to defend, Li rose to a new career high WTA ranking of 20 following the tournament, even though she ultimately lost her quarter-final match against Kim Clijsters in two close sets, 4–6, 5–7, despite serving for the second set at 5–2. |
|||
Despite a good early start to the season, Li then had a five-match losing streak. After receiving byes into the second rounds, she lost in a hardly fought match against [[Yanina Wickmayer]] at the [[2011 Dubai Tennis Championships|Dubai Championships]], lucky loser [[Klára Zakopalová]] at the [[2011 Qatar Ladies Open|Qatar Ladies Open]] and countrywoman [[Peng Shuai]] at [[2011 BNP Paribas Open|Indian Wells]]. Despite this, after Indian Wells she peaked at a career-high ranking of world No. 6 due to Janković's failures to defend her points. |
|||
At the US Open later that summer, she reached the fourth round, beating [[Mary Pierce]] 4–6, 6–0 6–0, before losing to the eventual champion Maria Sharapova, 4–6, 2–6. |
|||
Li's losing streak continued, when she was upset in the [[2011 Sony Ericsson Open|Miami Open]] by [[Johanna Larsson]]. With this loss, and [[Andy Murray]]'s loss at Miami, both Australian Open finalists had yet to win a match since their first major final. She fell back to No. 7. Li then broke her losing streak by winning her first-round match against [[Anastasija Sevastova]] in Stuttgart. However, she lost to [[Sabine Lisicki]] in the second round. Even though she was not able to defend all her Stuttgart ranking points, she rose back to No. 6. However, due to her disappointing results, Li Na sacked her husband as coach and hired Dane [[Michael Mortensen]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/tennis/li-nas-honesty-earns-locals-backing-for-azarenka-showdown-8467850.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220614/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/tennis/li-nas-honesty-earns-locals-backing-for-azarenka-showdown-8467850.html |archive-date=2022-06-14 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=Li Na's honesty earns locals' backing for Azarenka showdown |work=The Independent |date=25 January 2013 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
===2007=== |
|||
[[File:Li Na 2008.jpg|thumb|right|Li Na at 2008 Fortis Championships Luxembourg]] |
|||
Li Na started the year by participating a Tier III event in [[Gold Coast, Queensland|Gold Coast]], Australia where she reached the second round. The week after, she competed in Sydney ([[Medibank International]]). She defeated [[Francesca Schiavone]] in the first round, [[Elena Dementieva]] in the second saving five match points, and [[Katarina Srebotnik]] in the quarterfinal. Then, she made it to the semifinals, losing a tough match to [[Kim Clijsters]] 1–6, 6–1, 7–5, however, she rose to a career high of No.16 afterwards. |
|||
She entered the [[2011 Mutua Madrid Open|Madrid Open]] as sixth seed. In the first two rounds, she defeated María José Martínez Sánchez and Iveta Benešová without much difficulty. In the third round she got the better of Roberta Vinci coming back from a set deficit. She then defeated [[Bethanie Mattek-Sands]] after recovering from a break down in the deciding set. This victory marked her first semifinals appearance in Madrid, where she lost to eventual champion, [[Petra Kvitová]]. |
|||
Li Na followed her strong showing at the Medibank tournament with an equally strong showing at the [[2007 Australian Open]], where she advanced to the fourth round. Seeded 19th, Li dispatched [[Elena Bovina]] and [[Lourdes Domínguez Lino]] in straight sets through the first two rounds leading to a matchup with number 9 [[Dinara Safina]]. The match was postponed due to rain, but Li handedly beat Safina 6–2, 6–2 to advance to the fourth round to play [[Swiss]] star, number 6 [[Martina Hingis]]. Due to the rain delay and the fact that Hingis played on [[Rod Laver Arena]], a roofed court, on the originally scheduled day, Hingis had an extra day of rest. The match the previous day seemed to have no effect as Li took the first set from Hingis, however, Na faded as the match went on and lost 4–6, 6–3, 6–0, committing 69 unforced errors. Despite the loss, the tournament was a success for Na, as it marked the third straight time in a [[grand slam (tennis)|slam]] that she advanced to the fourth round or later. |
|||
Li's resurgence continued into the [[2011 Italian Open (tennis)|Italian Open]]. Seeded fourth, she received a bye in the first round. She won her opening match against [[Lourdes Domínguez Lino]] and defeated [[Jarmila Gajdošová]] and [[Gréta Arn]] in the next two rounds en route to back-to-back semifinals on clay. However, she lost to [[Samantha Stosur]] in two sets. |
|||
At the Tier I [[Toray Pan Pacific Open|Pan Pacific Open]] in Tokyo, Japan, Li advanced to the second round, defeating [[Lilia Osterloh]] 6–3, 6–2, before losing to [[Samantha Stosur]] 6–2, 6–4, converting zero of 11 break points. |
|||
Li won her first [[Grand Slam (tennis)|major]] title at the [[2011 French Open|French Open]] on June 4; by doing so she made history and became the first tennis player from an East Asian and Asian country to win a Grand Slam singles event. Seeded sixth, she defeated [[Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová]], [[Sílvia Soler Espinosa]], [[Sorana Cîrstea]], ninth seed Petra Kvitová, fourth seed Victoria Azarenka, seventh seed Maria Sharapova, and fifth seed and defending champion Francesca Schiavone in the final, a match that was watched by 330 million viewers worldwide.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2011/jun/06/li-na-french-open-champion|title=Li Na of China keeps feet on ground after historic French Open victory|date=6 June 2011|work=The Guardian|access-date=7 June 2011|location=London|first=Simon|last=Cambers}}</ref> |
|||
At the important [[Pacific Life Open]] in Indian Wells, California, Li made a strong showing, advancing to the semifinals. She lost to [[Daniela Hantuchová]] in the semifinal 7–5, 4–6, 6–1. She continued her good form at the [[Miami Masters]], losing just three games in her first two matches against [[Tamira Paszek]] and [[Katarina Srebotnik]], before stunning fourth-seeded [[Kim Clijsters]] 4–6, 6–4, 6–2. She then lost in the quarter-finals to [[Anna Chakvetadze]] 4–6, 7–5, 6–2. |
|||
After the match, Li Na was praised by the Chinese media,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tsn.ca/story/print/?id=367845 |title=China hails Li Na's French Open win as source of pride |publisher=TSN |date=4 June 2011 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> and her popularity throughout China was expected to grow significantly in the coming months, as she became the [[Tennis in China|first Chinese national]], male or female, ever to win a tennis Grand Slam title in singles, ensuring her place in the sport's history.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://thinkingchinese.com/index.php?page_id=296 |title=Li Na – From an athlete in the shadows to a new national hero |publisher=Thinking Chinese |date=5 June 2011 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>Although Li is the first Chinese national to have won a Grand Slam singles event, she is not the first ethnic Chinese individual to do so. That distinction belongs to [[Michael Chang]], a [[Chinese American]] who won the [[1989 French Open – Men's singles|1989 French Open]].</ref> Following the French Open, Li rose to a career high ranking of world No. 4. |
|||
As the second seed at [[2011 Aegon International|Eastbourne]], Li fell in the second round to Daniela Hantuchová. By virtue of the withdrawal of Kim Clijsters, Li was the third seed at [[2011 Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], her highest seeding at a Grand Slam. She beat [[Alla Kudryavtseva]] in the first round but lost in the second round to eventual semifinalist Sabine Lisicki of Germany even though she had two match points at 5–3 and served for the match twice at 5–4 and 6–5.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/sports/2015404732_aptenwimbledonli.html|title=French Open champ Li loses to Lisicki at Wimbledon|date=23 June 2011|work=The Seattle Times|access-date=23 June 2011}}</ref> Li suffered a surprise knock-out at the [[2011 US Open – Women's singles|2011 US Open]] at the hands of 53rd ranked Romanian teen [[Simona Halep]] and she ended the coaching of Mortensen. Then at the [[2011 China Open (tennis)|China Open]], Li suffered a first round defeat by Romanian player [[Monica Niculescu]]. However, as a result of Vera Zvonareva and Samantha Stosur's inability to go past the third round, she was able to qualify for the [[2011 WTA Tour Championships]] for the first time in her career. |
|||
She then moved onto the green clay of [[Bausch & Lomb Championships|Amelia Island]], where she suffered a shock second round exit after receiving a first round bye to former top twenty player [[Karolina Šprem]] in straight sets 6–3, 6–3. At the [[Family Circle Cup]] held in [[Charleston, South Carolina]], she fell in the third round to [[Anabel Medina Garrigues]] 6–4, 7–5. |
|||
Li made her debut appearance at the [[2011 WTA Tour Championships|WTA Championships]] in Istanbul. She was drawn in the White Group along with Maria Sharapova, Victoria Azarenka and Samantha Stosur. She beat Sharapova in her opening match but lost her other two matches, failing to make the semifinals. She finished the year as the world No. 5 after a memorable yet very inconsistent season. Li Na was nominated for two ESPY Sports Award categories: the "Annual Breakthrough Award" and "Annual Award for best female tennis players".<ref name="Li Na in Awards">{{cite web|url=http://www.tennisnow.com/News/Rafael-Nadal-And-Li-Na-Nominated-For-Two-ESPY-Awar.aspx |title=Rafael Nadal And Li Na Nominated For Two ESPY Awards |publisher=Tennisnow.com |date=30 June 2011 |first=James |last= Waterson |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> She lost to [[Blake Griffin]] and Serena Williams, respectively. On 17 and 18 December, Li participated in the [[Li Na & Friends Tennis Exhibition 2011]] in Wuhan, China. |
|||
After losing in a grass tune-up event in Birmingham Li has pulled out of every tournament she was to play in the summer including Wimbledon and the US Open citing a rib injury. |
|||
===2012: First Premier-5 event champion=== |
|||
===2008=== |
|||
Li started her 2012 season in the [[2012 Hopman Cup|Hopman Cup]] with countryman [[Wu Di (tennis)|Wu Di]], who was also from Hubei province, where she won all three single rubbers against Marion Bartoli, [[Anabel Medina Garrigues]] and [[Jarmila Gajdošová]]. It was her first win over Anabel Medina Garrigues in four meetings. It was a return to her form after being plagued by losses and early round exits in almost all her tournaments during the second half of 2011 following her Roland Garros triumph. Li then played in the [[2012 Apia International Sydney|Sydney]] to defend her title. She defeated Ekaterina Makarova, [[Chanelle Scheepers]] and Lucie Šafářová to reach the semifinals. In the semifinal, she came back from one set down to eke out the win against world No. 2, Petra Kvitová, the favorite to win the tournament. In the final, Li failed to defend her title, losing the match to Victoria Azarenka in three sets. |
|||
[[File:Li na wim08 1.JPG|right|thumb|right|Li Na at the [[2008 Wimbledon Championships]].]] |
|||
Li Na had not played a professional match in half a year and had resultantly slipped to 29th in the WTA rankings when she returned from her rib injury in January 2008 to compete at the [[2008 Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts]] in [[Gold Coast, Queensland|Gold Coast]], Australia. In the first round, she narrowly defeated seventh seed [[Sybille Bammer]] 6–4, 4–6, 6–4. After a comfortable second round victory over [[wild card (sports)#Professional Tennis|wildcard]] [[Monique Adamczak]], she was drawn to meet the top seed [[Nicole Vaidišová]] in the quarterfinals. Li won their encounter in straight sets, 6–3, 6–3, advancing to the semifinals where she edged past [[Patty Schnyder]] 3–6, 6–3, 7–5.<ref name="Safina's Golden Reign Comes To An End">{{cite news | author = [[Women's Tennis Association]] | title = Safina's Golden Reign Comes To An End | url = http://www.sonyericssonwtatour.com/1/newsroom/stories/?ContentID=1938 | date = 2008-01-03 | accessdate = 2008-01-03 | publisher = Women's Tennis Association }}</ref> |
|||
In the final, she narrowly prevailed against [[Victoria Azarenka]] 4–6, 6–3, 6–4 to score her first singles title since Guangzhou in 2004 and the second WTA singles title in her overall career. |
|||
Li began her [[2012 Australian Open – Women's singles|Australian Open]] campaign by cruising through the early rounds of the tournament, dispatching [[Ksenia Pervak]], [[Olivia Rogowska]], and Anabel Medina Garrigues (after Garrigues retired due to an injured ankle), en route to meeting her 2011 Australian Open final conqueror Kim Clijsters in the fourth round. Kim Clijsters rolled her ankle at 3–3 and Li took the first set comfortably. Li held four match points at 6–2 in the second set tiebreak, but dropped six consecutive points to give Clijsters the second set due to unforced errors and poor shot selection. At 1–5 in the final set, Li began a resurgence by reeling off the next three games to close the gap to 4–5, but the Belgian managed to close out the match. Her unexpected loss left her in tears in her post-match press conference. |
|||
Despite rising back up to World No. 24 following this victory, she then withdrew from the 2008 Medibank International in Syndey after suffering a right knee injury. Her failure to defend her previous year's semi-final performance at this event cost her 125 ranking points, which dipped her ranking back down to No. 30 in the rankings list for the week beginning 14 January. |
|||
After the disappointing Australian Open campaign, Li participated in the 2012 Fed Cup and won all three of her matches on home soil. She defeated Kei-Chen Changand and [[Nigina Abduraimova]] during the round robin stages to push China to the promotional play-offs against [[Kazakhstan Fed Cup team|Kazakhstan]]. She next played [[Galina Voskoboeva]] and won in three sets. This win sealed the tie and secured China's spot in the World Group II play-offs. |
|||
Going in to the 2008 Australian Open, she had a further 140 ranking points to defend from her fourth round performance in 2007. Faced with a relatively lenient draw in the early rounds, she survived a close three-set tussle with [[Séverine Brémond]] in the first round before surpassing [[Maria Elena Camerin]] in straight sets in round two. A revitalised [[Marta Domachowska]] (who last year slipped down from the Top 100 to the bottom of the Top 200 before a late-season winning streak propelled her suddenly back up to within the Top 150) remained between her and the defence of her ranking points, and although Li Na won the first set convincingly 6–2, she faltered thereafter and finally ceded the match to her Polish opponent by a single break of serve in the closely fought deciding set. |
|||
[[File:Li Na Miami.jpg|thumb|left|Li Na in Miami]] |
|||
Having slipped three places to World No. 33 by the time she entered the Tier II tournament at [[Antwerp]] in early February, she nonetheless progressed to the semi-finals with back-to-back straight-sets wins over Russian veteran [[Elena Likhovtseva]] 6–1, 6–1, Slovak World No. 45 [[Dominika Cibulková]] 6–4, 6–4 and on-form Swedish World No. 66 [[Sofia Arvidsson]] 7–5, 6–4. However, she came unstuck in the semi-finals against World No. 47 [[Karin Knapp]], despite having taken an early lead with a break of service in the first set, ultimately ceding the match to her Italian opponent 4–6, 6–7(5). This tournament brought her back up within the Top 30 at World No. 29. |
|||
Li then participated in the Open GDF Suez in Paris, but retired against [[Tsvetana Pironkova]] in the first round of the tournament due to a back injury she sustained during her Fed Cup matches. She made back-to-back quarterfinal appearances at [[2012 BNP Paribas Open|Indian Wells]] and [[2012 Sony Ericsson Open|Miami]]. At the Indian Wells Open, Li got a first round bye and faced a rematch with Galina Voskoboeva in the second round, which she won in three sets. Li recorded her first win over Zheng Jie, after losing the five earlier meetings. In the fourth round she comfortably won against Klára Zakopalová, who was on a roll, upsetting Vera Zvonareva and Daniela Hantuchová. In the quarterfinals she faced [[Angelique Kerber]] and lost in two sets. At the Miami Open, after receiving a first round bye, Li defeated [[Melinda Czink]], Iveta Benešová, and Sabine Lisicki to secure a spot in the quarterfinals. Her win over Lisicki avenged her loss to the big serving German in the previous year's second round of the Wimbledon Championships. Li lost to world No. 2, Maria Sharapova, in the quarterfinals, her first in their last four meetings, where the Chinese beat the Russian all in straight sets. |
|||
Li reached the final of the [[2012 Internazionali BNL d'Italia|Italian Open]], defeating Iveta Benešová, Chanelle Scheepers and Dominika Cibulková without dropping a set before receiving a walkover from Serena Williams in the semifinals. In the final she lost to Maria Sharapova in three thriller sets despite being a set up and leading 4–0 in the second and failing to convert a championship point in the final set. Li was seeded 7th at the [[2012 French Open|French Open]], where she was the defending champion. She began her title defence by defeating Sorana Cîrstea, [[Stéphanie Foretz]] and [[Christina McHale]] in the first three rounds before suffering a fourth round upset bid by qualifier [[Yaroslava Shvedova]]. She fell out of the world top ten due to her French Open result. Li lost to Sorana Cîrstea in the second round of Wimbledon – her first loss against the Romanian. |
|||
The very next week in the Tier I [[2008 Qatar Total Open]], Li met Likhovtseva again in the first round, and this time, after taking the first set comfortably, was challenged to a much tougher battle, but eventually won, 6–1, 0–6, 6–4. In Round Two, she scored her second straight-sets victory in four career head-to-heads against Russian World No. 6 [[Anna Chakvetadze]] (whom she had last beaten at the French Open in 2005), saving a set point in the first set tie-break, before recovering to win 7–6(7), 6–4. In the third round, she enjoyed a more comfortable victory over Israeli World No. 17 [[Shahar Pe'er]], recovering from a 1–3 deficit in the second set to win 6–1, 6–3. |
|||
At the [[Tennis at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Women's singles|2012 London Olympics]], Li, seeded 10th, crashed out in the first round to Slovakian Daniela Hantuchová. Her poor performance caused her to drop out of the world top ten for the second time in the year following the conclusion of the Games. After the Olympics, Li announced that she and [[Carlos Rodríguez (tennis coach)|Carlos Rodríguez]], coach of former world No. 1 and seven-time major winner Justine Henin, have commenced a coaching relationship.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/sports/tennis/story/2012-08-18/carlos-rodriguez-and-li-na/57127552/1 |title=Carlos Rodriguez opens up about teaming up with Li Na |work=USA Today |date=18 August 2012 |first=Bobby |last=Chintapalli |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
In the quarter-finals, she met her old rival and friend World No. 4 [[Jelena Janković]], coming into the match with a winning 3–1 head-to-head record to her credit against the Serbian player. By defeating Janković 6–3, 6–4, she extended this record to 4:1 and moved into the semi-finals, where she played [[Vera Zvonareva]] of Russia, against whom she had won both of her previous encounters. Despite taking the first set 6–3, Li lost the second by the same scoreline; and although she was 3–2 up in the final set, she then ceded four successive games to her opponent to lose the match. |
|||
Li's next tournament was the [[2012 Rogers Cup|Rogers Cup]], where she made it all the way to the final. She received a first round bye before seeing off home crowd favourite, [[Eugenie Bouchard]], in the second round. In the third round, she fended off world No. 9, [[Sara Errani]], and ended the hopes of Agnieszka Radwańska rising to No. 1 in the rankings by beating her in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, Li rallied to come back from a 5–1 deficit in the third set to overcome Lucie Šafářová before losing to Petra Kvitová in the final. After the tournament she returned to the world top ten at No. 9. |
|||
Her ranking having risen back to No. 23 on the strength of this performance, she was prevented from consolidating on this recovery by suffering a right knee injury which forced her to pull out of her scheduled entries into both the Tier II event at [[Bangalore]] in early March and the Tier I tournament at [[Indian Wells Masters|Indian Wells]] in the middle of the month. With 210 ranking points undefended from her semi-final performance at Indian Wells in 2007, her ranking is calculated to slip back down to the bottom end of the top 30 in the week beginning March 24, 2008. |
|||
At the [[2012 Western & Southern Open|Cincinnati Open]], Li had a first round bye before eliminating Sorana Cîrstea in the second round, avenging her loss to the Romanian in the second round of the [[2012 Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon Championships]]. In the third round Li proved to be too strong for [[Johanna Larsson]] and in the quarterfinals she convincingly defeated world No. 3 and top seed, Agnieszka Radwańska, in a match where Li only surrendered two games. She then edged Venus Williams in the semifinal (bringing their head-to-head to 3–0), before defeating fifth seed Angelique Kerber in the final; her fifth win against Kerber in six matches. This was her first title since the 2011 French Open and the sixth career title. By winning this tournament, she moved up one place in the rankings to world No. 8. |
|||
She returned to action at the [[International Women's Open]] in Eastbourne, winning one round before losing to [[Nadia Petrova]]. She then contested Wimbledon, defeating [[Anastasia Rodionova]] 3–6, 6–0, 6–1 before losing 6–2, 6–4 to [[Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova]]. |
|||
At the [[2012 US Open (tennis)|US Open]], Li cruised through the first two rounds with easy wins over [[Heather Watson]] and [[Casey Dellacqua]]. However, her tournament run came to an abrupt end in the next round, when she upset in three sets by rising British teenager [[Laura Robson (tennis)|Laura Robson]], who had defeated three-time champion Kim Clijsters in the previous round. This result meant that this was her first season since 2008 in which she failed to reach the quarterfinal stage at a Grand Slam tournament. |
|||
At the [[Beijing Olympics]], Li faced World No. 3 [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]] of Russia in her opening match. She disposed of her Russian opponent 7–6(5), 6–4, displaying a second victory among their five encounters. She then defeated [[Ayumi Morita]] 6–2, 7–5 in her second round match. Li advanced to the quarterfinals by beating [[Kaia Kanepi]] of Estonia, 4–6, 6–2, 6–0, in the third round. She went on to defeat one of the favourites, [[Venus Williams]], in the quarterfinals 7–5, 7–5. Li was trailing 1–4 in the first set but then managed to strengthen her game to win in straight sets. She is also the only remaining Chinese singles player left in the women's draw, as [[Zheng Jie]] was defeated 6–4, 6–3 by [[Dinara Safina]] in the third round. Li lost her semi-final match to sixth seed [[Dinara Safina]] 7–6(3), 7–5. She then was defeated in the bronze final by Russia's [[Vera Zvonareva]], 6–0, 7–5. |
|||
Li then travelled to Tokyo to participate in the [[2012 Toray Pan Pacific Open|Pan Pacific Open]]. She received a bye in the first round, and won her second round match against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova to book a meeting with former world No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki in the third round. She won the first set, but eventually lost the match. Her exit from the tournament meant that her chances of participating in the upcoming [[2012 WTA Tour Championships]] depended on her performance at the [[2012 China Open (tennis)|China Open]]. Li won the first round match against Francesca Schiavone. In the second round she recorded her first victory against Russian Nadia Petrova after six previous losses, who was coming off a title run at the Pan Pacific Open a week ago. She played compatriot Peng Shuai in the third round for a place in the quarters and emerged victorious in a topsy-turvy three set match lasting 2 hours and 28 minutes. In the quarterfinals, she faced defending champion Agnieszka Radwańska and played some high-quality tennis to defeat her for the third time this season. She lost her semifinal to Maria Sharapova; the Russian reeling off eight consecutive games to take the match. With this performance, she became the eighth and final player to qualify for the [[2012 WTA Tour Championships|season-ending championships]]. |
|||
At the US Open, Li faced No. 24 [[Shahar Pe'er]] in her opening match. After losing the first set, Li quickly took control of the match and won 2–6, 6–0, 6–1. In the second and third round, She defeated [[Sara Errani]] of Italy 4–6, 6–2, 6–0 and [[Ekaterina Makarova]] of Russia 6–1, 4–6, 6–2 respectively, before falling 2008 Beijing Olympics gold medalist [[Elena Dementieva]] in the fourth round 6–4, 6–1. Li struggled with 3 winners and 28 unforced errors. |
|||
For the 2012 WTA Tour Championships, Li was placed in the red group along with Victoria Azarenka, Serena Williams and Angelique Kerber. She played Serena Williams in her opening match and lost in two sets after failing to capitalise on her 4–1 first set lead. She defeated Angelique Kerber in her second match before losing to Azarenka in her third match; in the latter match, she had served for the first set at 5–4, but was broken and lost the set in a tie-break. This was the final match of her 2012 season, finishing the year ranked world No. 7. |
|||
In the 2008 [[Porsche Tennis Grand Prix|Porsche Grand Prix]], the unseeded Li defeated No. 1 ranked [[Serena Williams]] in the second-round 0–6, 6–1, 6–4. Li became only the second Chinese player to defeat a world number one player, following [[Zheng Jie]]'s victory over [[Ana Ivanović]] at [[2008 Wimbledon Championships|2008's Wimbledon]]. |
|||
On 29 December 2012, Li beat Victoria Azarenka in an annual exhibition event in Hua Hin, Thailand. |
|||
===2009=== |
|||
[[File:Li Na at the 2009 US Open 01.jpg|thumb|Li Na at the 2009 US Open]] |
|||
Li withdrew from both the inaugural [[Brisbane International]], where she was defending champion (as she won the title at Gold Coast in 2008), and the [[Australian Open 2009|Australian Open]] because of a right-knee injury. She made her comeback at the [[2009 Open GDF Suez|Paris Open]]. In the first round, she beat [[Ágnes Szávay]] 7–6(6), 6–2. In the second round, she lost to second-seeded [[Jelena Janković]] 6–0, 3–6, 6–2. |
|||
===2013: Second Australian Open final, return to top four & year-end No. 3=== |
|||
In the first round of the [[2009 Dubai Tennis Championships - Women's Singles|Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships]], Li lost in the opening round to Russian [[Elena Vesnina]] 1–6, 6–4, 6–4. |
|||
{{Main|2013 Li Na tennis season}} |
|||
[[File:Li Na Coach.JPG|thumb|Li Na with coach Carlos Rodríguez at the 2013 US Open]] |
|||
Unseeded at the [[2009 Monterrey Open|Monterrey Open]], she defeated World No. 10 and top seed [[Agnieszka Radwańska]] in a first round match that lasted over two hours 7–6(5), 4–6, 6–0. In the second round, she beat [[Petra Cetkovská]] 6–3, 6–4. She advanced to the semifinals after defeating [[Lucie Šafářová]] 6–3, 7–6(3). Li then moved into her fifth career tour final after beating sixth-seeded [[Iveta Benešová]] 6–3, 6–3. However, Li lost to second-seeded [[Marion Bartoli]] in the final in straight sets. |
|||
Li commenced her season at the first edition of the [[2013 Shenzhen Open|Shenzhen Open]]. She cruised to the final with straight-sets defeats over [[Mandy Minella]], [[Julia Cohen]], [[Bojana Jovanovski]] and Peng Shuai, putting her in prime position to claim her seventh WTA title. Li saw off 5th seed Klára Zakopalová in three sets in the final to claim her first title of 2013 and seventh of her career. |
|||
Li then played in the Premier event at Indian Wells, where she defeated [[Tamarine Tanasugarn]], [[Patty Schnyder]] and [[Amélie Mauresmo]], all in straight sets, to advance to the fourth round where she lost to eventual champion [[Vera Zvonareva]], 4–6, 4–6. |
|||
Li next played at the [[2013 Apia International Sydney|Sydney International]], at which she made consecutive finals the two previous years, winning in 2011. She was pushed to the limit by Christina McHale but had little trouble with [[Ayumi Morita]]. She met young American [[Madison Keys]] in the quarterfinals who proved to be a tougher challenge, with Li prevailing in three tight sets to book a semifinal showdown with world No. 4, Agnieszka Radwańska. Li looked the winner in the early stages of the match, but somewhat faltered, producing a high number of unforced errors which handed Radwańska the first set. She saved four match points on Radwańska's serve in the ninth game of the second set and three on her own serve in the tenth game. However, eventually she succumbed to the pressure and a half-volley into the net sealed the win for Radwańska in an hour and 32 minutes, putting an end to Li's Sydney reign. |
|||
She then reached the quarter-finals of the Premier event in Miami where she beat qualifier [[Urszula Radwańska]] in the first round and upset 29th seed [[Aleksandra Wozniak]] to reach the third round where she caused a big upset by defeating the previous week's Indian Wells champion, 6th-seeded Vera Zvonareva in three sets, 6–4, 3–6, 6–2. This victory was particularly important for Li, as she had been beaten by Zvonareva the week before at Indian Wells. She then faced unseeded Russian [[Ekaterina Makarova]] in the fourth round and beat her in three sets to set up a quarter-final match with the top seed and World No. 1 [[Serena Williams]], a match which she lost in a tight three-setter, 6–4, 6–7(1), 2–6, because of her strong performance her ranking went up to World No. 29 from World No. 40. |
|||
At the [[2013 Australian Open|Australian Open]], Li easily stormed through to the quarterfinals, where she faced world No. 4 Agnieszka Radwańska, who had not dropped a set during a 13-match winning streak. Li became the first player to defeat her this season and advanced to the semifinals where she ousted world No. 2, Maria Sharapova, in straight sets, who had only dropped a record-low nine games in the tournament. This marked Li's second Australian Open final appearance in three years, finishing runner-up to Kim Clijsters in 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-25/china-media-hail-li-na-as-resurgent-champion-at-australian-open.html |title=China Media Hail Li Na as Resurgent Champion at Australian Open |work=Bloomberg |date=24 January 2013 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> In the final, Li was hampered by injuries, falling over on two occasions. The first of which occurred at 1–3 in the second set, a fall that saw Li incur a 10-minute medical timeout. She fell over a second time after the Australia Day fireworks break, not only twisting her left ankle once more but also heavily knocking the rear of her head on the court, causing a momentary black-out. Despite being severely hindered in her movement, she continued playing but eventually lost the match in three sets to Victoria Azarenka. |
|||
Her next event was the second grand slam of the year, the French Open in Paris. As the 25th seed she won her first round 6–4, 6–2 against polish [[Marta Domachowska]]. She then defeated [[Timea Bacsinszky]] and [[Olga Govortsova]]. She then lost to unseeded, former world-number one [[Maria Sharapova]] in the fourth round, 4–6, 6–0, 4–6. after this impressive result she jumped 6 rankings up to No. 20. |
|||
The left ankle injury she sustained in the Australian Open decider forced her to withdraw from subsequent tournaments including the [[2013 Qatar Total Open|Qatar]] and [[2013 BNP Paribas Open|Indian Wells Open]], plus an exhibition match at the [[BNP Paribas Showdown]] in Hong Kong in which she was scheduled to play former world No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki. |
|||
She started her grass court season as the fourth seed at the [[2009 AEGON Classic - Singles|AEGON Classic]] in [[Birmingham]]. She advanced to the final with a 6–4, 6–4 win over [[Maria Sharapova]] in the semifinals. However, Na was defeated by [[Magdaléna Rybáriková]] with a 0–6, 6–7 in the final. |
|||
After being sidelined for seven weeks, Li made a return to the competition at the [[2013 Sony Open Tennis|Miami Open]] as the fifth seed. After a first round bye, she won her second round against [[Kiki Bertens]] in two quick sets without dropping serve in her first match since the Australian Open final. Next up she faced [[Varvara Lepchenko]] and [[Garbiñe Muguruza]] and defeated both in straight sets to set up a quarterfinal match against world No. 1 Serena Williams. Despite leading 5–2 in the second set and holding a set point on Williams' serve, she did not manage to find a way to capitalise and went on to lose the match in a tiebreak. |
|||
Na is seeded 19th at the [[2009 Wimbledon Championships]]. She defeated [[Galina Voskoboeva]] in the first round and [[Olga Govortsova]] in the second round but lost to #11 [[Agnieszka Radwańska]] in the third round. |
|||
Li's next tournament was the [[2013 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix|Porsche Tennis Grand Prix]], the first bigger [[clay court]] event of the season. As the second seed, she received a bye in the first round. She swept past qualifier [[Mirjana Lučić-Baroni]] in the second round, setting up an encounter with Petra Kvitová in the quarterfinals. She disposed of Kvitová and then surprise semifinalist Bethanie Mattek-Sands both in straight sets to advance to the final for the first time, seeking her eighth career title. The final was a contest between her and Maria Sharapova, whose passage to the final included three three-set matches each lasting over three hours. She, however, handily defeated Li in just over 90 minutes, increasing her clay-court winning streak to 16 and avenging her Australian Open semifinal loss to Li earlier in the year. |
|||
At the [[2009 Bank of the West Classic]] she lost to [[Serena Williams]] in the first round and at the [[2009 LA Women's Tennis Championships|2009 LA Women's Tennis Championships p/b Herbalife]] she withdrew due to injury to lower ranked [[Urszula Radwańska]] of Poland. |
|||
Li was then stunned by lucky loser Madison Keys in the first round of the [[2013 Mutua Madrid Open|Madrid Open]] the following week, her first early tournament exit of the season. She returned to the [[2013 Italian Open (tennis)|Italian Open]] as the defending finalist. After a first round bye, she defeated Zheng Jie in straight sets then squared off with former doubles partner Jelena Janković, who defeated Li in a marathon match in which Li's inconsistency proved to her be undoing, committing 62 unforced errors. As one of the favourites, Li's quest for a second Grand Slam title began when she played Anabel Medina Garrigues in the opening round of [[2013 French Open|Roland Garros]], winning in two sets. Her struggles on clay continued, however, as she fell victim to Bethanie Mattek-Sands, ranked 67th, in a rain-interrupted second round match – losing in three sets, bringing her disappointing clay-court season to a close. |
|||
No. 18 seed at the [[2009 US Open (tennis)|2009 US Open]] she reached her first [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] quarterfinals where she lost to [[Kim Clijsters]]. En route to the quarterfinals she defeated [[Ioana Raluca Olaru]], [[Michelle Larcher de Brito]], [[Maria Kirilenko]] and [[Francesca Schiavone]] all in straight sets. |
|||
Li got her grass-court season off to a winning start by beating [[Alizé Cornet]] in the first round of the [[2013 Aegon International|Eastbourne International]], at which she was seeded second. A quarterfinal berth against Elena Vesnina was secured after her second round opponent Marion Bartoli pulled out due to a viral illness. The Russian ended Li's run and went on to win the tournament. |
|||
Seeded 15th at the [[Toray Pan Pacific Open]], Li Na won her opening match against [[Alizé Cornet]] 6–4, 6–0. She then defeated [[Vera Dushevina]] 7–5, 6–0 before defeating [[Kateryna Bondarenko]] 2–6, 7–5, 6–3. In the quarterfinal, she defeated [[Victoria Azarenka]] in three sets, 7–6(7), 4–6, 7–6(4), though she failed to serve for the match twice in the last set. Li lost in the semifinals to [[Jelena Janković]] 6–4, 6–3. |
|||
Li was the sixth seed at [[2013 Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]]. She defeated [[Michaëlla Krajicek]] in the first round and [[Simona Halep]] in a rollercoaster three set match. In the third round against the No. 32 seed Klára Zakopalová, Li lost the first set, but won the match in three sets after Zakopalová failed to serve out the match. In the fourth round she dispatched Roberta Vinci to secure a spot in the last eight for the third time. After the match, she revealed that the secret to her success was the slice practice that her husband Jiang Shan gave her prior to the match. In her quarterfinal clash with Agnieszka Radwańska, she was leading 5–4 in the first set and was a set point up when she hit an ace that was wrongly called out. Li didn't challenge the call, and lost the set in a tiebreak where she was also leading 5–3. She mounted a comeback to win the second set, coming from 4–2 down. A brief rain delay halted proceedings at the beginning of the third. When play resumed, it was Radwańska who raced to a 5–2 lead. Li saved eight match points, but eventually lost the match in 2 hours 47 minutes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://straightsets.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/03/a-challenge-not-taken-a-match-not-won/ |title=A Challenge Not Taken, a Match Not Won |work=The New York Times |date=3 July 2013 |first=Craig |last=O'Shannessy |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
Li finished the year at world number 15, her career high year-end ranking. |
|||
[[File:Li Na 2013 Rogers Cup Practice.jpg|thumb|left|Li Na practicing at 2013 Rogers Cup in Toronto]] |
|||
===2010=== |
|||
Li then competed at the [[2013 Rogers Cup|Rogers Cup]] in Toronto, at which she made the final last year. After enjoying a bye in the first round, she defeated Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in two easy sets, followed by hard-fought wins over in-form players Ana Ivanovic (in a final set tie-break, after surviving 2–5) and Dominika Cibulková to reach the semifinals, where she lost to [[Sorana Cîrstea]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.thestar.com/sports/tennis/2013/08/10/rogers_cup_sorana_cirstea_beats_li_na_to_make_final.html |title=Rogers Cup: Sorana Cirstea beats Li Na to make final |work=Toronto Star |date=10 August 2013 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> At the [[2013 Western & Southern Open|San Diego Open]], she notched wins over [[Lauren Davis]] and Angelique Kerber before receiving a walkover from Agnieszka Radwańska in the quarterfinals after the Pole pulled out for personal reasons. In her semifinal against Serena Williams, she was broken when serving for both sets and was beaten by the eventual champion.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} |
|||
[[File:Li Na Return Photo by Sascha Grabow.jpg|thumb|Li Na at the 2010 Stuttgart Porsche Grand Prix]] |
|||
Li's first tournament of 2010 was the [[2010 ASB Classic]] in [[Auckland]]. where she was seeded second. She was defeated by [[Kaia Kanepi]] in the first round 6–1 6–3. In the [[Medibank International]] she defeated 4th seed [[Caroline Wozniacki]] 2–6 6–3 6–2. She lost to [[Flavia Pennetta]] in the second round, 2–6, 6–7(4). |
|||
Seeded fifth at the [[2013 US Open (tennis)|US Open]], she defeated Olga Govortsova and [[Sofia Arvidsson]] in straight sets and then got revenge on Laura Robson in the third round, the same stage where Robson defeated her last year. She then breezed past former world No. 1 Jelena Janković in straight sets. Upon defeating Janković, she reached the quarterfinals of the US Open for only the second time in her career. There she beat Ekaterina Makarova to reach her first US Open semifinal (as well as it being the first time a Chinese woman made the US Open semifinals) before Serena Williams again ended her run in straight sets, needing six match points to do so. |
|||
Li was seeded 16th at the [[2010 Australian Open]]. She defeated World No. 4 [[Caroline Wozniacki]] in the 4th round 6–4 6–3 and then came from a set and 3–5 down to defeat World No. 6 [[Venus Williams]] 2–6, 7–6(4), 7–5 in her first ever Australian Open quarterfinal, and only her third ever [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] quarterfinals. In the semi-finals she lost to [[Serena Williams]] 7–6(4), 7–6(1). As a result of this performance, Li was the first Chinese woman ever to be ranked in the Top 10 of women's professional tennis. |
|||
She then headed to Beijing to take part in the [[2013 China Open (tennis)|2013 China Open]] as the home crowd favourite, defeating Daniela Hantuchová, Bojana Jovanovski and Sabine Lisicki in straight sets before falling to Petra Kvitová in the quarterfinals. |
|||
At the Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships, Li, the number 8 seed, defeated [[María José Martínez Sánchez]] 7–6(7) 2–6 6–4 in the second round. She then came from a 6–3 5–2 deficit to defeat [[Marion Bartoli]] in the 3rd round, 3–6 7–5 6–0. Li retired in her Quarterfinals match against [[Shahar Pe'er]]. Li was trailing 5–7 0–3 when she retired. |
|||
Li continued her season at the inaugural [[Malaysian Open (tennis)|Malaysian Open]]. As the #2 seed, she fell to [[Tatjana Malek]] in the first round. As the 7th seed at the [[2010 BNP Paribas Open]], Li fell to [[Elena Baltacha]] in the second round 6–7(5), 6–2, 6–7(7). Li was the 8th seed at the [[2010 Sony Ericsson Open]], but fell to [[Timea Bacsinszky]] in the second round. |
|||
On 27 September, Li qualified for the [[2013 WTA Tour Championships]]. She won all three of her round robin matches against Sara Errani, Jelena Janković and Victoria Azarenka, thus qualifying for the semifinals for the first time. Upon beating Petra Kvitová her ranking rose to a new career high of world No. 3, the highest-ever ranking for a female tennis player from an East Asian and Asian country and overtaking Maria Sharapova and Agnieszka Radwańska. In the final, she made a strong start, blasting ten winners en route to winning the first set against Serena Williams, but ran out of gas at three-all in the second, losing nine games in a row to lose the match. |
|||
At the [[2010 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix]], Li defeated defending champion [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]] in the second round before falling to eventual runner-up [[Sam Stosur]] 6–3, 6–3 in the quarterfinals. Li was the 11th seed at the [[2010 French Open]]. She fell to eventual champion #17 [[Francesca Schiavone]] in the third round. |
|||
===2014: Australian Open champion and retirement=== |
|||
Li was seeded 1st at the [[2010 AEGON Classic]]. She defeated 4th seed [[Aravane Rezaï]] in the semifinals and #2 seed [[Maria Sharapova]] in the final to win the tournament. With the win Li will return to the top ten in the WTA rankings. Seeded 7th at the [[2010 AEGON International]], Li retired with a knee injury when she leads 7–6 (6) [[Elena Baltacha]] in the first round. |
|||
{{Main|2014 Li Na tennis season}} |
|||
Li started her 2014 season as the defending champion at the [[2014 WTA Shenzhen Open|Shenzhen Open]]. She defeated wildcard and former world No. 2 Vera Zvonareva in the first round, [[Nadiia Kichenok]] in the second round, Monica Niculescu in the quarterfinals and [[Annika Beck]] in the semifinals to reach her first final of the year and setting up the second all-Chinese final in WTA history in the process, where she defeated Peng Shuai in straight sets to win her eighth career singles title.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://in.reuters.com/article/tennis-women-shenzen-idINDEEA0302420140104 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306111323/http://in.reuters.com/article/tennis-women-shenzen-idINDEEA0302420140104 |url-status=dead |archive-date=March 6, 2016 |title=Li Na overcomes Peng to defend Shenzhen Open title |publisher=Reuters |date=4 January 2014 |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref> This marked the first time in Li's career where she had successfully defended a title of any kind. |
|||
Li was seeded 9th at the [[2010 Wimbledon Championships]]. She defeated 7th seed [[Agnieszka Radwańska]] to advance to the quarterfinals at Wimbledon for the second time in her career where she lost to world #1 and defending champion [[Serena Williams]] 7–5, 6–3. By going into the last eight Li will once again return to the top ten in the WTA rankings. At the [[2010 US Open (tennis)|2010 US Open]], she started off as the #8 seed, but suffered an upset to [[Kateryna Bondarenko]] 2–6, 6–4, 6–2. |
|||
At the [[2014 Australian Open|Australian Open]], Li competed as the fourth seed. She made quick work of current junior top-2 players [[Ana Konjuh]] and [[Belinda Bencic]] in the first two rounds. Having lost the first set against [[Lucie Šafářová]], she fended off a match point when trailing 5–6 in the second, before rebounding in the tiebreak and decisive set to avoid the upset. She then cruised past Ekaterina Makarova, Flavia Pennetta, and Eugenie Bouchard to reach her third Australian Open final, where she defeated first-time major singles finalist and 20th seed, Dominika Cibulková, in straight sets to claim her first Australian Open title, thus becoming the first East Asian and Asian Australian Open champion and [[Grand slam champions who saved match points (from 2000)|fourth woman to win the title after being match point down]].<ref>{{cite web|url =https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/jan/25/li-na-v-dominika-cibulkova-live |title= Li Na wins Australian Open final against Dominika Cibulkova – as it happened|date=25 January 2014|work=Guardian UK|first=Dan|last=Lucas|access-date=27 January 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.bbc.com/sport/0/tennis/25875113|title= Li Na beats Dominika Cibulkova to win Australian Open final|date=25 January 2014|publisher=BBC Sport|first=Piers|last=Newbery|access-date=27 January 2014}}</ref> |
|||
At the end of the year, Li's coach Thomas Hogstead chose to leave her in order to coach [[Maria Sharapova]]. |
|||
Li extended her winning streak to thirteen consecutive matches by defeating [[Magdaléna Rybáriková]] in her opener at the [[2014 Qatar Total Open|Qatar Ladies Open]]. She then suffered her first loss of the season to qualifier [[Petra Cetkovská]] in a tight three set contest in the third round. After the tournament, Li reached a new career-high singles ranking of world No. 2. |
|||
===2011=== |
|||
[[File:Li_Na_2011_French_Open.jpg|thumb|right|Li Na in 2011 French Open semi final]] |
|||
Li played in [[2011 Medibank International Sydney]] as the #8 seed, making fast work with Australian wildcard [[Anastasia Rodionova]] 6–1, 6–2 and winning a tough three-set match against [[Virginie Razzano]] 6–4, 1–6, 6–4 in the first two rounds. In the quarterfinals she met two time Grand Slam winner [[Svetlana Kuznetsova]] and came through with a 3–6, 7–6(4), 6–0 win. She defeated surprise qualifier [[Bojana Jovanovski]] in the semifinals 7–6(5), 6–3 to advance to her eighth [[Women's Tennis Association|WTA]] final.<ref>http://www.medibankinternational.com.au/2011/01/li-defeats-clijsters-to-take-womens-singles#more-5399</ref> Li faced World #3 [[Kim Clijsters]] in the final, and despite trailing 5–0 in the first set, Li would go on to defeat Clijsters 7–6, 6–3. |
|||
Li's next scheduled event was the [[2014 BNP Paribas Open|Indian Wells Open]], where she was unable to compete the previous year due to injury. Seeded first at a Premier Mandatory event for the first time, she received a bye in the first round before registering straight set victories over countrywoman Zheng Jie, [[Karolína Plíšková]] and [[Aleksandra Wozniak]] en route to a quarterfinal clash with Dominika Cibulková, a rematch of the Australian Open final. Though Li committed 54 unforced errors, she prevailed in three sets and faced Flavia Pennetta in the semifinals. There, she was upset in straight sets by the 20th-seeded Italian and eventual champion.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.si.com/tennis/beyond-baseline/2014/03/15/flavia-pennetta-agnieszka-radwanska-indian-wells-final |title=Flavia Pennetta stuns Li Na, will face Aga Radwanska in Indian Wells final |magazine=Sports Illustrated |date=15 March 2014 |first=Courtney |last=Nguyen |access-date=19 September 2014}}</ref> |
|||
Li was the 9th seed at the [[2011 Australian Open]], where she reached her first Grand Slam singles final. On her way there, she ousted the No. 8 seed [[Victoria Azarenka]] in straight sets, 6–3 6–3. She then defeated world No. 1 [[Caroline Wozniacki]] in the semi-finals to reach her first Grand Slam final after saving a match point in the second set, 3–6 7–5 6–3. She became the first Chinese player to reach a Grand Slam singles final, facing No. 3 seed [[Kim Clijsters]] (whom she defeated at the Medibank International). Although Li claimed the first set, Clijsters was able to rally back and claim the championship, winning 3–6, 6–3, 6–3. Despite the loss, Li's ranking rose to a career high of world #7. |
|||
At the [[2014 Sony Open Tennis|Miami Open]], she received a first-round bye and walkover in the second round due to the withdrawal of [[Alisa Kleybanova]]. Li defeated Madison Keys, Carla Suárez Navarro and Caroline Wozniacki en route to a semifinal against Dominika Cibulková, who was projected to make her top-ten debut with her previous win over Agnieszka Radwańska. Li improved her perfect record against the Slovakian to 7–0 and booked her place in her first Premier Mandatory final. In a final featuring the world's top-2 players, Li raced to a 5–2 lead in the first set and wasted a set point, before her opponent, world No. 1 Serena Williams, rallied to steal the set 7–5. Li only managed to win a single game in the second set. |
|||
Despite a good early start to the season, Li then had a 5 match losing streak after her loss in the final of the Australian Open, she lost in the first round of [[2011 Dubai Tennis Championships]] and [[2011 Qatar Ladies Open]]. After a receiving bye in the first round, she lost in the second round of [[2011 BNP Paribas Open]]. Despite this, after Indian Wells she will reach a career high ranking of World #6 due to [[Jelena Jankovic]]'s failures to defend her points. |
|||
Following a 21–3 start to the season, Li was forced out of the [[2014 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix]] due to a left knee injury, where she was the finalist in 2013. She started her clay-court campaign at the [[2014 Mutua Madrid Open|Madrid Open]], where she recorded wins over [[Kirsten Flipkens]] and Zheng Jie in the first two rounds. Li then battled past [[Sloane Stephens]] in three sets, and was again involved in a narrow three setter in her quarterfinal against Maria Sharapova, eventually succumbing to the Russian after taking the first set comfortably. At the [[2014 Internazionali BNL d'Italia|Italian Open]], Li beat Australians Casey Dellacqua (for her 500th career win) and Sam Stosur, before suffering her first loss to Sara Errani in the quarterfinals. After the match, Li told reporters that she had vomited less than 20 minutes prior to stepping onto the court due to food poisoning.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espn.co.uk/tennis/sport/story/308245.html |title=Errani upsets Li to reach Rome semi-finals |publisher=ESPN |date=16 May 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> At the [[2014 French Open|French Open]], she was upset by French youngster [[Kristina Mladenovic]] in the opening round. This was also Li's earliest loss in the tournament. Li's first round loss contributed to three negative tennis records. Due to fellow 2014 Australian Open men's champion [[Stan Wawrinka]] losing in the first round as well, it was the first time in the history of tennis that the reigning Grand Slam winners were ousted in the opening round of their next major.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ftw.usatoday.com/2014/05/li-na-stan-wawrinka-french-open-first-time-ever-loss |title=Li Na and Stan Wawrinka made the wrong kind of history at the French Open |work=USA Today |date=27 May 2014 |first=Chris |last=Chase |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Due to top seed Serena Williams losing in the second round, it was the first time in Open Era history that the two top seeded women have lost before the third round at any Grand Slam tournament.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.foxnews.com/world/serena-williams-and-older-sister-venus-both-lose-in-2nd-round-of-french-open/ |title=Serena Williams and older sister Venus both lose in 2nd round of French Open |work=Fox News |date=28 May 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> After No. 3 seed Agnieszka Radwańska lost in the third round, it was also the first time in the Open Era that none of the top-3 seeds advanced past the third round. |
|||
Li's losing streak then continued when she was upset in the [[2011 Sony Ericsson Open]] by Swede [[Johanna Larsson (tennis)|Johanna Larsson]] 5–7, 7–6(5), 6–7(5). With this loss, and [[Andy Murray]]'s loss at Miami, both [[Australian Open]] finalists have yet to win a match since the first Grand Slam. Despite Li's successive losses, her #6 Ranking was ensured due to [[Samantha Stosur]]'s inability to defend her clay season points. After a week, she fell back to #7. Li then broke her losing streak by winning her first round match against [[Anastasija Sevastova]] in Stuttgart, 6–2, 6–3. However, she subsequently lost to [[Sabine Lisicki]] in the second round, 4–6, 5–7. Even, though she was not able to defend all her Stuttgart ranking points,she rose back to #6, with [[Samantha Stosur]]'s inability to defend her own Stuttgart points. However with her disappointing results Li Na sacked her husband as coach and hired the Dane [[Michael Mortensen]]. |
|||
Li chose not to play a warm-up event before the third major of the season got underway. Her dip in form continued at the [[2014 Wimbledon Championships]], where she was eliminated in the third round by Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová, having beaten [[Paula Kania]] and [[Yvonne Meusburger]] in the first and second rounds, respectively. In July, Li and coach Rodríguez parted ways.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/tennis/story/_/id/11174514/li-na-part-ways-coach-carlos-rodriguez |title=Li Na, Carlos Rodriguez part ways |publisher=ESPN |date=3 July 2014 |access-date=5 July 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
She entered the [[2011 Mutua Madrid Open]] as sixth seed. In first two rounds, she defeated [[María José Martínez Sánchez]] 6–4, 7–6(6), and [[Iveta Benešová]] 6–1, 6–4. In the third round she defeated [[Roberta Vinci]] 2–6, 6–2, 6–1 coming back from a set deficit. She defeated [[Bethanie Mattek-Sands]] 6–4, 3–6, 6–4, coming back from, 3–4, one break down in the deciding set. This victory marked her the first semifinals appearance in Madrid, where she eventually lost to [[Petra Kvitová]] 3–6, 1–6. |
|||
Having not played since Wimbledon due to a left knee injury which required surgery, Li announced her retirement from professional tennis on 19 September 2014. She ended her career ranked world No. 6 by the WTA.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wtatennis.com/news/article/4155316/title/li-na-announces-retirement |title=Li Na Announces Retirement |publisher=WTA |date=19 September 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/19/sports/tennis/chinas-li-na-set-to-retire-from-tennis.html |title=Li Na, Two-Time Major Winner, Is Retiring With Knee Woes |work=The New York Times |first=Ben |last=Rothenberg |date=18 September 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wtatennis.com/news/article/4155350/title/li-na-unveils-next-phase-of-career |title=Li Na Unveils Next Phase Of Career |access-date=19 September 2014 |publisher=wtatennis.com}}</ref> That year she was named one of ESPNW's Impact 25.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://espn.go.com/espnw/news-commentary/impact25/slideshow/12020053/10/li-na-32-2014-australian-open-champion-retired-tennis-star|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141216171500/http://espn.go.com/espnw/news-commentary/impact25/slideshow/12020053/10/li-na-32-2014-australian-open-champion-retired-tennis-star|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 16, 2014|title=2014 espnW Impact 25}}</ref> |
|||
Li's resurgence continued in [[2011 Internazionali BNL d'Italia]]. Seeded 4th, she received a bye in the first round. She won her opening match against [[Lourdes Domínguez Lino]] 6–4, 6–2. She defeated [[Jarmila Gajdošová]] 6–2, 6–1, and [[Gréta Arn]] 6–3, 6–1 in the next two rounds en route to her back-to-back semifinals on clay court.However, she lost to [[Samantha Stosur]] 7–6(6), 6–0. |
|||
==Popularity and endorsements== |
|||
Li won her first [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] title and become the first Grand Slam singles champion born in an Asian country at the [[2011 French Open]]. Seeded 6th, she defeated [[Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová]], [[Silvia Soler Espinosa]], [[Sorana Cîrstea]], 9th seed [[Petra Kvitova]], 4th seed [[Victoria Azarenka]], 7th seed [[Maria Sharapova]] and 5th seed and defending champion [[Francesca Schiavone]] in the final.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2011/jun/06/li-na-french-open-champion|title=Li Na of China keeps feet on ground after historic French Open victory|date= 6 June 2011|work=Guardian|accessdate=7 June 2011}}</ref> |
|||
As the most successful East Asian, and Asian tennis player ever, Li has become one of the most well-known and marketable athletes in the world.<ref name="edition.cnn.com">{{cite web|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/25/sport/tennis/tennis-french-open-li-na/index.html |title=Courting China: Li Na leaps up sport's rich list |publisher=CNN |date=25 May 2012 |first=Caroline |last=Cheese |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> In 2013, Li appeared on the cover of ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine, which named her in its annual list of the [[Time 100|100 Most Influential People in the World]]; Li being one of only four athletes to be named on the list. Former world No. 1 [[Chris Evert]] writes: "Tennis has exploded in China. The country now has some 15 million tennis players; 116 million watched Li win the French Open. That kind of exposure is crucial to our sport, and it never would have happened without Li. At tournaments, I've seen her charm the crowds. When she smiles, everyone melts. She's just such a breath of fresh air. Her friendly on-court demeanour as well as her hilariously-witty post-match interviews brings a smile to everyone's face."<ref name="SI Li on TIME Magazine Cover">{{cite magazine |url=http://tennis.si.com/2013/04/18/li-na-time-magazine-cover-100-most-influential/ |title=Li Na on Time Magazine cover, named one of 100 most influential people |magazine=Sports Illustrated |date=18 April 2013 |first=Courtney |last=Nguyen |access-date=19 September 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140502042752/http://tennis.si.com/2013/04/18/li-na-time-magazine-cover-100-most-influential/ |archive-date=2 May 2014 }}</ref><ref name="2013 TIME 100 cover">{{cite magazine|url=https://time100.time.com/2013/04/18/cover-shots/slide/li-na/ |title=The 2013 TIME 100 Cover Shots |magazine=Time |date=2013 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref><ref name="The 2013 TIME 100 List">{{cite magazine|url=https://time100.time.com/2013/04/18/time-100/slide/li-na/ |title=The 2013 TIME 100 List - Li Na |magazine=Time |date=18 April 2013 |first=Chris |last=Evert |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Li also appeared on the cover of 26 May 2014 edition of ''Time'' magazine, which featured an article titled "The Passion of Li Na", in which author Hannah Beech described Li as a world class sports idol, inspiring millions of Chinese people to regard her as an icon of pursuing independent character and freedom of thought.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://time.com/100575/the-meaning-of-li-na/ |title=The Meaning of Li Na |magazine=Time |date=15 May 2014 |first=Hannah |last=Beech |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/early-lead/wp/2014/05/16/chinese-tennis-star-li-na-will-be-on-time-magazine-cover/ |title=Chinese tennis star Li Na will be on Time magazine cover |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=16 May 2014 |first=Kelyn |last=Soong |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.womenofchina.cn/html/womenofchina/report/173099-1.htm |title=Li Na Enters SportsPro's Most Marketable Athletes List |publisher=womenofchina.cn |date=22 May 2014 |first=Arnold |last=Hou |access-date=20 September 2014 |archive-date=28 March 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200328172618/http://www.womenofchina.cn/html/womenofchina/report/173099-1.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2012, ''[[Forbes]]'' listed Li as No. 85 in the [[Forbes Celebrity 100]] list. Li, along with the fellow tennis players [[Maria Sharapova]] and [[Serena Williams]], were the only three female athletes who cracked the Top 100 earning list.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tennisworldusa.org/Six-tennis-stars-make-the-Forbes-Celebrity-100-list--articolo18890.html |title=Six tennis stars make the Forbes Celebrity 100 list |publisher=Tennisworldusa.org |date=2 July 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Li was ranked No. 5 and No.8 on the [[Forbes China Celebrity 100]] list in 2012 and 2014 respectively.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/russellflannery/2012/05/21/taiwan-singer-jay-chou-tops-the-2012-forbes-china-celebrity-list/ |title=Taiwan Singer Jay Chou Tops The 2012 Forbes China Celebrity List |work=Forbes |date=21 May 2012 |first=Russell |last=Flannery |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/russellflannery/2014/05/06/actress-fan-bingbing-repeats-at-no-1-on-new-forbes-china-celebrity-list/ |title=Actress Fan Bingbing Repeats At No. 1 On New Forbes China Celebrity List |work=Forbes |date=6 May 2014 |first=Russell |last=Flannery |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref> Li is affectionately called "Big Sister Na" ({{zh|c=娜姐 |p=Nàjiě}}) among Chinese communities and is considered a "strong, unbending and unyielding" [[role model]]. She has not only become a household name across China but a global icon, with her [[Sina Weibo]] [[microblogging]] having over 23 million followers as of October 2014.<ref>{{cite news|agency=Xinhua |url=http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2011-06/05/c_13912229.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110610053245/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2011-06/05/c_13912229.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 10, 2011 |title=Li Na hailed as China' s new idol |date=5 June 2011 |access-date=20 September 2014 }}</ref> Her perceived rebelliousness, exemplified by the rose [[tattoo]] on her chest and her previous run-ins with government sports programs, also helped boost her popularity.<ref name="edition.cnn.com" /> On 15 April 2015, Li received the [[Laureus World Sports Awards#Exceptional Achievement Award|Laureus Academy Exceptional Achievement]] award at the [[Laureus World Sports Awards]] held in [[Shanghai]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wtatennis.com/news/article/4642214/title/li-na-honored-at-laureus-awards|title=Li Na Honored At Laureus Awards|date=15 April 2015}}</ref> She was also a nominee for the Laureus World Sportswoman of the Year award, alongside [[Serena Williams]]. |
|||
After the match, Li Na was praised by the Chinese media <ref>[http://www.tsn.ca/ CHINA HAILS LI NA'S FRENCH OPEN WIN AS SOURCE OF PRIDE], [http://www.tsn.ca/ TSN.ca], June 4, 2011</ref> and her popularity throughout China is expected to grow significantly in the following months, as she became the first ever Chinese singles player to win a tennis Grandslam title.<ref>[http://thinkingchinese.com/index.php?page_id=296 Li Na – From an athlete in the shadows to a new national hero], [http://thinkingchinese.com Thinking Chinese], June 5, 2011</ref> Following the French Open, Li will reach a career high ranking of World No. 4. |
|||
[[Nike, Inc.|Nike]] was Li's clothing and footwear sponsor for many years, dating back to her early tennis career.<ref name="nike athletes">{{cite web |date=17 April 2012 |title=Jeremy Lin, Li Na and Xiang Liu show Nike has eye for talent |url=http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20120417000001&cid=1504 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140221220600/http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20120417000001&cid=1504 |archive-date=21 February 2014 |access-date=19 September 2014 |publisher=Wantchinatimes.com}}</ref> Li used [[Babolat]] Pure Drive GT rackets.<ref name="babolatserialplayers.com">{{cite web |title=Babolat Serial Player Wanted |url=http://en.babolat.ca/player/tennis/show/na-li |work=Babolat |access-date=19 September 2014 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304054849/http://en.babolat.ca/player/tennis/show/na-li |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2009, Li was signed by [[IMG (company)|IMG]]. She rose to fame after her Roland Garros triumph, and since had signed seven endorsements in multiple-year terms.<ref>{{cite web|work=The Daily Telegraph |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/8676962/Li-Na-poised-to-become-worlds-top-earning-female-athlete.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/8676962/Li-Na-poised-to-become-worlds-top-earning-female-athlete.html |archive-date=2022-01-12 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=Li Na poised to become world's top-earning female athlete |date=2 August 2011 |first=Malcolm |last=Moore |access-date=19 September 2014 }}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |work=The Week |url=http://www.theweek.co.uk/people-news/3401/china%E2%80%99s-li-na-set-earn-more-maria-sharapova |title=China's Li Na set to earn more than Maria Sharapova |date=2 August 2011 |first=Jonathan |last=Harwood |access-date=19 September 2014 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304043218/http://www.theweek.co.uk/people-news/3401/china%E2%80%99s-li-na-set-earn-more-maria-sharapova |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|work=Forbes |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/russellflannery/2011/06/06/win-by-chinas-li-na-to-boost-sponsors-may-spur-spending-on-other-stars/ |title=Win By China's Li Na To Boost Sponsors, May Spur Spending On Other Stars |date=6 June 2011 |first=Russell |last=Flannery |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Her agent, [[Max Eisenbud]], also managed to negotiate a deal allowing Li to wear other sponsors' patches on her [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]] tennis shirt, something not usually permitted by the sportswear giant.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-07-31/li-na-nears-top-earner-sharapova-with-42-million-in-endorsement-contracts.html |title=Li Na Nears Top Earner Sharapova With $42 Million in Endorsement Contracts |work=Bloomberg |date=31 July 2011 |first=Danielle |last=Rossingh |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/business-27795565 |title=Wimbledon 2014: Li Na courts fans and sponsors |publisher=BBC News |date=22 June 2014 |first=Bill |last=Wilson |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
==Grand Slam finals== |
|||
===Singles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up)=== |
|||
In 2019, [[Peter Chan]] directed a biopic about Li Na's life, based on her autobiography, with a release date yet unknown.<ref name=":0">{{cite web|url=https://edition.cnn.com/2019/04/19/sport/li-na-movie-and-motherhood-spt-intl/index.html|title=Li Na: Tennis player wants the movie about her life to inspire women|date=19 April 2019 |publisher=CNN|access-date=2020-12-29}}</ref> |
|||
{| class="sortable wikitable" |
|||
==Playing style== |
|||
Li was an aggressive baseliner whose game was founded upon her quick reflexes, athleticism and powerful groundstrokes that achieved precision, placement and depth. Li's crosscourt forehand tended to be her favourite shot, hit with great accuracy and pace, although her backhand was said to be the more consistent and reliable groundstroke, both of which she was known to unleash unpredictably to all areas of the court to dictate play. She boasted an exceptional backhand down-the-line, which was very effective at producing winners or setting up a weak reply from the opponent. Many tennis analysts considered Li one of the cleanest and hardest hitting players on tour, capable of overpowering and outgunning opponents from the baseline. Although she did not possess an overwhelmingly powerful serve, it was very well placed, earning her aces or unreturnables on occasion, however it often became a liability when she lost confidence under pressure, resulting in many double faults. Li employed a solid defensive game combining great footwork, speed and lateral movement. Her ability to turn defense into offense was one of her biggest assets as she hit well on the run and scrambled around the court with ease. Having been an accomplished doubles player, she was comfortable when playing at the net, often moving forward to take advantage of a short ball or finish off an extended rally. Li's inconsistency was cited as her main weakness throughout her career, as she was prone to streaky and erratic play accompanied by a high unforced error count. Since her shots were usually hit hard and flat with minimal topspin or slice, her game lacked variety. Her emotions on court have hurt her game during tight moments.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/tennis/australian-open-womens-finalists-victoria-azarenka-and-li-na-put-mind-over-matter/story-e6frfgao-1226561998169?nk=33bd52a767d10d236a6eaf53b256fab1 |title=Australian Open women's finalists Victoria Azarenka and Li Na put mind over matter |work=The Herald Sun |date=26 January 2013 |first=Todd |last=Balym |access-date=23 September 2014}}</ref> Under the tutelage of [[Carlos Rodríguez (tennis coach)|Carlos Rodríguez]], Li adopted more of an all-round game, implementing a forehand with additional topspin<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/28/sports/tennis/li-na-finds-quick-success-with-coach-carlos-rodriguez.html?_r=0 |title=After Replacing Coach, Li Finds Quick Success |work=The New York Times |date=27 August 2012 |first=Ben |last=Rothenberg |access-date=22 September 2014 }}</ref> and frequent net approaches into her arsenal, as well as improved consistency, mental stability,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://grantland.com/features/victoria-azarenka-defeats-li-na-australian-open-women-final/ |title=Drama Queens |work=Grantland |date=28 January 2013 |first=Louisa |last=Thomas |access-date=22 September 2014 }}</ref> mobility and coordination.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/tennis/2013/08/30/us-open-2013-li-na-coach-carlos-roeriguez/2749029/ |title=Carlos Rodriguez on Li Na: 'A lot of improvement' |work=USA Today |date=30 August 2013 |first=Bobby |last=Chintapalli |access-date=27 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
==Rivalries== |
|||
===Li vs. Sharapova=== |
|||
Li Na had a see-saw rivalry with [[Maria Sharapova]], with the latter winning their first five matches dating back to 2005, including Li's Grand Slam debut at the [[2005 Australian Open]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2005-01-21/sharapova-breezes-through-to-fourth-round/623370 |title=Sharapova breezes through to fourth round |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=21 January 2005 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Li won her first match against Sharapova in the 2009 Birmingham semifinals, starting a series of four consecutive wins against Sharapova. Li beat Sharapova again in Birmingham in 2010, this time in the final, and in the semifinals of the [[2011 French Open]], on her way to winning her maiden Grand Slam. At the Year-end Championships later that year, Li defeated Sharapova in the round robin stage. In 2012, Li and Sharapova met three times, with Sharapova winning all three of their matches, the most notable being the final of the clay-court tournament in Rome. Li won the first set and looked headed for victory when she went 4–0 up in the second due to an effectively aggressive gameplan which saw her take 15 of 17 points. With victory nearing Li suddenly saw her accuracy shatter and 24 unforced errors let Sharapova back into the match to eventually take a three set win over Li.<ref>{{cite news |title=Sharapova beats Li to retain Rome title |work=USA Today |access-date=21 October 2012 |url=http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/sports/tennis/story/2012-05-20/maria-sharapova-beats-li-na-at-italian-open-in-rome/55093174/1 |date=20 May 2012}}</ref> They met again in the 2013 Australian Open semifinals, where Li achieved her most notable victory over Sharapova, winning in straight sets and giving up just four games (Sharapova had lost just nine entering the match). A few months later at the 2013 Porsche Grand Prix Tennis in Stuttgart, Sharapova defended her title by defeating Li in the final. The pair was involved in another three set battle in the 2014 Mutua Madrid Open quarterfinals, where Sharapova eventually triumphed even though Li was up a set and a break. Sharapova led Li in the head-to-head 10–5.<ref>{{cite news |title=Head to Head with M. Sharapova |work=wtatennis.com |access-date=24 January 2013 |url=http://www.wtatennis.com/head2head/player1/4846/player2/9499 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130623113151/http://www.wtatennis.com/head2head/player1/4846/player2/9499 |archive-date=23 June 2013 }}</ref> |
|||
===Li vs. Radwańska=== |
|||
Li and [[Agnieszka Radwańska]] first played each other in 2009. Li led the head-to-head 6–5.<ref>{{cite news |title=Head to Head with A. Radwanska |work=wtatennis.com |access-date=22 January 2013 |url=http://www.wtatennis.com/head2head/player1/4846/player2/11530 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141208063524/http://www.wtatennis.com/head2head/player1/4846/player2/11530 |archive-date=8 December 2014 }}</ref> After their first four matches in 2009 and 2010 the head-to-head was even at 2–2. This included a victory each at [[Wimbledon Championships|the Wimbledon Championships]]; Radwańska winning in 2009 and Li in 2010. In 2012 Li and Radwańska met 4 times, with Li taking 3 victories. Li lost their meeting in the Stuttgart quarter-final in three sets, but dominated in Montréal, Cincinnati and Beijing. Li prevented Radwańska from taking the [[List of WTA number 1 ranked players|world No. 1]] ranking off [[Victoria Azarenka]] with the first two victories, whilst she also ended her title defence in Beijing, securing the eighth and final place in the [[2012 WTA Tour Championships|year-end championships]] in the process. |
|||
In 2013 both won the first tournament they entered. They were both undefeated when they met each other in the semifinals of their second tournament of the year at Sydney. Radwańska beat Li and eventually won the tournament. This was Li's first defeat of 2013, while Radwańska remained unbeaten. In the [[2013 Australian Open]] quarterfinals, Li handed Radwańska her first loss of the season. They met again at Wimbledon in the quarterfinals, with Radwańska eking out a close three set win. |
|||
===Li vs. Clijsters=== |
|||
Li and [[Kim Clijsters]] formed a well-known rivalry, having met eight times between 2006 and 2012. Clijsters won their head-to-head 6–2, including 4–0 at Grand Slams.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tennis.wettpoint.com/en/h2h/78852-100240.html |title=Head to Head Statistics: K. Clijsters und N. Li Year up to 2014 |work=Tennis Datenbank |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Li's maiden Grand Slam quarterfinal was at [[2006 Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] in 2006 in which she was defeated by the second-seeded Clijsters in straight sets. Li's second Grand Slam quarterfinal was at the [[2009 US Open (tennis)|2009 US Open]], and again it was against Clijsters, who had recently launched a comeback after starting a family, who prevailed in straight sets. |
|||
One of Li's two wins against Clijsters came in the final of the [[2011 Medibank International Sydney|2011 Sydney International]]. Li had trailed 0–5 in the first set before coming back to win the set in a tiebreak en route to complete a remarkable straight-sets victory and deny Clijsters a third Sydney title.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-01-14/li-upsets-clijsters-in-sydney-final/1905820 |title=Li upsets Clijsters in Sydney final |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=14 January 2011 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> They would meet again only two weeks later, in the final of the [[2011 Australian Open]], a match which had historical proportions because Li would have become the first player from an Asian country to win a Grand Slam singles title or Clijsters would win her first non-US Open Grand Slam title. Both players came into the match having defeated the world's top two players in the semifinals: Li over [[Caroline Wozniacki]] and Clijsters over [[Vera Zvonareva]]. After Li took the first set, she proceeded to lose the next two, giving Clijsters her only Australian Open title.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-01-29/clijsters-claims-open-crown/1922382 |title=Clijsters claims Open crown |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=30 January 2011 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
The pair met again at the [[2012 Australian Open|same tournament twelve months later]], this time in the fourth round. Similar to the previous year's final, Li won the first set before eventually losing in three sets; this time around she had held four match points in the second-set tiebreak.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/tennis/australian-open-2012-kim-clijsters-169961|title=Australian Open 2012: Kim Clijsters survives close shave against Li Na|publisher=Mirror.co.uk|date=22 January 2012|access-date=2 July 2015}}</ref> |
|||
===Li vs. Azarenka=== |
|||
'''List of all matches''' |
|||
{| class="sortable collapsible autocollapse sortable wikitable" |
|||
|- style="background:#eee;" |
|||
! No. |
|||
! Year |
|||
! style="width:120px;" |Tournament |
|||
! Surface |
|||
! Round |
|||
! Winner |
|||
! Score |
|||
! Length |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 1. |
|||
| [[2008 Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts|2008]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Brisbane International|Gold Coast]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| F |
|||
| Li |
|||
| 4–6, 6–3, 6–4 |
|||
| N/A |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 2. |
|||
| [[2009 Toray Pan Pacific Open|2009]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|JPN}} [[Pan Pacific Open|Tokyo]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| QF |
|||
| Li |
|||
| 7–6<sup>(9–7)</sup>, 4–6, 7–6<sup>(7–4)</sup> |
|||
| 2:11 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 3. |
|||
| [[2010 Rogers Cup|2010]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Canadian Open (tennis)|Montreal]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| R16 |
|||
| Azarenka |
|||
| 6–3, 6–3 |
|||
| 1:24 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 4. |
|||
| [[2011 Australian Open|2011]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Australian Open]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| R16 |
|||
| Li |
|||
| 6–3, 6–3 |
|||
| 1:24 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 5. |
|||
| [[2011 French Open|2011]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|FRA}} [[French Open]] |
|||
| Clay |
|||
| QF |
|||
| Li |
|||
| 7–5, 6–2 |
|||
| 1:29 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 6. |
|||
| [[2011 WTA Tour Championships|2011]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|TUR}} [[WTA Tour Championships|Istanbul]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| RR |
|||
| Azarenka |
|||
| 6–2, 6–2 |
|||
| N/A |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 7. |
|||
| [[2012 Apia International Sydney|2012]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Sydney International|Sydney]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| F |
|||
| Azarenka |
|||
| 6–2, 1–6, 6–3 |
|||
| 1:56 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 8. |
|||
| [[2012 Mutua Madrid Open|2012]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|ESP}} [[WTA Madrid Open (tennis)|Madrid]] |
|||
| Clay |
|||
| QF |
|||
| Azarenka |
|||
| 3–6, 6–3, 6–3 |
|||
| 1:54 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 9. |
|||
| [[2012 WTA Tour Championships|2012]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|TUR}} [[WTA Tour Championships|Istanbul]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| RR |
|||
| Azarenka |
|||
| 7–6<sup>(7–4)</sup>, 6–3 |
|||
| 1:39 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 10. |
|||
| [[2013 Australian Open|2013]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Australian Open]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| F |
|||
| Azarenka |
|||
| 4–6, 6–4, 6–3 |
|||
| 2:40 |
|||
|- bgcolor="" |
|||
| 11. |
|||
| [[2013 WTA Tour Championships|2013]] |
|||
| {{flagicon|TUR}} [[WTA Tour Championships|Istanbul]] |
|||
| Hard |
|||
| RR |
|||
| Li |
|||
| 6–2, 6–1 |
|||
| N/A |
|||
|} |
|||
Li and [[Victoria Azarenka]] met eleven times between 2008 and 2013.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tennis.wettpoint.com/en/h2h/101836-100240.html |title=Head to Head Statistics: V. Azarenka und N. Li Year up to 2014 |work=Tennis Datenbank |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Azarenka led the head-to-head 6–5 overall, and 2–1 in championship matches, but Li led 2–1 in Grand Slam matches. |
|||
Their first meeting was in the final of the [[2008 Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts]] tournament (which has since been renamed the [[Brisbane International]]), which Li Na won in three sets after Azarenka had won the first.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2008-01-05/li-storms-to-victory-in-gc-hardcourts-final/1003664 |title=Li storms to victory in GC Hardcourts final |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=5 January 2008 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Azarenka's first victory over Li was in the third round of the [[2010 Rogers Cup]]. They met three times in 2011, two of which were at Grand Slams, with Li winning on both occasions, before Azarenka won their third meeting at the [[2011 WTA Tour Championships]], en route to reaching the final. |
|||
They met a further three times in [[2012 WTA Tour|2012]], with Azarenka winning each time. They met in the final of the [[2012 Apia International Sydney|Sydney International]], where the Belarusian won in three sets after breaking the defending champion Li at 4–3 in the decider.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-01-13/azarenka-victorious-in-sydney-decider/3772550 |title=Azarenka victorious in Sydney decider |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation |date=13 January 2012 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> Azarenka was also victorious in their meetings at [[2012 Mutua Madrid Open|Madrid]] and the [[2012 WTA Tour Championships|year-end championships]]. |
|||
Their most notable meeting to date was in the final of the [[2013 Australian Open]]. Both players entered the championship match with one Grand Slam title each (Azarenka won the [[2012 Australian Open]], whilst Li won the [[2011 French Open]]), and in very good form, with Azarenka only conceding one set during the tournament and Li not having dropped a set and also having defeated two top-4 players ([[Agnieszka Radwańska]] and [[Maria Sharapova]]) en route. After Li won the first set, she suffered serious head and ankle injuries and eventually lost in three sets.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/australianopen/9827160/Australian-Open-final-2013-Victoria-Azarenka-retains-title-after-tense-battle-with-brave-Li-Na.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/australianopen/9827160/Australian-Open-final-2013-Victoria-Azarenka-retains-title-after-tense-battle-with-brave-Li-Na.html |archive-date=2022-01-12 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Australian Open final 2013: Victoria Azarenka retains title after tense battle with brave Li Na|first=Simon|last=Briggs|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=26 January 2013|access-date=2 July 2015}}{{cbignore}}</ref> |
|||
Their last meeting at the [[2013 WTA Tour Championships]] was a lopsided affair, with Li recording a straight sets win and losing just three games in the process.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-10-26/li-na-defeats-victoria-azarenka-to-qualify-for-wta-championship/5047658?section=sport |title=Li Na defeats Victoria Azarenka to qualify for WTA Championships semi-finals |work=ABC Grandstand Sport |date=26 October 2013 |access-date=19 September 2014 }}</ref> |
|||
==Career statistics== |
|||
{{Main|Li Na career statistics}} |
|||
===Grand Slam tournament finals=== |
|||
====Singles: 4 (2 titles, 2 runner-ups)==== |
|||
{|class="sortable wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
!Result |
|||
| style="width:100px;"|'''Outcome''' |
|||
!Year |
|||
|width="60"|'''Year''' |
|||
!style="width:150px"|Championship |
|||
!Surface |
|||
!style="width:160px"|Opponent |
|||
!style="width:140px" class="unsortable"|Score |
|||
|- style="background:#ffc;" |
|- style="background:#ffc;" |
||
| style="background:#ffa07a;"| |
| style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss||[[2011 Australian Open – Women's singles|2011]]||[[Australian Open]]||Hard||{{flagicon|BEL}} [[Kim Clijsters]]||6–3, 3–6, 3–6 |
||
|- style="background:#ebc2af;" |
|- style="background:#ebc2af;" |
||
| style="background:#98fb98;"| |
| style="background:#98fb98;"|Win||[[2011 French Open – Women's singles|2011]]||[[French Open]]||Clay||{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Francesca Schiavone]]||6–4, 7–6<sup>(7–0)</sup> |
||
|- style="background:#ffc;" |
|||
| style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss||[[2013 Australian Open – Women's singles|2013]]||Australian Open ||Hard||{{flagicon|BLR}} [[Victoria Azarenka]]|| 6–4, 4–6, 3–6 |
|||
|- style="background:#ffc;" |
|||
| style="background:#98fb98;"|Win||[[2014 Australian Open – Women's singles|2014]]||Australian Open||Hard||{{flagicon|SVK}} [[Dominika Cibulková]]|| 7–6<sup>(7–3)</sup>, 6–0 |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===Olympic medal matches=== |
|||
==Career statistics== |
|||
====Singles: 1==== |
|||
{{Main|Li Na career statistics}} |
|||
{|class="sortable wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
!Result |
|||
!Year |
|||
!style="width:200px"|Championship |
|||
!Surface |
|||
!style="width:160px"|Opponent |
|||
!style="width:140px" class="unsortable"|Score |
|||
|- style="background:#ffea5c;" |
|||
| style="background:yellow;"|4th place || [[2008 Summer Olympics|2008]] || [[Tennis at the 2008 Summer Olympics|Summer Olympics Beijing]], China || Hard || {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Vera Zvonareva]] || 0–6, 5–7 |
|||
|} |
|||
===Grand Slam performance timelines=== |
|||
{{performance key|active=no}} |
|||
====Singles==== |
|||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
|||
|- |
|||
!Tournament!![[2000 WTA Tour|2000]]!![[2001 WTA Tour|2001]]!!...!![[2005 WTA Tour|2005]]!![[2006 WTA Tour|2006]]!![[2007 WTA Tour|2007]]!![[2008 WTA Tour|2008]]!![[2009 WTA Tour|2009]]!![[2010 WTA Tour|2010]]!![[2011 WTA Tour|2011]]!![[2012 WTA Tour|2012]]!![[2013 WTA Tour|2013]]!![[2014 WTA Tour|2014]]!!SR!!{{Tooltip|W–L|Win–loss}}!!Win % |
|||
|- |
|||
| align="left" |[[Australian Open]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|[[2001 Australian Open – Women's singles qualifying|LQ]] |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2005 Australian Open – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2006 Australian Open – Women's singles|1R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2007 Australian Open – Women's singles|4R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2008 Australian Open – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
|A |
|||
| style="background:yellow;" |[[2010 Australian Open – Women's singles|SF]] |
|||
| style="background:thistle;" |[[2011 Australian Open – Women's singles|F]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2012 Australian Open – Women's singles|4R]] |
|||
| style="background:thistle;" |[[2013 Australian Open – Women's singles|F]] |
|||
| bgcolor="lime" |[[2014 Australian Open – Women's singles|'''W''']] |
|||
|1 / 9 |
|||
|34–8 |
|||
|81% |
|||
|- |
|||
| align="left" |[[French Open]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|A |
|||
|A |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2006 French Open – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2007 French Open – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2009 French Open – Women's singles|4R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2010 French Open – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="lime" |[[2011 French Open – Women's singles|'''W''']] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2012 French Open – Women's singles|4R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2013 French Open – Women's singles|2R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2014 French Open – Women's singles|1R]] |
|||
|1 / 8 |
|||
|20–7 |
|||
|74% |
|||
|- |
|||
| align="left" |[[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|[[2001 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles qualifying|LQ]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="ffebcd" |[[2006 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|QF]] |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2008 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|2R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2009 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="ffebcd" |[[2010 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|QF]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2011 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|2R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2012 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|2R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="ffebcd" |[[2013 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|QF]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2014 Wimbledon Championships – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
|0 / 8 |
|||
|19–8 |
|||
|70% |
|||
|- |
|||
| align="left" |[[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] |
|||
|[[2000 US Open – Women's singles qualifying|LQ]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2005 US Open – Women's singles|1R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2006 US Open – Women's singles|4R]] |
|||
|A |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2008 US Open – Women's singles|4R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="ffebcd" |[[2009 US Open – Women's singles|QF]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2010 US Open – Women's singles|1R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2011 US Open – Women's singles|1R]] |
|||
| bgcolor="afeeee" |[[2012 US Open – Women's singles|3R]] |
|||
| style="background:yellow;" |[[2013 US Open – Women's singles|SF]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|0 / 8 |
|||
|17–8 |
|||
|68% |
|||
|-style=background:#efefef;font-weight:bold |
|||
| style="text-align:left" |Win–loss |
|||
|0–0 |
|||
|0–0 |
|||
| |
|||
|2–2 |
|||
|9–4 |
|||
|5–2 |
|||
|6–3 |
|||
|9–3 |
|||
|11–4 |
|||
|14–3 |
|||
|9–4 |
|||
|16–4 |
|||
|9–2 |
|||
|2 / 33 |
|||
|90–31 |
|||
|74% |
|||
|} |
|||
====Doubles==== |
|||
{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center" |
|||
|- |
|||
!Tournament!![[2000 WTA Tour|2000]]!![[2001 WTA Tour|2001]]!![[2005 WTA Tour|2005]]!![[2006 WTA Tour|2006]]!![[2007 WTA Tour|2007]]!![[2008 WTA Tour|2008]]!!SR!!W–L |
|||
|- |
|||
|align=left|[[Australian Open]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Australian Open – Women's doubles|1R]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Australian Open – Women's doubles|2R]] |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Australian Open – Women's doubles|2R]] |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2008 Australian Open – Women's doubles|1R]] |
|||
|0 / 4 |
|||
|2–4 |
|||
|- |
|||
|align=left|[[French Open]] |
|||
|colspan=3|Absent |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 French Open – Women's doubles|2R]] |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 French Open – Women's doubles|2R]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|0 / 2 |
|||
|2–2 |
|||
|- |
|||
|align=left|[[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] |
|||
|colspan=3|Absent |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Wimbledon Championships – Women's doubles|2R]] |
|||
|colspan=2|Absent |
|||
|0 / 1 |
|||
|1–1 |
|||
|- |
|||
|align=left|[[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 US Open – Women's doubles|2R]] |
|||
|A |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 US Open – Women's doubles|3R]] |
|||
|bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 US Open – Women's doubles|1R]] |
|||
|colspan=2|Absent |
|||
|0 / 3 |
|||
|3–3 |
|||
|-style=background:#efefef;font-weight:bold |
|||
| style="text-align:left" |Win–loss |
|||
|1–1 |
|||
|0–1 |
|||
|2–1 |
|||
|3–4 |
|||
|2–2 |
|||
|0–1 |
|||
|0 / 10 |
|||
|8–10 |
|||
|} |
|||
==Personal life== |
|||
===Parents=== |
|||
Li Na was born on 26 February 1982 in downtown [[Wuhan]], [[Hubei]]. Her grandfather Li Longli was a sports teacher at the Baoxing Street Elementary School, Hankow.<ref>{{Cite news|title=中网球童选拔李娜母校进行 娜爷爷寄语下一代|date=2011-06-28|work=腾讯体育|url=https://sports.qq.com/a/20110628/000528.htm}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|title=亲情浇灌娜朵奇葩 爷爷爸爸把她领进体育门 |date=2011-06-05|work=楚天金报 |last=王际凯 |url=https://sports.sohu.com/20110605/n309364038.shtml}}</ref> Her father Li Shengpeng ({{zh|labels=no|t=李盛鵬}}, 1957''–''1996<ref name="qnb0">{{cite news |date=31 January 2011 |script-title=zh:她最爱吃妈妈煮的面 |url=http://sports.163.com/11/0131/09/6RNE178U00051CDG.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110608161447/http://sports.163.com/11/0131/09/6RNE178U00051CDG.html |archive-date=8 June 2011 |access-date=3 June 2011 |language=zh |script-work=zh:青年报}}</ref>), from [[Caidian, Wuhan|Hanyang County]], Hubei,<ref name="Caidian">{{cite news |date=2011-06-08 |title=网友争夺李娜籍贯 记者多方求证李娜确系湖北人 |url=http://news.cnhubei.com/hbrb/hbrbsglk/hbrb06/201106/t1728012.shtml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110611085531/http://news.cnhubei.com/hbrb/hbrbsglk/hbrb06/201106/t1728012.shtml |archive-date=2011-06-11 |work=湖北日报}}</ref> briefly made it to the Hubei provincial [[badminton]] team but had his sports career halted when he was sent to the countryside during the [[Down to the Countryside Movement]] of the [[Cultural Revolution]]. Li Shengpeng past his peak level when he returned from the countryside and worked as a sales rep in the state-owned Yangtze Metal Works Factory in Wuhan.<ref name="Chengdu 2011"/> He died from a rare cardiovascular disease when Li Na was fourteen.<ref name="qnb0" /><ref name="nyt2013" /> |
|||
Li Na's maternal grandparents and her mother, all from [[Xinhua County]], Hunan, used to live in Port Baoqing in Wuhan, a neighborhood historically resided by the river shipping clique from Xinhua County.<ref name="Xinhua, Hunan" /><ref name="Caidian" /> Her mother Li Yanping ({{zh|labels=no|t=李豔萍}}, 1957–) worked at the Wuhan Yangtze Ferry Company.<ref name="Chengdu 2011">{{cite news|title=李娜母亲讲述女儿成长史 坎坷网球路辛酸事颇多|date=2011-06-21|work=成都商报|last=李晶|url=https://sports.sohu.com/20110621/n310979915.shtml}}</ref> When Li Na was three years old, her mother took her to temporarily live with her maternal grandmother in [[Baixi, Xinhua|Baixi]], Xinhua, Hunan.<ref name="Xinhua, Hunan">{{cite news |date=2011-08-07 |title=李娜 新化人的骄傲 |url=https://maimai.cn/article/detail?fid=1680260401&efid=lpB3YBIpKFgAuntB6w4ogQ |work=新化在线}}</ref> |
|||
===Marriage=== |
|||
Li and her husband, Jiang Shan, have two children.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Rossingh |first=Danielle |date=2019-04-19 |title=Li Na: Tennis player wants the movie about her life to inspire women |url=https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/19/sport/li-na-movie-and-motherhood-spt-intl/index.html |access-date=2024-05-07 |website=CNN |language=en}}</ref> On 19 January 2015, Li announced that she and her husband were expecting their first child.<ref>{{cite news |date=19 January 2015 |title=Retired Champion Li Na Announces She's Pregnant |url=https://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/retired-champion-li-na-announces-shes-pregnant-28317041 |access-date=19 January 2015 |work=ABC News}}</ref> She gave birth to her daughter Alisa in June 2015.<ref>{{cite news |date=3 June 2015 |title=Li Na shares delivery-room photo of newborn daughter, Alisa |url=http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/06/li-na-daughter-baby-alisa-mother-gave-birth-picture-photo |access-date=3 June 2015 |work=USA Today}}</ref> Her second child, a boy, was born on 23 December 2016.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-12-24 |title=2 Grand Slams und jetzt auch 2 Kinder |url=http://www.spox.com/de/tennisnet/turniere/wta/1612/Artikel/na-li-geburt-mutter-kind-sapajou.html |access-date=2016-12-26 |work=spox.com}}</ref> She often refers to her husband as 'Dennis'.<ref name=":0" /> |
|||
In December 2019, Li purchased a [[Hudson Yards, Manhattan|Hudson Yards]] apartment in [[New York City]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=lovetennis |date=2020-01-11 |title=Li Na Enjoying Retirement with $10 Million New York Apartment Purchase - Tennis News |url=https://www.lovetennis.com/tennis-news/li-na-enjoying-retirement-with-10-million-new-york-apartment-purchase/ |access-date=2024-05-07 |website=Love Tennis |language=en-US}}</ref> She also owns an apartment in [[Boston]], Massachusetts.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Prakash |date=2020-01-11 |title=Li Na Purchases Apartment in New York for $10.6 Million |url=https://www.tennisworldusa.org/tennis/news/Tennis_Stories/82528/li-na-purchases-apartment-in-new-york-for-106-million/ |access-date=2024-05-07 |website=Tennis World USA |language=en}}</ref> |
|||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
{{Portal box|China|Biography|Tennis}} |
|||
* [[Tennis in China]] |
* [[Tennis in China]] |
||
* [[List of female tennis players]] |
* [[List of female tennis players]] |
||
* [[List of Grand Slam women's singles champions]] |
|||
* [[Tennis performance timeline comparison (women)]] |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} |
|||
{{Reflist}} |
|||
==Further reading== |
|||
* {{cite book |first=Na |last=Li |title=Li Na: My Life |year=2014 |publisher=Penguin |isbn=978-0143800057 }} |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{Commons category|Li Na}} |
{{Commons category|Li Na}} |
||
* {{ |
* {{WTA}} |
||
* {{ITF}} |
|||
* [http://www.itftennis.com/womens/players/activity.asp?player=20010231 Li Na] ITF Tennis profile |
|||
* {{Fed Cup player}} |
|||
* [http://data.sports.163.com/athlete/home/0005000E0HNQ.html Li Na, comprehensive sports profile] – historical information, news, pictures, video, and personal data |
|||
* {{Wimbledon player}} |
|||
* [http://weibo.com/linatennis Li Na] Li Na's Personal [[Sina Weibo|Weibo]](Microblog) |
|||
* {{ESPN Tennis}} |
|||
{{French Open women's singles champions}} |
|||
* {{Olympedia}} |
|||
{{Top ten tennis players}} |
|||
* {{Chinese Olympic Committee|756|Li Na|en_archive=20200920203919|zh_archive=20201025051337}} |
|||
{{Top ten Asian female tennis players}} |
|||
* {{Weibo}} |
|||
{{Top ten Chinese female tennis players (singles)}} |
|||
{{navboxes|title=Li Na in the [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam tournaments]] |
|||
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. --> |
|||
|list1= |
|||
| NAME = Li, Na |
|||
{{Australian Open women's singles champions}} |
|||
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = |
|||
{{French Open women's singles champions}} |
|||
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = |
|||
| DATE OF BIRTH = February 26, 1982 |
|||
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Wuhan]], [[Hubei]], [[People's Republic of China|China]] |
|||
| DATE OF DEATH = |
|||
| PLACE OF DEATH = |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
{{Forbes China Celebrity 100}} |
|||
{{International Tennis Hall of Fame members}} |
|||
{{Xinhua News Agency's Top Ten Chinese Athletes of the Year}} |
|||
{{Portal bar|China|Biography|Sports|Tennis}} |
|||
{{authority control}} |
|||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Li, Na}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Li, Na}} |
||
[[Category:Li Na| ]] |
|||
[[Category:1982 births]] |
[[Category:1982 births]] |
||
[[Category:Living people]] |
[[Category:Living people]] |
||
[[Category:Asian Games bronze medalists for China]] |
|||
[[Category:Asian Games gold medalists for China]] |
|||
[[Category:Asian Games medalists in tennis]] |
|||
[[Category:Australian Open (tennis) champions]] |
|||
[[Category:Chinese autobiographers]] |
|||
[[Category:Chinese female tennis players]] |
[[Category:Chinese female tennis players]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:French Open champions]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in women's singles]] |
||
[[Category:Huazhong University of Science and Technology alumni]] |
|||
[[Category:International Tennis Hall of Fame inductees]] |
|||
[[Category:Olympic tennis players for China]] |
|||
[[Category:Tennis players from Wuhan]] |
|||
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2000 Summer Olympics]] |
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2000 Summer Olympics]] |
||
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2006 Asian Games]] |
|||
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2008 Summer Olympics]] |
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2008 Summer Olympics]] |
||
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2010 Asian Games]] |
|||
[[Category:Tennis players at the 2012 Summer Olympics]] |
|||
[[af:Li Na (tennisspeler)]] |
|||
[[Category:Women autobiographers]] |
|||
[[bg:Ли На]] |
|||
[[Category:Writers from Wuhan]] |
|||
[[ca:Li Na]] |
|||
[[Category:Medalists at the 2006 Asian Games]] |
|||
[[cs:Na Liová]] |
|||
[[Category:Medalists at the 2010 Asian Games]] |
|||
[[da:Li Na]] |
|||
[[Category:Summer World University Games medalists in tennis]] |
|||
[[de:Li Na (Tennisspielerin)]] |
|||
[[Category:FISU World University Games gold medalists for China]] |
|||
[[et:Li Na]] |
|||
[[Category:Medalists at the 2001 Summer Universiade]] |
|||
[[es:Li Na]] |
|||
[[eo:Li Na]] |
|||
[[fr:Li Na (tennis)]] |
|||
[[hi:ली ना]] |
|||
[[hr:Na Li]] |
|||
[[id:Li Na]] |
|||
[[it:Na Li]] |
|||
[[he:נה לי]] |
|||
[[lv:Na Li]] |
|||
[[hu:Li Na (teniszező)]] |
|||
[[mr:ली ना]] |
|||
[[mzn:لی نا]] |
|||
[[nl:Li Na (tennisster)]] |
|||
[[ja:李娜]] |
|||
[[no:Li Na]] |
|||
[[pl:Li Na]] |
|||
[[pt:Li Na (tenista)]] |
|||
[[ru:Ли На]] |
|||
[[sk:Na Liová]] |
|||
[[sr:Ли На]] |
|||
[[sh:Na Li]] |
|||
[[fi:Li Na]] |
|||
[[sv:Li Na]] |
|||
[[ta:லீ நா]] |
|||
[[th:หลี่ น่า]] |
|||
[[tr:Na Li]] |
|||
[[uk:Лі На]] |
|||
[[vi:Lý Na (vận động viên quần vợt)]] |
|||
[[zh-yue:李娜]] |
|||
[[zh:李娜 (网球运动员)]] |
Latest revision as of 15:09, 23 November 2024
Country (sports) | China | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residence | Wuhan, Hubei | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Wuhan, Hubei | 26 February 1982|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.72 m (5 ft 7+1⁄2 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Turned pro | 1999 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Retired | April 2002–May 2004; 19 September 2014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Plays | Right-handed (two-handed backhand) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
College | Huazhong University of Science and Technology (B.A.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Coach | Jiang Shan (2006–2012) Thomas Högstedt (2009–2010) Michael Mortensen (2011) Carlos Rodríguez (2012–2014) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Prize money | $16,709,074[1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Int. Tennis HoF | 2019 (member page) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Singles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career record | 503–188 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career titles | 9 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Highest ranking | No. 2 (17 February 2014) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Grand Slam singles results | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Australian Open | W (2014) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
French Open | W (2011) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wimbledon | QF (2006, 2010, 2013) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
US Open | SF (2013) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other tournaments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tour Finals | F (2013) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Olympic Games | SF – 4th (2008) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Doubles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career record | 121–50 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Career titles | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Highest ranking | No. 54 (28 August 2006) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Grand Slam doubles results | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Australian Open | 2R (2006, 2007) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
French Open | 2R (2006, 2007) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wimbledon | 2R (2006) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
US Open | 3R (2005) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other doubles tournaments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Olympic Games | 2R (2012) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
|
Li Na | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chinese | 李娜 | ||||||||||
|
Li Na (born 26 February 1982) is a Chinese former professional tennis player. She achieved a career-high ranking of world No. 2. In her career, Li won nine singles titles, including two major titles at the 2011 French Open and 2014 Australian Open. Those victories made her the first Grand Slam singles champion from Asia, male or female. She was also the first player representing an Asian country to appear in a major singles final, finishing as the runner-up at the 2011 Australian Open. Li was the runner-up at the 2013 Australian Open and 2013 WTA Tour Championships, a three-time quarterfinalist at Wimbledon and a semifinalist at the 2008 Beijing Olympics[2] and 2013 US Open. Among her other most notable achievements, she was the first Chinese player to win a WTA Tour title at the Guangzhou International Women's Open in 2004, the first to reach a major singles quarterfinal at the 2006 Wimbledon Championships, and the first to break into the world's top ten.
By 2013, Li's accomplishments had made her the most successful Asian tennis player in history, landing her on Time magazine's list of 100 Most Influential People in the World. She is credited with growing tennis in China, with former world No. 1 Chris Evert writing: "Tennis has exploded in China. The country now has some 15 million tennis players; 116 million watched Li win the French Open. That kind of exposure is crucial to our sport, and it never would have happened without Li."
Li retired from tennis in September 2014, at age 32. In 2019, she was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Tennis career
[edit]At age six, Li followed her father's footsteps and started playing badminton, which honed her reflexes.[3] Just before she turned eight, Li was persuaded to switch to tennis by coach Xia Xiyao of the Wuhan youth tennis club.[4] Her instructors taught tennis through negative reinforcement, which affected Li's confidence in later years.[5] Li joined China's National Tennis Team in 1997. The following year, Li, sponsored by Nike, went to John Newcombe Academy in Texas to study tennis.[6] She studied there for ten months and returned to China.[7] Growing up, her favourite tennis player was Andre Agassi.[8] She turned professional in 1999 at the age of sixteen.
At the end of 2002, Li left the national tennis team to study part-time at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST), where she completed her bachelor's degree in journalism in 2009. The Chinese media cited various reasons for this. Some reported that the relationship between her and her teammate and future husband, Jiang Shan (姜山), was opposed by the national team's management,[9] some reported that her coach, Yu Liqiao (余丽桥), was too strict and demanding, while other reports claimed that her request for a personal coach did not go through.[10][11] However, some regarded that it was just the health problem leading to the retirement.[12] The New York Times reported that one of the reasons was that a team leader wanted her to play through by taking hormone medicine[13] as Li struggled with her performance due to hormone imbalance.[14] She later told CNN that she had felt sick every day and didn't want her life to be only for tennis.[15]
Li returned to the national team in 2004 to "give back" for their help during her earlier career.[15] On January 27, 2006, Li married Jiang Shan who then became her personal coach. Li quit the national team[16] as well as the state-run sports system in 2008 under an experimental reform policy for tennis players. This change was called "Fly Solo" (单飞) by Chinese media.[9][17] As a result, Li had the freedom to hire her own coaching staff and she would be solely responsible for the cost of training and coaching and tour expense. She could keep more of her winnings,[18] with only twelve percent of her winnings going to the Chinese Tennis Association development fund as opposed to 65 percent previously.[15] In the summer of 2012, the requirement of contribution to the Chinese tennis development fund was lifted and Li kept all her prize money.[19]
On 5 June 2016, Li was commissioned by Special Olympics as a Global Ambassador.[20]
1999–2002: Dominance on the ITF Circuit
[edit]Li turned professional in 1999, and won three of the first four singles tournaments she entered on the ITF Circuit, two at Shenzhen and one at Westende, Belgium. She also won all of her first seven ITF doubles tournaments she entered.
In 2000, she won 52 singles matches on the ITF Circuit, more than any other player, notching another eight tournament titles, including one at the $50k level, two at $25k, and a run of four $10k tournament wins in March and April.
Notable individual victories in the course of the year included wins over Flavia Pennetta, Emmanuelle Gagliardi, Maria Elena Camerin, Tamarine Tanasugarn and Yayuk Basuki.
In June, after Li's world ranking had risen to No. 136 on the strength of her ITF performances alone, she gained direct entry into her first WTA Tour event at Tashkent. Despite winning the first set, Li lost her first WTA singles match to Anna Zaporozhanova in three sets, but she captured the women's doubles title at Tashkent with Li Ting against Zaporozhanova and Iroda Tulyaganova.
By the end of 2000, Li had won four WTA Tour singles matches, this brought her cumulative ITF singles title count up to eleven. That year, she also won seven more ITF doubles events, six of them with Li Ting.
Li was mostly absent from the tour in 2001. She further won two $25k singles tournaments, defeating Roberta Vinci in the final at Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and Liu Nannan in the final at Guangzhou in July, but then played only one further match for the rest of the year, leading her ranking to fall to No. 303 by the year's close.
She won her 15th career ITF doubles tournament at Hangzhou in March.
In 2002, she came through qualifying to win her first $75k singles tournament at Midland, United States in February, defeating Laura Granville, Tatiana Perebiynis, and Mashona Washington en route to the title, the 14th of her career. But she then played only one more match (a loss to Zuzana Ondrášková in the $50k event at Dinan, France that April), followed by a lengthy absence from the circuit for the next 25 months.
Sources vary as to the causes of this absence, the Chinese media mostly cited the conflict between her and the China's National Tennis Team's administration and coaching staff.[10][11][12][21] Some claimed that she just wanted a break from professional tennis so she could concentrate on her studies at university.
2004–2005: Successful return to professional tennis
[edit]In May 2004, Li returned to competition after having not played since 2002. Although she was unranked, she won 26 successive matches to notch three further $25k tournament wins and another $50k title, increasing her career singles title count to 18, only to have her winning streak finally snapped by Evgenia Linetskaya in the semifinal of the $50k Bronx tournament that August. However, she won her 16th ITF doubles tournament at the same event, the 17th overall doubles title of her career.
That September, she lost in the final of a $25k tournament to compatriot Zheng Jie, before returning to the WTA Tour, thanks to a wildcard entry into qualifying at Beijing. There, she defeated Antonella Serra Zanetti, Marta Domachowska, and Nicole Pratt before losing in the deciding-set tie-break after a very close second-round main-draw tussle against newly crowned US Open Champion Svetlana Kuznetsova, during which she held match points against Kuznetsova. The Russian afterwards praised her Chinese opponent, stating that she had felt as though she was up against a top-five player.
The very next week, Li battled her way through qualifying into the WTA Tour event at Guangzhou (a Tier IV event at the time, though since has been upgraded to Tier III), then beat Vera Dushevina, Jelena Janković, Kristina Brandi, and Li Ting in the main draw to reach the final, where she overcame Martina Suchá to win her first WTA Tour title. By doing so, Li became the first Chinese player to win a WTA event.[22]
On the back of the ranking points accrued through this result, on 4 October 2004, she broke into the WTA top 100 for the first time.
To cap off her most successful year as a singles player yet, she competed in two $50k tournaments at Shenzhen, winning the first outright to bring her the 19th ITF singles title and 20th overall singles title of her career, but losing in the quarterfinals of the second to lower-ranked country-woman Yan Zi. These results elevated Li Na to world No. 80 by the close of the year, a year in which she won 51 singles matches and lost just four.
2005 saw Li finally abandoning the ITF Circuit to focus solely on tour-level events. She began the year with a second-round performance at Gold Coast and a semifinal showing at Hobart, but losing to fellow Chinese player and eventual tournament champion Zheng Jie. She then made her Grand Slam debut at the 2005 Australian Open, advancing to the third round with wins over Laura Granville and Shinobu Asagoe before losing to Maria Sharapova. In early February, she reached the quarterfinals at Hyderabad and qualified for Doha where she was narrowly beaten by Patty Schnyder in the first round of the main draw. After a victory over Ai Sugiyama in the first round at Dubai the following week, it was Schnyder once again who stopped her from reaching the later stages of the event.
After taking a month off from competition, Li returned at Estoril in late April, defeating Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro, Nicole Pratt, Dally Randriantefy, and then crushing Dinara Safina to reach her second WTA Tour final. Li was denied the title by Czech qualifier Lucie Šafářová, who prevailed in a close three-set match. At Rabat in May, Li reached the semifinal stage, but further success ultimately proved elusive for her. With the score leveled at 3–3, she retired due to a right ankle sprain while clashing with Zheng Jie. Reaching this semifinal propelled her to a career-high singles ranking of world No. 33, but the injury she had sustained was destined to keep her out of action for the next three months. On her return at Los Angeles in August, she fell in the first round to Anna Chakvetadze of Russia. The following week, however, at the Canadian Open, she once more beat Jelena Janković and María Vento-Kabchi, before losing to Nadia Petrova in the third round.
It was Lindsay Davenport who proved her undoing in her next two tournaments, beating her in the first round of the US Open, and at the semifinal stage in Bali in September, but not before Li Na had avenged her previous year's defeat by Yan Zi in the second round of the same tournament. The following week, another highly ranked American player, Jill Craybas, narrowly defeated Li Na in a close three-set first-round match at Beijing. Li commenced her defense of her Guangzhou title; but she was prevented from completing it in the quarterfinals by eventual champion Yan Zi, who thereby edged out in front in their head-to-head record once again. This second loss in three head-to-heads against Yan proved to be Li's last match of 2005; and in her absence from the Shenzhen $50k tournaments where she had notched up some ranking points late the previous year, she found herself slipping further in the rankings from the high point of No. 33 that she had reached in the spring before her injury break, to No. 56 at the year's close.
2006: First Chinese major quarterfinalist
[edit]With nearly all her remaining ranking points to defend concentrated in a little over the first four months of the year, Li began the year faced with the challenge of equaling her strong results from the early part of 2005 in order to maintain her position in the middle reaches of the WTA top 100. Early-round draws against high-ranked players towards the beginning of 2006 took a heavy toll on Li's singles ranking, bringing it slipping down to No. 71 by the end of February.
She returned with a career-best performance at Tier I events by reaching the semifinal at Berlin. On the way there, she achieved her first victory over a current top-10-ranked player as she ousted Patty Schnyder for the first time at the quarterfinal stage. However, this match left her with a muscle sprain, and she lost to Nadia Petrova in the semifinal. Nonetheless, her performance at this high-level tournament saw her ranked No. 39. Joining the WTA Tour grass-court season for the first time at the Birmingham Classic in June, she managed another third-round finish with wins over Mashona Washington and grass-court specialist Eleni Daniilidou, both in straight sets, then lost for the third time in three meetings to Maria Sharapova. Her ranking following this tournament was No. 30, which was at that time the highest ever ranking achieved by a Chinese woman.
At the same event, partnering Jelena Janković, she notched up her second career WTA doubles title, almost exactly six years from her first at Tashkent. An early retirement against Alona Bondarenko in the first round of the Ondina Open at 's-Hertogenbosch the following week curtailed her final competitive preparations for her debut appearance at Wimbledon. But with an entry ranking of 30th, she found herself seeded 27th after some withdrawals, and thus achieved another first for her country in becoming the first Chinese woman ever to be seeded for entry into a Grand Slam tournament.
At Wimbledon, she reached the fourth round with comfortable straight-sets wins over respected grass-court players Virginie Razzano and recent Birmingham semifinalist Meilen Tu, followed by victory against 10th seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova, resulting in her being the first Chinese player ever to reach any Grand Slam quarterfinal.[22] Li rose to a new career-high WTA ranking of No. 20 following the tournament, even though she ultimately lost her quarterfinal match against Kim Clijsters in two close sets. She reached the quarterfinals at Stockholm, and the fourth round at the US Open, where, as the 24th seed, she was beaten by eventual champion Maria Sharapova in two sets. She then reached the quarterfinals at the China Open, where she was beaten by Svetlana Kuznetsova, and in Guangzhou.
2007–2009
[edit]Li started the year by participating at Tier III event in Gold Coast, Australia, where she reached the second round. The next week, she competed in Sydney. She defeated Francesca Schiavone in the first round, Elena Dementieva in the second, saving five match points, and Katarina Srebotnik in the quarterfinal. Then, she made it to the semifinals, losing a tough match to Kim Clijsters, 5–7 in the third set. However, she rose to a career high of No. 16 afterwards.
Li Na followed her strong showing at Sydney with an equally strong showing at the Australian Open, where she advanced to the fourth round. Seeded 19th, Li dispatched Elena Bovina and Lourdes Domínguez Lino in straight sets through the first two rounds, leading to a matchup with No. 9 Dinara Safina. The match was postponed due to rain, but Li handily beat Safina to advance to the fourth round to play Swiss star, No. 6 Martina Hingis. Due to a rain delay and the fact that Hingis played on Rod Laver Arena, a roofed court, on the originally scheduled day, Hingis had an extra day of rest. The match the previous day seemed to have no effect, as Li took the first set from Hingis. However, Na faded as the match went on and lost while committing 69 unforced errors. Despite the loss, the tournament was a success for Li, as it marked the third straight time in a Grand Slam that she advanced at least to the fourth round.
At the Tier I Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo, Li advanced to the second round, defeating Lilia Osterloh before losing to Samantha Stosur in two sets, converting zero of eleven break points. At the important Indian Wells Open in California, Li made a strong showing, advancing to the semifinals. She lost to Daniela Hantuchová in the semifinal. She continued her good form at the Miami Open, losing just three games in her first two matches against Tamira Paszek and Katarina Srebotnik, before stunning fourth-seeded Kim Clijsters in three sets. She then lost in the quarterfinals to Anna Chakvetadze.
She then moved onto the green clay of Amelia Island, where she suffered a shock second-round exit, after receiving a first round bye, to former top-20 player Karolina Šprem in straight sets. At the Family Circle Cup held in Charleston, South Carolina, she fell in the third round to Anabel Medina Garrigues. After losing in a grass tune-up event in Birmingham, Li pulled out of every tournament she was to play in the summer, including Wimbledon and the US Open, citing a rib injury.
Li had not played a professional match in half a year and had resultantly slipped to No. 29 in the WTA rankings when she returned from her rib injury in January 2008 to compete at the Australian Women's Hardcourts in Gold Coast. In the first round, she narrowly defeated seventh seed Sybille Bammer. After a comfortable second round victory over wildcard Monique Adamczak, she was drawn to meet the top seed Nicole Vaidišová in the quarterfinals. Li won their encounter in straight sets, advancing to the semifinals, where she edged past Patty Schnyder.[23] In the final, she narrowly prevailed against Victoria Azarenka, not only ending her three-year title drought (since Guangzhou 2004) but scoring her second career singles title.
Despite rising back up to world No. 24 following this victory, she then withdrew from the 2008 Sydney International, after suffering a right knee injury. Her failure to defend her previous year's semifinal performance at this event cost her 125 ranking points, which dipped her ranking back down to No. 30 for the week beginning 14 January. Going into the 2008 Australian Open, she had a further 140 ranking points to defend from her fourth-round performance in 2007. Faced with a relatively lenient draw in the early rounds, she survived a close three-set tussle with Séverine Brémond in the first round, before surpassing Maria Elena Camerin in straight sets in round two. A revitalised Marta Domachowska remained between her and the defence of her ranking points, and although Li won the first set convincingly, she faltered thereafter and finally ceded the match to her Polish opponent by a single break of serve in the closely fought deciding set.
Having slipped three places to world No. 33 by the time she entered the Tier II tournament at Antwerp in early February, she nonetheless progressed to the semifinals with back-to-back-to-back straight-sets wins over Russian veteran Elena Likhovtseva, Slovak world No. 45 Dominika Cibulková, and on-form Swedish world No. 66 Sofia Arvidsson. However, she withered in the semifinals against world No. 47, Karin Knapp, despite having taken an early lead with a break of service in the first set, ultimately ceding the match to her Italian opponent in two sets. This tournament brought her back up within the top 30 at world No. 29.
The next week at the Tier I Qatar Open, Li met Likhovtseva again in the first round. This time, after taking the first set comfortably, she was challenged to a much tougher battle, but eventually won in three sets. In round two, she scored her second straight-sets victory in four career head-to-heads against Russian world No. 6 Anna Chakvetadze, saving a set point in the first set tie-break, before recovering to win. In the third round, she enjoyed a more comfortable victory over Israeli world No. 17, Shahar Pe'er, recovering from a 1–3 deficit in the second set. In the quarterfinals, she met her old rival and friend, world No. 4 Jelena Janković, coming into the match with a winning 3–1 head-to-head record to her credit against the Serbian player. By defeating Janković she extended this record to 4–1 and moved into the semifinals, where she played Vera Zvonareva, against whom she had won both of her previous encounters. Despite taking the first set, Li lost the second by the same scoreline; and although she was 3–2 up in the final set, she then ceded four successive games to her opponent to lose the match.
Her ranking having risen back to No. 23 on the strength of this performance, she was prevented from consolidating on this recovery by suffering a right knee injury, which forced her to pull out of her scheduled entries into both the Tier II event at Bangalore in early March and the Tier I tournament at Indian Wells in the middle of the month. She returned to action at the International Women's Open in Eastbourne, winning one round before losing to Nadia Petrova. She then contested Wimbledon, defeating Anastasia Rodionova before losing to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
At the Beijing Olympics, following early-round victories against world No. 3 Svetlana Kuznetsova, Ayumi Morita, and Kaia Kanepi, she went on to defeat one of the favourites, Venus Williams, in the quarterfinals. Li was trailing 1–4 in the first set, but managed to strengthen her game to win in straight sets. Li lost her semifinal match to sixth seed Dinara Safina and was then defeated in the bronze final by Vera Zvonareva. At the following US Open, Li was defeated by the Beijing Olympics gold medalist Elena Dementieva in the fourth round.
In the 2008 Stuttgart Grand Prix, the unseeded Li defeated top ranked Serena Williams in the second round in three sets. Li thus became only the second Chinese player to defeat a world No. 1 player, following Zheng Jie's victory over Ana Ivanovic at Wimbledon in 2008.
Li withdrew from both the inaugural Brisbane International, where she was defending champion (as she won the title at Gold Coast in 2008), and the 2009 Australian Open because of a right-knee injury. She made her comeback at the Paris Indoors. In the first round, she beat Ágnes Szávay, but in the second round she lost to second-seeded Jelena Janković.
In the first round of the Dubai Championships, Li lost to Elena Vesnina in three sets. Unseeded at the Monterrey Open, she defeated world No. 10 and top seed Agnieszka Radwańska in a first round match that lasted over two hours. In the second round, she beat Petra Cetkovská and then advanced to the semifinals after defeating Lucie Šafářová. Li then moved into her fifth career tour final, after beating sixth-seeded Iveta Benešová. However, Li lost to second-seeded Marion Bartoli in the final in straight sets. She played in the Premier event at Indian Wells, where she defeated Tamarine Tanasugarn, Patty Schnyder, and[Amélie Mauresmo, all in straight sets, to advance to the fourth round, where she lost to eventual champion Vera Zvonareva.
She then reached the quarterfinals of the Premier event in Miami, where she beat qualifier Urszula Radwańska in the first round and upset 29th seed Aleksandra Wozniak to reach the third round, where she caused a big upset by defeating the previous week's Indian Wells champion, sixth-seeded Vera Zvonareva in three sets. This victory was particularly important for Li, as she had been beaten by Zvonareva the week before at Indian Wells. She then faced unseeded Russian Ekaterina Makarova in the fourth round and beat her in three sets to set up a quarterfinal match with the top seed and world No. 1, Serena Williams, a match which she lost in a tight three-setter. Because of her strong performance, her ranking went up to world No. 29 from world No. 40.
Li's next event was the second Grand Slam of the year, the French Open in Paris. As the 25th seed, she won her first round against Marta Domachowska. She then defeated Timea Bacsinszky and Olga Govortsova. She then lost to unseeded former world No. 1, Maria Sharapova, in the fourth round. After this impressive result, she jumped up to No. 20. She started her grass-court season as the fourth seed at the Birmingham Classic and advanced to the final with a win over Maria Sharapova in the semifinals. However, Na was defeated by Magdaléna Rybáriková in the final. Li was seeded 19th at the 2009 Wimbledon Championships. She defeated Galina Voskoboeva in the first round and Olga Govortsova in the second round, but lost to No. 11 Agnieszka Radwańska in the third round.
At the 2009 Bank of the West Classic, she lost to Serena Williams in the first round, and at the LA Women's Championships, she withdrew due to injury during her match with Urszula Radwańska of Poland. Seeded 18th at the US Open, she reached her first US Open quarterfinals, where she lost to eventual champion Kim Clijsters. En route to the quarterfinals, she defeated Raluca Olaru, Michelle Larcher de Brito, Maria Kirilenko, and Francesca Schiavone all in straight sets. Seeded 15th at the Pan Pacific Open, Li won her opening match against Alizé Cornet. She then defeated Vera Dushevina before beating Kateryna Bondarenko. In the quarterfinal, she defeated Victoria Azarenka in three sets, two of which were tiebreaks, though she failed in serving for the match twice in the last set. Li lost in the semifinals to Jelena Janković and finished the year at world No. 15, her then-career-high year-end ranking.
2010: First major semifinal & ascent to top 10
[edit]Li's first tournament of 2010 was the Classic in Auckland, where she was seeded second. She was defeated by Kaia Kanepi in the first round. In Sydney, she defeated fourth seed Caroline Wozniacki but lost to Flavia Pennetta in the second round.
Li was seeded 16th at the Australian Open. She defeated world No. 4 Caroline Wozniacki in the fourth round and then came from a set and 3–5 down to defeat world No. 6 Venus Williams, in her first Australian Open quarterfinal and only her third major quarterfinal. In the semifinals, she lost to Serena Williams in two highly competitive tiebreaks. As a result of this performance, Li was the first Chinese woman ever to be ranked in the top ten of women's professional tennis.[22]
At the Dubai Championships, Li, the eighth seed, defeated María José Martínez Sánchez in the second round. She then came from a 6–3, 5–2 deficit to defeat Marion Bartoli in the third round. Li was forced to retire in her quarterfinals match against Shahar Pe'er. Li continued her season at the inaugural Malaysian Open. As second seed, she fell to Tatjana Malek in the first round. As seventh seed at the Indian Wells Open, Li fell to Elena Baltacha in round two. Li was eighth seed at the Miami Open, but fell to Timea Bacsinszky in the second round.
At the Stuttgart Grand Prix, Li defeated defending champion Svetlana Kuznetsova in the second round, before falling to eventual runner-up Sam Stosur in the quarterfinals. Li was 11th seed at the French Open. She fell to eventual champion and world No. 17 Francesca Schiavone in the third round. Li was seeded first at the Birmingham Classic. She defeated 4th seed Aravane Rezaï in the semifinals, and second-seeded Maria Sharapova in the final to win the tournament. With the win, Li returned to the top 10 in the WTA rankings. Seeded seventh at Eastbourne, Li retired in the first round with a knee injury after winning the first set against Elena Baltacha. Li was seeded ninth at Wimbledon. She defeated seventh seed Agnieszka Radwańska to advance to the quarterfinals at Wimbledon for the second time in her career, where she lost to world No. 1 and defending champion Serena Williams. In doing so Li once again returned to the top 10 in the WTA rankings.
At the US Open, she started off as the eighth seed, but fell at the first hurdle to Kateryna Bondarenko. Li was an alternate at the WTA Championships, but did not receive a chance to play. Instead, she played at the Tournament of Champions as the first seed. However, she was defeated by Japanese Kimiko Date-Krumm in the first round, putting an end to her 2010 season, her best season to date. She finished just outside the top 10 at world No. 11. At the end of the year, Li's coach Thomas Högstedt chose to leave her in order to coach Maria Sharapova.
2011: Major breakthrough & historic victory at French Open
[edit]Li played in the Sydney International as the eighth seed, making fast work of Australian wildcard Anastasia Rodionova and winning a tough three-set match against Virginie Razzano in the first two rounds. In the quarterfinals she met two-time Grand Slam winner Svetlana Kuznetsova and came through with a win. She defeated surprise qualifier Bojana Jovanovski in the semifinals to advance to her eighth WTA final.[24] Li faced world No. 3 Kim Clijsters in the final, and despite trailing 5–0 in the first set, Li went on to defeat Clijsters, capturing the fourth WTA title of her career.
Li was the ninth seed at the Australian Open, where she reached her first Grand Slam singles final, the first tennis player representing an East Asian and Asian country to achieve that feat. On the way she ousted eighth seed Victoria Azarenka in straight sets. She defeated world No. 1, Caroline Wozniacki, in the semifinals to reach the final, after saving a match point in the second set. She faced No. 3 seed Kim Clijsters (whom she had defeated at the Sydney International). Although Li claimed the first set, Clijsters was able to rally back and claim the championship. Despite the loss, Li's ranking rose to a career high of world No. 7.[25]
Despite a good early start to the season, Li then had a five-match losing streak. After receiving byes into the second rounds, she lost in a hardly fought match against Yanina Wickmayer at the Dubai Championships, lucky loser Klára Zakopalová at the Qatar Ladies Open and countrywoman Peng Shuai at Indian Wells. Despite this, after Indian Wells she peaked at a career-high ranking of world No. 6 due to Janković's failures to defend her points.
Li's losing streak continued, when she was upset in the Miami Open by Johanna Larsson. With this loss, and Andy Murray's loss at Miami, both Australian Open finalists had yet to win a match since their first major final. She fell back to No. 7. Li then broke her losing streak by winning her first-round match against Anastasija Sevastova in Stuttgart. However, she lost to Sabine Lisicki in the second round. Even though she was not able to defend all her Stuttgart ranking points, she rose back to No. 6. However, due to her disappointing results, Li Na sacked her husband as coach and hired Dane Michael Mortensen.[26]
She entered the Madrid Open as sixth seed. In the first two rounds, she defeated María José Martínez Sánchez and Iveta Benešová without much difficulty. In the third round she got the better of Roberta Vinci coming back from a set deficit. She then defeated Bethanie Mattek-Sands after recovering from a break down in the deciding set. This victory marked her first semifinals appearance in Madrid, where she lost to eventual champion, Petra Kvitová.
Li's resurgence continued into the Italian Open. Seeded fourth, she received a bye in the first round. She won her opening match against Lourdes Domínguez Lino and defeated Jarmila Gajdošová and Gréta Arn in the next two rounds en route to back-to-back semifinals on clay. However, she lost to Samantha Stosur in two sets.
Li won her first major title at the French Open on June 4; by doing so she made history and became the first tennis player from an East Asian and Asian country to win a Grand Slam singles event. Seeded sixth, she defeated Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová, Sílvia Soler Espinosa, Sorana Cîrstea, ninth seed Petra Kvitová, fourth seed Victoria Azarenka, seventh seed Maria Sharapova, and fifth seed and defending champion Francesca Schiavone in the final, a match that was watched by 330 million viewers worldwide.[27] After the match, Li Na was praised by the Chinese media,[28] and her popularity throughout China was expected to grow significantly in the coming months, as she became the first Chinese national, male or female, ever to win a tennis Grand Slam title in singles, ensuring her place in the sport's history.[29][30] Following the French Open, Li rose to a career high ranking of world No. 4.
As the second seed at Eastbourne, Li fell in the second round to Daniela Hantuchová. By virtue of the withdrawal of Kim Clijsters, Li was the third seed at Wimbledon, her highest seeding at a Grand Slam. She beat Alla Kudryavtseva in the first round but lost in the second round to eventual semifinalist Sabine Lisicki of Germany even though she had two match points at 5–3 and served for the match twice at 5–4 and 6–5.[31] Li suffered a surprise knock-out at the 2011 US Open at the hands of 53rd ranked Romanian teen Simona Halep and she ended the coaching of Mortensen. Then at the China Open, Li suffered a first round defeat by Romanian player Monica Niculescu. However, as a result of Vera Zvonareva and Samantha Stosur's inability to go past the third round, she was able to qualify for the 2011 WTA Tour Championships for the first time in her career.
Li made her debut appearance at the WTA Championships in Istanbul. She was drawn in the White Group along with Maria Sharapova, Victoria Azarenka and Samantha Stosur. She beat Sharapova in her opening match but lost her other two matches, failing to make the semifinals. She finished the year as the world No. 5 after a memorable yet very inconsistent season. Li Na was nominated for two ESPY Sports Award categories: the "Annual Breakthrough Award" and "Annual Award for best female tennis players".[32] She lost to Blake Griffin and Serena Williams, respectively. On 17 and 18 December, Li participated in the Li Na & Friends Tennis Exhibition 2011 in Wuhan, China.
2012: First Premier-5 event champion
[edit]Li started her 2012 season in the Hopman Cup with countryman Wu Di, who was also from Hubei province, where she won all three single rubbers against Marion Bartoli, Anabel Medina Garrigues and Jarmila Gajdošová. It was her first win over Anabel Medina Garrigues in four meetings. It was a return to her form after being plagued by losses and early round exits in almost all her tournaments during the second half of 2011 following her Roland Garros triumph. Li then played in the Sydney to defend her title. She defeated Ekaterina Makarova, Chanelle Scheepers and Lucie Šafářová to reach the semifinals. In the semifinal, she came back from one set down to eke out the win against world No. 2, Petra Kvitová, the favorite to win the tournament. In the final, Li failed to defend her title, losing the match to Victoria Azarenka in three sets.
Li began her Australian Open campaign by cruising through the early rounds of the tournament, dispatching Ksenia Pervak, Olivia Rogowska, and Anabel Medina Garrigues (after Garrigues retired due to an injured ankle), en route to meeting her 2011 Australian Open final conqueror Kim Clijsters in the fourth round. Kim Clijsters rolled her ankle at 3–3 and Li took the first set comfortably. Li held four match points at 6–2 in the second set tiebreak, but dropped six consecutive points to give Clijsters the second set due to unforced errors and poor shot selection. At 1–5 in the final set, Li began a resurgence by reeling off the next three games to close the gap to 4–5, but the Belgian managed to close out the match. Her unexpected loss left her in tears in her post-match press conference.
After the disappointing Australian Open campaign, Li participated in the 2012 Fed Cup and won all three of her matches on home soil. She defeated Kei-Chen Changand and Nigina Abduraimova during the round robin stages to push China to the promotional play-offs against Kazakhstan. She next played Galina Voskoboeva and won in three sets. This win sealed the tie and secured China's spot in the World Group II play-offs.
Li then participated in the Open GDF Suez in Paris, but retired against Tsvetana Pironkova in the first round of the tournament due to a back injury she sustained during her Fed Cup matches. She made back-to-back quarterfinal appearances at Indian Wells and Miami. At the Indian Wells Open, Li got a first round bye and faced a rematch with Galina Voskoboeva in the second round, which she won in three sets. Li recorded her first win over Zheng Jie, after losing the five earlier meetings. In the fourth round she comfortably won against Klára Zakopalová, who was on a roll, upsetting Vera Zvonareva and Daniela Hantuchová. In the quarterfinals she faced Angelique Kerber and lost in two sets. At the Miami Open, after receiving a first round bye, Li defeated Melinda Czink, Iveta Benešová, and Sabine Lisicki to secure a spot in the quarterfinals. Her win over Lisicki avenged her loss to the big serving German in the previous year's second round of the Wimbledon Championships. Li lost to world No. 2, Maria Sharapova, in the quarterfinals, her first in their last four meetings, where the Chinese beat the Russian all in straight sets.
Li reached the final of the Italian Open, defeating Iveta Benešová, Chanelle Scheepers and Dominika Cibulková without dropping a set before receiving a walkover from Serena Williams in the semifinals. In the final she lost to Maria Sharapova in three thriller sets despite being a set up and leading 4–0 in the second and failing to convert a championship point in the final set. Li was seeded 7th at the French Open, where she was the defending champion. She began her title defence by defeating Sorana Cîrstea, Stéphanie Foretz and Christina McHale in the first three rounds before suffering a fourth round upset bid by qualifier Yaroslava Shvedova. She fell out of the world top ten due to her French Open result. Li lost to Sorana Cîrstea in the second round of Wimbledon – her first loss against the Romanian.
At the 2012 London Olympics, Li, seeded 10th, crashed out in the first round to Slovakian Daniela Hantuchová. Her poor performance caused her to drop out of the world top ten for the second time in the year following the conclusion of the Games. After the Olympics, Li announced that she and Carlos Rodríguez, coach of former world No. 1 and seven-time major winner Justine Henin, have commenced a coaching relationship.[33]
Li's next tournament was the Rogers Cup, where she made it all the way to the final. She received a first round bye before seeing off home crowd favourite, Eugenie Bouchard, in the second round. In the third round, she fended off world No. 9, Sara Errani, and ended the hopes of Agnieszka Radwańska rising to No. 1 in the rankings by beating her in the quarterfinals. In the semifinals, Li rallied to come back from a 5–1 deficit in the third set to overcome Lucie Šafářová before losing to Petra Kvitová in the final. After the tournament she returned to the world top ten at No. 9.
At the Cincinnati Open, Li had a first round bye before eliminating Sorana Cîrstea in the second round, avenging her loss to the Romanian in the second round of the Wimbledon Championships. In the third round Li proved to be too strong for Johanna Larsson and in the quarterfinals she convincingly defeated world No. 3 and top seed, Agnieszka Radwańska, in a match where Li only surrendered two games. She then edged Venus Williams in the semifinal (bringing their head-to-head to 3–0), before defeating fifth seed Angelique Kerber in the final; her fifth win against Kerber in six matches. This was her first title since the 2011 French Open and the sixth career title. By winning this tournament, she moved up one place in the rankings to world No. 8.
At the US Open, Li cruised through the first two rounds with easy wins over Heather Watson and Casey Dellacqua. However, her tournament run came to an abrupt end in the next round, when she upset in three sets by rising British teenager Laura Robson, who had defeated three-time champion Kim Clijsters in the previous round. This result meant that this was her first season since 2008 in which she failed to reach the quarterfinal stage at a Grand Slam tournament.
Li then travelled to Tokyo to participate in the Pan Pacific Open. She received a bye in the first round, and won her second round match against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova to book a meeting with former world No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki in the third round. She won the first set, but eventually lost the match. Her exit from the tournament meant that her chances of participating in the upcoming 2012 WTA Tour Championships depended on her performance at the China Open. Li won the first round match against Francesca Schiavone. In the second round she recorded her first victory against Russian Nadia Petrova after six previous losses, who was coming off a title run at the Pan Pacific Open a week ago. She played compatriot Peng Shuai in the third round for a place in the quarters and emerged victorious in a topsy-turvy three set match lasting 2 hours and 28 minutes. In the quarterfinals, she faced defending champion Agnieszka Radwańska and played some high-quality tennis to defeat her for the third time this season. She lost her semifinal to Maria Sharapova; the Russian reeling off eight consecutive games to take the match. With this performance, she became the eighth and final player to qualify for the season-ending championships.
For the 2012 WTA Tour Championships, Li was placed in the red group along with Victoria Azarenka, Serena Williams and Angelique Kerber. She played Serena Williams in her opening match and lost in two sets after failing to capitalise on her 4–1 first set lead. She defeated Angelique Kerber in her second match before losing to Azarenka in her third match; in the latter match, she had served for the first set at 5–4, but was broken and lost the set in a tie-break. This was the final match of her 2012 season, finishing the year ranked world No. 7.
On 29 December 2012, Li beat Victoria Azarenka in an annual exhibition event in Hua Hin, Thailand.
2013: Second Australian Open final, return to top four & year-end No. 3
[edit]Li commenced her season at the first edition of the Shenzhen Open. She cruised to the final with straight-sets defeats over Mandy Minella, Julia Cohen, Bojana Jovanovski and Peng Shuai, putting her in prime position to claim her seventh WTA title. Li saw off 5th seed Klára Zakopalová in three sets in the final to claim her first title of 2013 and seventh of her career.
Li next played at the Sydney International, at which she made consecutive finals the two previous years, winning in 2011. She was pushed to the limit by Christina McHale but had little trouble with Ayumi Morita. She met young American Madison Keys in the quarterfinals who proved to be a tougher challenge, with Li prevailing in three tight sets to book a semifinal showdown with world No. 4, Agnieszka Radwańska. Li looked the winner in the early stages of the match, but somewhat faltered, producing a high number of unforced errors which handed Radwańska the first set. She saved four match points on Radwańska's serve in the ninth game of the second set and three on her own serve in the tenth game. However, eventually she succumbed to the pressure and a half-volley into the net sealed the win for Radwańska in an hour and 32 minutes, putting an end to Li's Sydney reign.
At the Australian Open, Li easily stormed through to the quarterfinals, where she faced world No. 4 Agnieszka Radwańska, who had not dropped a set during a 13-match winning streak. Li became the first player to defeat her this season and advanced to the semifinals where she ousted world No. 2, Maria Sharapova, in straight sets, who had only dropped a record-low nine games in the tournament. This marked Li's second Australian Open final appearance in three years, finishing runner-up to Kim Clijsters in 2011.[34] In the final, Li was hampered by injuries, falling over on two occasions. The first of which occurred at 1–3 in the second set, a fall that saw Li incur a 10-minute medical timeout. She fell over a second time after the Australia Day fireworks break, not only twisting her left ankle once more but also heavily knocking the rear of her head on the court, causing a momentary black-out. Despite being severely hindered in her movement, she continued playing but eventually lost the match in three sets to Victoria Azarenka.
The left ankle injury she sustained in the Australian Open decider forced her to withdraw from subsequent tournaments including the Qatar and Indian Wells Open, plus an exhibition match at the BNP Paribas Showdown in Hong Kong in which she was scheduled to play former world No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki.
After being sidelined for seven weeks, Li made a return to the competition at the Miami Open as the fifth seed. After a first round bye, she won her second round against Kiki Bertens in two quick sets without dropping serve in her first match since the Australian Open final. Next up she faced Varvara Lepchenko and Garbiñe Muguruza and defeated both in straight sets to set up a quarterfinal match against world No. 1 Serena Williams. Despite leading 5–2 in the second set and holding a set point on Williams' serve, she did not manage to find a way to capitalise and went on to lose the match in a tiebreak.
Li's next tournament was the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, the first bigger clay court event of the season. As the second seed, she received a bye in the first round. She swept past qualifier Mirjana Lučić-Baroni in the second round, setting up an encounter with Petra Kvitová in the quarterfinals. She disposed of Kvitová and then surprise semifinalist Bethanie Mattek-Sands both in straight sets to advance to the final for the first time, seeking her eighth career title. The final was a contest between her and Maria Sharapova, whose passage to the final included three three-set matches each lasting over three hours. She, however, handily defeated Li in just over 90 minutes, increasing her clay-court winning streak to 16 and avenging her Australian Open semifinal loss to Li earlier in the year.
Li was then stunned by lucky loser Madison Keys in the first round of the Madrid Open the following week, her first early tournament exit of the season. She returned to the Italian Open as the defending finalist. After a first round bye, she defeated Zheng Jie in straight sets then squared off with former doubles partner Jelena Janković, who defeated Li in a marathon match in which Li's inconsistency proved to her be undoing, committing 62 unforced errors. As one of the favourites, Li's quest for a second Grand Slam title began when she played Anabel Medina Garrigues in the opening round of Roland Garros, winning in two sets. Her struggles on clay continued, however, as she fell victim to Bethanie Mattek-Sands, ranked 67th, in a rain-interrupted second round match – losing in three sets, bringing her disappointing clay-court season to a close.
Li got her grass-court season off to a winning start by beating Alizé Cornet in the first round of the Eastbourne International, at which she was seeded second. A quarterfinal berth against Elena Vesnina was secured after her second round opponent Marion Bartoli pulled out due to a viral illness. The Russian ended Li's run and went on to win the tournament.
Li was the sixth seed at Wimbledon. She defeated Michaëlla Krajicek in the first round and Simona Halep in a rollercoaster three set match. In the third round against the No. 32 seed Klára Zakopalová, Li lost the first set, but won the match in three sets after Zakopalová failed to serve out the match. In the fourth round she dispatched Roberta Vinci to secure a spot in the last eight for the third time. After the match, she revealed that the secret to her success was the slice practice that her husband Jiang Shan gave her prior to the match. In her quarterfinal clash with Agnieszka Radwańska, she was leading 5–4 in the first set and was a set point up when she hit an ace that was wrongly called out. Li didn't challenge the call, and lost the set in a tiebreak where she was also leading 5–3. She mounted a comeback to win the second set, coming from 4–2 down. A brief rain delay halted proceedings at the beginning of the third. When play resumed, it was Radwańska who raced to a 5–2 lead. Li saved eight match points, but eventually lost the match in 2 hours 47 minutes.[35]
Li then competed at the Rogers Cup in Toronto, at which she made the final last year. After enjoying a bye in the first round, she defeated Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in two easy sets, followed by hard-fought wins over in-form players Ana Ivanovic (in a final set tie-break, after surviving 2–5) and Dominika Cibulková to reach the semifinals, where she lost to Sorana Cîrstea.[36] At the San Diego Open, she notched wins over Lauren Davis and Angelique Kerber before receiving a walkover from Agnieszka Radwańska in the quarterfinals after the Pole pulled out for personal reasons. In her semifinal against Serena Williams, she was broken when serving for both sets and was beaten by the eventual champion.[citation needed]
Seeded fifth at the US Open, she defeated Olga Govortsova and Sofia Arvidsson in straight sets and then got revenge on Laura Robson in the third round, the same stage where Robson defeated her last year. She then breezed past former world No. 1 Jelena Janković in straight sets. Upon defeating Janković, she reached the quarterfinals of the US Open for only the second time in her career. There she beat Ekaterina Makarova to reach her first US Open semifinal (as well as it being the first time a Chinese woman made the US Open semifinals) before Serena Williams again ended her run in straight sets, needing six match points to do so.
She then headed to Beijing to take part in the 2013 China Open as the home crowd favourite, defeating Daniela Hantuchová, Bojana Jovanovski and Sabine Lisicki in straight sets before falling to Petra Kvitová in the quarterfinals.
On 27 September, Li qualified for the 2013 WTA Tour Championships. She won all three of her round robin matches against Sara Errani, Jelena Janković and Victoria Azarenka, thus qualifying for the semifinals for the first time. Upon beating Petra Kvitová her ranking rose to a new career high of world No. 3, the highest-ever ranking for a female tennis player from an East Asian and Asian country and overtaking Maria Sharapova and Agnieszka Radwańska. In the final, she made a strong start, blasting ten winners en route to winning the first set against Serena Williams, but ran out of gas at three-all in the second, losing nine games in a row to lose the match.
2014: Australian Open champion and retirement
[edit]Li started her 2014 season as the defending champion at the Shenzhen Open. She defeated wildcard and former world No. 2 Vera Zvonareva in the first round, Nadiia Kichenok in the second round, Monica Niculescu in the quarterfinals and Annika Beck in the semifinals to reach her first final of the year and setting up the second all-Chinese final in WTA history in the process, where she defeated Peng Shuai in straight sets to win her eighth career singles title.[37] This marked the first time in Li's career where she had successfully defended a title of any kind.
At the Australian Open, Li competed as the fourth seed. She made quick work of current junior top-2 players Ana Konjuh and Belinda Bencic in the first two rounds. Having lost the first set against Lucie Šafářová, she fended off a match point when trailing 5–6 in the second, before rebounding in the tiebreak and decisive set to avoid the upset. She then cruised past Ekaterina Makarova, Flavia Pennetta, and Eugenie Bouchard to reach her third Australian Open final, where she defeated first-time major singles finalist and 20th seed, Dominika Cibulková, in straight sets to claim her first Australian Open title, thus becoming the first East Asian and Asian Australian Open champion and fourth woman to win the title after being match point down.[38][39]
Li extended her winning streak to thirteen consecutive matches by defeating Magdaléna Rybáriková in her opener at the Qatar Ladies Open. She then suffered her first loss of the season to qualifier Petra Cetkovská in a tight three set contest in the third round. After the tournament, Li reached a new career-high singles ranking of world No. 2.
Li's next scheduled event was the Indian Wells Open, where she was unable to compete the previous year due to injury. Seeded first at a Premier Mandatory event for the first time, she received a bye in the first round before registering straight set victories over countrywoman Zheng Jie, Karolína Plíšková and Aleksandra Wozniak en route to a quarterfinal clash with Dominika Cibulková, a rematch of the Australian Open final. Though Li committed 54 unforced errors, she prevailed in three sets and faced Flavia Pennetta in the semifinals. There, she was upset in straight sets by the 20th-seeded Italian and eventual champion.[40]
At the Miami Open, she received a first-round bye and walkover in the second round due to the withdrawal of Alisa Kleybanova. Li defeated Madison Keys, Carla Suárez Navarro and Caroline Wozniacki en route to a semifinal against Dominika Cibulková, who was projected to make her top-ten debut with her previous win over Agnieszka Radwańska. Li improved her perfect record against the Slovakian to 7–0 and booked her place in her first Premier Mandatory final. In a final featuring the world's top-2 players, Li raced to a 5–2 lead in the first set and wasted a set point, before her opponent, world No. 1 Serena Williams, rallied to steal the set 7–5. Li only managed to win a single game in the second set.
Following a 21–3 start to the season, Li was forced out of the 2014 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix due to a left knee injury, where she was the finalist in 2013. She started her clay-court campaign at the Madrid Open, where she recorded wins over Kirsten Flipkens and Zheng Jie in the first two rounds. Li then battled past Sloane Stephens in three sets, and was again involved in a narrow three setter in her quarterfinal against Maria Sharapova, eventually succumbing to the Russian after taking the first set comfortably. At the Italian Open, Li beat Australians Casey Dellacqua (for her 500th career win) and Sam Stosur, before suffering her first loss to Sara Errani in the quarterfinals. After the match, Li told reporters that she had vomited less than 20 minutes prior to stepping onto the court due to food poisoning.[41] At the French Open, she was upset by French youngster Kristina Mladenovic in the opening round. This was also Li's earliest loss in the tournament. Li's first round loss contributed to three negative tennis records. Due to fellow 2014 Australian Open men's champion Stan Wawrinka losing in the first round as well, it was the first time in the history of tennis that the reigning Grand Slam winners were ousted in the opening round of their next major.[42] Due to top seed Serena Williams losing in the second round, it was the first time in Open Era history that the two top seeded women have lost before the third round at any Grand Slam tournament.[43] After No. 3 seed Agnieszka Radwańska lost in the third round, it was also the first time in the Open Era that none of the top-3 seeds advanced past the third round.
Li chose not to play a warm-up event before the third major of the season got underway. Her dip in form continued at the 2014 Wimbledon Championships, where she was eliminated in the third round by Barbora Záhlavová-Strýcová, having beaten Paula Kania and Yvonne Meusburger in the first and second rounds, respectively. In July, Li and coach Rodríguez parted ways.[44]
Having not played since Wimbledon due to a left knee injury which required surgery, Li announced her retirement from professional tennis on 19 September 2014. She ended her career ranked world No. 6 by the WTA.[45][46][47] That year she was named one of ESPNW's Impact 25.[48]
Popularity and endorsements
[edit]As the most successful East Asian, and Asian tennis player ever, Li has become one of the most well-known and marketable athletes in the world.[49] In 2013, Li appeared on the cover of Time magazine, which named her in its annual list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World; Li being one of only four athletes to be named on the list. Former world No. 1 Chris Evert writes: "Tennis has exploded in China. The country now has some 15 million tennis players; 116 million watched Li win the French Open. That kind of exposure is crucial to our sport, and it never would have happened without Li. At tournaments, I've seen her charm the crowds. When she smiles, everyone melts. She's just such a breath of fresh air. Her friendly on-court demeanour as well as her hilariously-witty post-match interviews brings a smile to everyone's face."[50][51][52] Li also appeared on the cover of 26 May 2014 edition of Time magazine, which featured an article titled "The Passion of Li Na", in which author Hannah Beech described Li as a world class sports idol, inspiring millions of Chinese people to regard her as an icon of pursuing independent character and freedom of thought.[53][54][55] In 2012, Forbes listed Li as No. 85 in the Forbes Celebrity 100 list. Li, along with the fellow tennis players Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams, were the only three female athletes who cracked the Top 100 earning list.[56] Li was ranked No. 5 and No.8 on the Forbes China Celebrity 100 list in 2012 and 2014 respectively.[57][58] Li is affectionately called "Big Sister Na" (Chinese: 娜姐; pinyin: Nàjiě) among Chinese communities and is considered a "strong, unbending and unyielding" role model. She has not only become a household name across China but a global icon, with her Sina Weibo microblogging having over 23 million followers as of October 2014.[59] Her perceived rebelliousness, exemplified by the rose tattoo on her chest and her previous run-ins with government sports programs, also helped boost her popularity.[49] On 15 April 2015, Li received the Laureus Academy Exceptional Achievement award at the Laureus World Sports Awards held in Shanghai.[60] She was also a nominee for the Laureus World Sportswoman of the Year award, alongside Serena Williams.
Nike was Li's clothing and footwear sponsor for many years, dating back to her early tennis career.[6] Li used Babolat Pure Drive GT rackets.[61] In 2009, Li was signed by IMG. She rose to fame after her Roland Garros triumph, and since had signed seven endorsements in multiple-year terms.[62][63][64] Her agent, Max Eisenbud, also managed to negotiate a deal allowing Li to wear other sponsors' patches on her Nike tennis shirt, something not usually permitted by the sportswear giant.[65][66]
In 2019, Peter Chan directed a biopic about Li Na's life, based on her autobiography, with a release date yet unknown.[67]
Playing style
[edit]Li was an aggressive baseliner whose game was founded upon her quick reflexes, athleticism and powerful groundstrokes that achieved precision, placement and depth. Li's crosscourt forehand tended to be her favourite shot, hit with great accuracy and pace, although her backhand was said to be the more consistent and reliable groundstroke, both of which she was known to unleash unpredictably to all areas of the court to dictate play. She boasted an exceptional backhand down-the-line, which was very effective at producing winners or setting up a weak reply from the opponent. Many tennis analysts considered Li one of the cleanest and hardest hitting players on tour, capable of overpowering and outgunning opponents from the baseline. Although she did not possess an overwhelmingly powerful serve, it was very well placed, earning her aces or unreturnables on occasion, however it often became a liability when she lost confidence under pressure, resulting in many double faults. Li employed a solid defensive game combining great footwork, speed and lateral movement. Her ability to turn defense into offense was one of her biggest assets as she hit well on the run and scrambled around the court with ease. Having been an accomplished doubles player, she was comfortable when playing at the net, often moving forward to take advantage of a short ball or finish off an extended rally. Li's inconsistency was cited as her main weakness throughout her career, as she was prone to streaky and erratic play accompanied by a high unforced error count. Since her shots were usually hit hard and flat with minimal topspin or slice, her game lacked variety. Her emotions on court have hurt her game during tight moments.[68] Under the tutelage of Carlos Rodríguez, Li adopted more of an all-round game, implementing a forehand with additional topspin[69] and frequent net approaches into her arsenal, as well as improved consistency, mental stability,[70] mobility and coordination.[71]
Rivalries
[edit]Li vs. Sharapova
[edit]Li Na had a see-saw rivalry with Maria Sharapova, with the latter winning their first five matches dating back to 2005, including Li's Grand Slam debut at the 2005 Australian Open.[72] Li won her first match against Sharapova in the 2009 Birmingham semifinals, starting a series of four consecutive wins against Sharapova. Li beat Sharapova again in Birmingham in 2010, this time in the final, and in the semifinals of the 2011 French Open, on her way to winning her maiden Grand Slam. At the Year-end Championships later that year, Li defeated Sharapova in the round robin stage. In 2012, Li and Sharapova met three times, with Sharapova winning all three of their matches, the most notable being the final of the clay-court tournament in Rome. Li won the first set and looked headed for victory when she went 4–0 up in the second due to an effectively aggressive gameplan which saw her take 15 of 17 points. With victory nearing Li suddenly saw her accuracy shatter and 24 unforced errors let Sharapova back into the match to eventually take a three set win over Li.[73] They met again in the 2013 Australian Open semifinals, where Li achieved her most notable victory over Sharapova, winning in straight sets and giving up just four games (Sharapova had lost just nine entering the match). A few months later at the 2013 Porsche Grand Prix Tennis in Stuttgart, Sharapova defended her title by defeating Li in the final. The pair was involved in another three set battle in the 2014 Mutua Madrid Open quarterfinals, where Sharapova eventually triumphed even though Li was up a set and a break. Sharapova led Li in the head-to-head 10–5.[74]
Li vs. Radwańska
[edit]Li and Agnieszka Radwańska first played each other in 2009. Li led the head-to-head 6–5.[75] After their first four matches in 2009 and 2010 the head-to-head was even at 2–2. This included a victory each at the Wimbledon Championships; Radwańska winning in 2009 and Li in 2010. In 2012 Li and Radwańska met 4 times, with Li taking 3 victories. Li lost their meeting in the Stuttgart quarter-final in three sets, but dominated in Montréal, Cincinnati and Beijing. Li prevented Radwańska from taking the world No. 1 ranking off Victoria Azarenka with the first two victories, whilst she also ended her title defence in Beijing, securing the eighth and final place in the year-end championships in the process.
In 2013 both won the first tournament they entered. They were both undefeated when they met each other in the semifinals of their second tournament of the year at Sydney. Radwańska beat Li and eventually won the tournament. This was Li's first defeat of 2013, while Radwańska remained unbeaten. In the 2013 Australian Open quarterfinals, Li handed Radwańska her first loss of the season. They met again at Wimbledon in the quarterfinals, with Radwańska eking out a close three set win.
Li vs. Clijsters
[edit]Li and Kim Clijsters formed a well-known rivalry, having met eight times between 2006 and 2012. Clijsters won their head-to-head 6–2, including 4–0 at Grand Slams.[76] Li's maiden Grand Slam quarterfinal was at Wimbledon in 2006 in which she was defeated by the second-seeded Clijsters in straight sets. Li's second Grand Slam quarterfinal was at the 2009 US Open, and again it was against Clijsters, who had recently launched a comeback after starting a family, who prevailed in straight sets.
One of Li's two wins against Clijsters came in the final of the 2011 Sydney International. Li had trailed 0–5 in the first set before coming back to win the set in a tiebreak en route to complete a remarkable straight-sets victory and deny Clijsters a third Sydney title.[77] They would meet again only two weeks later, in the final of the 2011 Australian Open, a match which had historical proportions because Li would have become the first player from an Asian country to win a Grand Slam singles title or Clijsters would win her first non-US Open Grand Slam title. Both players came into the match having defeated the world's top two players in the semifinals: Li over Caroline Wozniacki and Clijsters over Vera Zvonareva. After Li took the first set, she proceeded to lose the next two, giving Clijsters her only Australian Open title.[78]
The pair met again at the same tournament twelve months later, this time in the fourth round. Similar to the previous year's final, Li won the first set before eventually losing in three sets; this time around she had held four match points in the second-set tiebreak.[79]
Li vs. Azarenka
[edit]List of all matches
No. | Year | Tournament | Surface | Round | Winner | Score | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | 2008 | Gold Coast | Hard | F | Li | 4–6, 6–3, 6–4 | N/A |
2. | 2009 | Tokyo | Hard | QF | Li | 7–6(9–7), 4–6, 7–6(7–4) | 2:11 |
3. | 2010 | Montreal | Hard | R16 | Azarenka | 6–3, 6–3 | 1:24 |
4. | 2011 | Australian Open | Hard | R16 | Li | 6–3, 6–3 | 1:24 |
5. | 2011 | French Open | Clay | QF | Li | 7–5, 6–2 | 1:29 |
6. | 2011 | Istanbul | Hard | RR | Azarenka | 6–2, 6–2 | N/A |
7. | 2012 | Sydney | Hard | F | Azarenka | 6–2, 1–6, 6–3 | 1:56 |
8. | 2012 | Madrid | Clay | QF | Azarenka | 3–6, 6–3, 6–3 | 1:54 |
9. | 2012 | Istanbul | Hard | RR | Azarenka | 7–6(7–4), 6–3 | 1:39 |
10. | 2013 | Australian Open | Hard | F | Azarenka | 4–6, 6–4, 6–3 | 2:40 |
11. | 2013 | Istanbul | Hard | RR | Li | 6–2, 6–1 | N/A |
Li and Victoria Azarenka met eleven times between 2008 and 2013.[80] Azarenka led the head-to-head 6–5 overall, and 2–1 in championship matches, but Li led 2–1 in Grand Slam matches.
Their first meeting was in the final of the 2008 Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts tournament (which has since been renamed the Brisbane International), which Li Na won in three sets after Azarenka had won the first.[81] Azarenka's first victory over Li was in the third round of the 2010 Rogers Cup. They met three times in 2011, two of which were at Grand Slams, with Li winning on both occasions, before Azarenka won their third meeting at the 2011 WTA Tour Championships, en route to reaching the final.
They met a further three times in 2012, with Azarenka winning each time. They met in the final of the Sydney International, where the Belarusian won in three sets after breaking the defending champion Li at 4–3 in the decider.[82] Azarenka was also victorious in their meetings at Madrid and the year-end championships.
Their most notable meeting to date was in the final of the 2013 Australian Open. Both players entered the championship match with one Grand Slam title each (Azarenka won the 2012 Australian Open, whilst Li won the 2011 French Open), and in very good form, with Azarenka only conceding one set during the tournament and Li not having dropped a set and also having defeated two top-4 players (Agnieszka Radwańska and Maria Sharapova) en route. After Li won the first set, she suffered serious head and ankle injuries and eventually lost in three sets.[83]
Their last meeting at the 2013 WTA Tour Championships was a lopsided affair, with Li recording a straight sets win and losing just three games in the process.[84]
Career statistics
[edit]Grand Slam tournament finals
[edit]Singles: 4 (2 titles, 2 runner-ups)
[edit]Result | Year | Championship | Surface | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss | 2011 | Australian Open | Hard | Kim Clijsters | 6–3, 3–6, 3–6 |
Win | 2011 | French Open | Clay | Francesca Schiavone | 6–4, 7–6(7–0) |
Loss | 2013 | Australian Open | Hard | Victoria Azarenka | 6–4, 4–6, 3–6 |
Win | 2014 | Australian Open | Hard | Dominika Cibulková | 7–6(7–3), 6–0 |
Olympic medal matches
[edit]Singles: 1
[edit]Result | Year | Championship | Surface | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4th place | 2008 | Summer Olympics Beijing, China | Hard | Vera Zvonareva | 0–6, 5–7 |
Grand Slam performance timelines
[edit]W | F | SF | QF | #R | RR | Q# | P# | DNQ | A | Z# | PO | G | S | B | NMS | NTI | P | NH |
Singles
[edit]Tournament | 2000 | 2001 | ... | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | SR | W–L | Win % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australian Open | A | LQ | A | 3R | 1R | 4R | 3R | A | SF | F | 4R | F | W | 1 / 9 | 34–8 | 81% |
French Open | A | A | A | A | 3R | 3R | A | 4R | 3R | W | 4R | 2R | 1R | 1 / 8 | 20–7 | 74% |
Wimbledon | A | LQ | A | A | QF | A | 2R | 3R | QF | 2R | 2R | QF | 3R | 0 / 8 | 19–8 | 70% |
US Open | LQ | A | A | 1R | 4R | A | 4R | QF | 1R | 1R | 3R | SF | A | 0 / 8 | 17–8 | 68% |
Win–loss | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–2 | 9–4 | 5–2 | 6–3 | 9–3 | 11–4 | 14–3 | 9–4 | 16–4 | 9–2 | 2 / 33 | 90–31 | 74% |
Doubles
[edit]Tournament | 2000 | 2001 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | SR | W–L |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australian Open | A | 1R | A | 2R | 2R | 1R | 0 / 4 | 2–4 |
French Open | Absent | 2R | 2R | A | 0 / 2 | 2–2 | ||
Wimbledon | Absent | 2R | Absent | 0 / 1 | 1–1 | |||
US Open | 2R | A | 3R | 1R | Absent | 0 / 3 | 3–3 | |
Win–loss | 1–1 | 0–1 | 2–1 | 3–4 | 2–2 | 0–1 | 0 / 10 | 8–10 |
Personal life
[edit]Parents
[edit]Li Na was born on 26 February 1982 in downtown Wuhan, Hubei. Her grandfather Li Longli was a sports teacher at the Baoxing Street Elementary School, Hankow.[85][86] Her father Li Shengpeng (李盛鵬, 1957–1996[87]), from Hanyang County, Hubei,[88] briefly made it to the Hubei provincial badminton team but had his sports career halted when he was sent to the countryside during the Down to the Countryside Movement of the Cultural Revolution. Li Shengpeng past his peak level when he returned from the countryside and worked as a sales rep in the state-owned Yangtze Metal Works Factory in Wuhan.[89] He died from a rare cardiovascular disease when Li Na was fourteen.[87][13]
Li Na's maternal grandparents and her mother, all from Xinhua County, Hunan, used to live in Port Baoqing in Wuhan, a neighborhood historically resided by the river shipping clique from Xinhua County.[90][88] Her mother Li Yanping (李豔萍, 1957–) worked at the Wuhan Yangtze Ferry Company.[89] When Li Na was three years old, her mother took her to temporarily live with her maternal grandmother in Baixi, Xinhua, Hunan.[90]
Marriage
[edit]Li and her husband, Jiang Shan, have two children.[91] On 19 January 2015, Li announced that she and her husband were expecting their first child.[92] She gave birth to her daughter Alisa in June 2015.[93] Her second child, a boy, was born on 23 December 2016.[94] She often refers to her husband as 'Dennis'.[67]
In December 2019, Li purchased a Hudson Yards apartment in New York City.[95] She also owns an apartment in Boston, Massachusetts.[96]
See also
[edit]- Tennis in China
- List of female tennis players
- List of Grand Slam women's singles champions
- Tennis performance timeline comparison (women)
References
[edit]- ^ "Career Prize Money Leaders" (PDF). WTA Tour. Retrieved 30 January 2024.
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Li Na". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2016-12-04.
- ^ Johnson, Christopher (26 January 2011). "One-on-one with Chinese tennis ace Li Na". CNN. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ^ Branch, John (8 September 2009). "China's Na Li Finds a Taste of Home in New York". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
- ^ Assael, Shaun (22 April 2014). "For self or for country". ESPN. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
- ^ a b "Jeremy Lin, Li Na and Xiang Liu show Nike has eye for talent". Wantchinatimes.com. 17 April 2012. Archived from the original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Wertheim, Jon (26 May 2014). "Words with...Li Na: A sit-down interview with China's tennis star". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Nguyen, Courtney (19 September 2014). "The best of Li Na quotes: Funny, witty and memorable". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ a b Bhattacharya, Abheek; Zhong, Raymond (27 August 2011). "For the Love of Prize Money". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ a b 李娜自曝当年退役缘由 称:余丽桥不懂得表扬队员. 武汉晚报 (in Chinese). 10 October 2010. Archived from the original on 5 July 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- ^ a b 李娜—09中国网球公开赛参赛选手简介. Yahoo China (in Chinese). 2 October 2009. Archived from the original on 20 April 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- ^ a b 网易 (29 January 2011). 个性李娜单飞后屡获成功 映射举国体制之尴尬. 163.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- ^ a b Larmer, Brook (22 August 2013). "Li Na, China's Tennis Rebel". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Powell, Sian (21 December 2014). "Match points". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
- ^ a b c "Li Na: Taking Chinese tennis to the top". CNN. 17 February 2010. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Dyer, Geoff (28 January 2011). "Li Na serves an ace by flying solo". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- ^ 分析:李娜单飞的意义. Financial Times Chinese. 28 January 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
- ^ "Li Na tops Francesca Schiavone for title". ESPN. 4 June 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
- ^ 1400万奖金 李娜只带走840万 (in Chinese). Xinhua News. 28 January 2014. Archived from the original on March 26, 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Olympics, Special. "Special Olympics Announces Chinese Tennis Player Li Na as Global Ambassador". www.prnewswire.com (Press release).
- ^ Nguyen, Courtney (11 February 2014). "Li Na offers candid, revealing look at historic career in autobiography". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ a b c "FACTBOX – Tennis – The rise of China's women". Reuters UK. 19 September 2014. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ Women's Tennis Association (3 January 2008). "Safina's Golden Reign Comes To An End". Women's Tennis Association. Archived from the original on 7 January 2008. Retrieved 3 January 2008.
- ^ "Li defeats Clijsters to take women's singles". Archived from the original on 2011-01-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ Clarey, Christopher (29 January 2011). "Clijsters, While Not at Her Best, Is Still Too Much for Li". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na's honesty earns locals' backing for Azarenka showdown". The Independent. 25 January 2013. Archived from the original on 2022-06-14. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Cambers, Simon (6 June 2011). "Li Na of China keeps feet on ground after historic French Open victory". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 7 June 2011.
- ^ "China hails Li Na's French Open win as source of pride". TSN. 4 June 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na – From an athlete in the shadows to a new national hero". Thinking Chinese. 5 June 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Although Li is the first Chinese national to have won a Grand Slam singles event, she is not the first ethnic Chinese individual to do so. That distinction belongs to Michael Chang, a Chinese American who won the 1989 French Open.
- ^ "French Open champ Li loses to Lisicki at Wimbledon". The Seattle Times. 23 June 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
- ^ Waterson, James (30 June 2011). "Rafael Nadal And Li Na Nominated For Two ESPY Awards". Tennisnow.com. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Chintapalli, Bobby (18 August 2012). "Carlos Rodriguez opens up about teaming up with Li Na". USA Today. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "China Media Hail Li Na as Resurgent Champion at Australian Open". Bloomberg. 24 January 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ O'Shannessy, Craig (3 July 2013). "A Challenge Not Taken, a Match Not Won". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Rogers Cup: Sorana Cirstea beats Li Na to make final". Toronto Star. 10 August 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na overcomes Peng to defend Shenzhen Open title". Reuters. 4 January 2014. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ Lucas, Dan (25 January 2014). "Li Na wins Australian Open final against Dominika Cibulkova – as it happened". Guardian UK. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
- ^ Newbery, Piers (25 January 2014). "Li Na beats Dominika Cibulkova to win Australian Open final". BBC Sport. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
- ^ Nguyen, Courtney (15 March 2014). "Flavia Pennetta stuns Li Na, will face Aga Radwanska in Indian Wells final". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Errani upsets Li to reach Rome semi-finals". ESPN. 16 May 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Chase, Chris (27 May 2014). "Li Na and Stan Wawrinka made the wrong kind of history at the French Open". USA Today. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Serena Williams and older sister Venus both lose in 2nd round of French Open". Fox News. 28 May 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na, Carlos Rodriguez part ways". ESPN. 3 July 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
- ^ "Li Na Announces Retirement". WTA. 19 September 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Rothenberg, Ben (18 September 2014). "Li Na, Two-Time Major Winner, Is Retiring With Knee Woes". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na Unveils Next Phase Of Career". wtatennis.com. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "2014 espnW Impact 25". Archived from the original on December 16, 2014.
- ^ a b Cheese, Caroline (25 May 2012). "Courting China: Li Na leaps up sport's rich list". CNN. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Nguyen, Courtney (18 April 2013). "Li Na on Time Magazine cover, named one of 100 most influential people". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on 2 May 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "The 2013 TIME 100 Cover Shots". Time. 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Evert, Chris (18 April 2013). "The 2013 TIME 100 List - Li Na". Time. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Beech, Hannah (15 May 2014). "The Meaning of Li Na". Time. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ Soong, Kelyn (16 May 2014). "Chinese tennis star Li Na will be on Time magazine cover". The Washington Post. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ Hou, Arnold (22 May 2014). "Li Na Enters SportsPro's Most Marketable Athletes List". womenofchina.cn. Archived from the original on 28 March 2020. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ "Six tennis stars make the Forbes Celebrity 100 list". Tennisworldusa.org. 2 July 2014. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Flannery, Russell (21 May 2012). "Taiwan Singer Jay Chou Tops The 2012 Forbes China Celebrity List". Forbes. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ Flannery, Russell (6 May 2014). "Actress Fan Bingbing Repeats At No. 1 On New Forbes China Celebrity List". Forbes. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na hailed as China' s new idol". Xinhua. 5 June 2011. Archived from the original on June 10, 2011. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ^ "Li Na Honored At Laureus Awards". 15 April 2015.
- ^ "Babolat Serial Player Wanted". Babolat. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Moore, Malcolm (2 August 2011). "Li Na poised to become world's top-earning female athlete". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Harwood, Jonathan (2 August 2011). "China's Li Na set to earn more than Maria Sharapova". The Week. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Flannery, Russell (6 June 2011). "Win By China's Li Na To Boost Sponsors, May Spur Spending On Other Stars". Forbes. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Rossingh, Danielle (31 July 2011). "Li Na Nears Top Earner Sharapova With $42 Million in Endorsement Contracts". Bloomberg. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Wilson, Bill (22 June 2014). "Wimbledon 2014: Li Na courts fans and sponsors". BBC News. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ a b "Li Na: Tennis player wants the movie about her life to inspire women". CNN. 19 April 2019. Retrieved 2020-12-29.
- ^ Balym, Todd (26 January 2013). "Australian Open women's finalists Victoria Azarenka and Li Na put mind over matter". The Herald Sun. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
- ^ Rothenberg, Ben (27 August 2012). "After Replacing Coach, Li Finds Quick Success". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ^ Thomas, Louisa (28 January 2013). "Drama Queens". Grantland. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ^ Chintapalli, Bobby (30 August 2013). "Carlos Rodriguez on Li Na: 'A lot of improvement'". USA Today. Retrieved 27 September 2014.
- ^ "Sharapova breezes through to fourth round". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 21 January 2005. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Sharapova beats Li to retain Rome title". USA Today. 20 May 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- ^ "Head to Head with M. Sharapova". wtatennis.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2013. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
- ^ "Head to Head with A. Radwanska". wtatennis.com. Archived from the original on 8 December 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
- ^ "Head to Head Statistics: K. Clijsters und N. Li Year up to 2014". Tennis Datenbank. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li upsets Clijsters in Sydney final". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 January 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Clijsters claims Open crown". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 30 January 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Australian Open 2012: Kim Clijsters survives close shave against Li Na". Mirror.co.uk. 22 January 2012. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
- ^ "Head to Head Statistics: V. Azarenka und N. Li Year up to 2014". Tennis Datenbank. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Li storms to victory in GC Hardcourts final". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 5 January 2008. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "Azarenka victorious in Sydney decider". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 13 January 2012. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ Briggs, Simon (26 January 2013). "Australian Open final 2013: Victoria Azarenka retains title after tense battle with brave Li Na". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
- ^ "Li Na defeats Victoria Azarenka to qualify for WTA Championships semi-finals". ABC Grandstand Sport. 26 October 2013. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
- ^ "中网球童选拔李娜母校进行 娜爷爷寄语下一代". 腾讯体育. 2011-06-28.
- ^ 王际凯 (2011-06-05). "亲情浇灌娜朵奇葩 爷爷爸爸把她领进体育门". 楚天金报.
- ^ a b 她最爱吃妈妈煮的面. 青年报 (in Chinese). 31 January 2011. Archived from the original on 8 June 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
- ^ a b "网友争夺李娜籍贯 记者多方求证李娜确系湖北人". 湖北日报. 2011-06-08. Archived from the original on 2011-06-11.
- ^ a b 李晶 (2011-06-21). "李娜母亲讲述女儿成长史 坎坷网球路辛酸事颇多". 成都商报.
- ^ a b "李娜 新化人的骄傲". 新化在线. 2011-08-07.
- ^ Rossingh, Danielle (2019-04-19). "Li Na: Tennis player wants the movie about her life to inspire women". CNN. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
- ^ "Retired Champion Li Na Announces She's Pregnant". ABC News. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
- ^ "Li Na shares delivery-room photo of newborn daughter, Alisa". USA Today. 3 June 2015. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
- ^ "2 Grand Slams und jetzt auch 2 Kinder". spox.com. 2016-12-24. Retrieved 2016-12-26.
- ^ lovetennis (2020-01-11). "Li Na Enjoying Retirement with $10 Million New York Apartment Purchase - Tennis News". Love Tennis. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
- ^ Prakash (2020-01-11). "Li Na Purchases Apartment in New York for $10.6 Million". Tennis World USA. Retrieved 2024-05-07.
Further reading
[edit]- Li, Na (2014). Li Na: My Life. Penguin. ISBN 978-0143800057.
External links
[edit]- Li Na at the Women's Tennis Association
- Li Na at the International Tennis Federation
- Li Na at the Billie Jean King Cup
- Li Na at Wimbledon
- Li Na at ESPN.com
- Li Na at Olympedia
- Li Na at the Chinese Olympic Committee (archived, also available in Chinese)
- Li Na on Weibo (in Chinese)
- Li Na
- 1982 births
- Living people
- Asian Games bronze medalists for China
- Asian Games gold medalists for China
- Asian Games medalists in tennis
- Australian Open (tennis) champions
- Chinese autobiographers
- Chinese female tennis players
- French Open champions
- Grand Slam (tennis) champions in women's singles
- Huazhong University of Science and Technology alumni
- International Tennis Hall of Fame inductees
- Olympic tennis players for China
- Tennis players from Wuhan
- Tennis players at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Tennis players at the 2006 Asian Games
- Tennis players at the 2008 Summer Olympics
- Tennis players at the 2010 Asian Games
- Tennis players at the 2012 Summer Olympics
- Women autobiographers
- Writers from Wuhan
- Medalists at the 2006 Asian Games
- Medalists at the 2010 Asian Games
- Summer World University Games medalists in tennis
- FISU World University Games gold medalists for China
- Medalists at the 2001 Summer Universiade