Amanda Anisimova
Amanda Anisimova – WTA Tennis Player
Personal Info
Born on 31 August 2001 in Freehold, NJ, USA.
Nationality: United States of America.
WTA Rank (as of 23 August 2025): 9.
WTA Doubles Rank (as of 23 August 2025): [Not currently ranked / 386 career high].
Height: 5 ft. 11 in. (1.80 m).
Amanda Anisimova – Career Info
Singles Titles: 3 | Doubles Titles: 0
Matches Won: 142 | Matches Lost: 89
Highest WTA Rank: 7 (14 July 2025)
Highest Doubles Rank: 386 (24 June 2019)
Data last updated: 23 August 2025
Earnings
Total Career Prize Money: $8,695,146 USD (approx. €8,040,000)
Data last updated: 23 August 2025
Miscellaneous
Information compiled by tennis fans from official WTA and ITF sources.
-

LIVE WTA Rankings 2026 Before a Ball Has Been Struck in Indian Wells
Welcome to our LIVE WTA Rankings 2026 hub — updated as of March 2, 2026. This is your go-to source for the latest WTA rankings, featuring real-time updates on the current women’s tennis standings, ranking points, and Race to the WTA Finals. We update the list weekly — and more frequently during Grand Slams and…
-

Pegula and Svitolina Ignite Dubai: “What Jess Can Do, I Can Do Better,” Elina Must Have Thought
The semifinals of the WTA Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships delivered exactly what WTA elite tennis promises: pressure, precision, and the fall of favorites. Dubai Delivers Chaos — And Clarity Both the top seed and the No.2 seed were eliminated on Friday, leaving behind a final shaped not by ranking, but by resilience. Jessica Pegula…
-

Dubai Tennis Championships 2026 Tournament Centre: Results, Schedule & Daily Key Stats (WTA 1000)
Updated as of February 21. The Dubai Tennis Championships 2026 is the second headline WTA 1000 event on the Middle East Swing. This Tournament Centre tracks every result day by day, with scores updated regularly as the draw advances. What you’ll find here all weekEvery women’s singles score from February 13–21, updated round by round from…
-

Mirra Andreeva in Tears as Amanda Anisimova Ends Dubai Title Defense in Epic Quarterfinal
Under the Dubai night sky, the defending champion walked off in tears. Mirra Andreeva’s bid to retain her Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships crown ended in one of the most dramatic matches of the 2026 WTA season. After 2 hours and 40 minutes of razor-thin margins, Amanda Anisimova prevailed 2–6, 7–5, 7–6(4), denying the 18-year-old…
-

Mirra Andreeva Leads Dubai Drama as Rybakina Retires and Gauff Survives Thriller
Dubai does not whisper. It tests. It twists. It exposes. And on a day packed with tension, resilience, and sudden exits at the WTA 1000 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, defending champion Mirra Andreeva stood at the center of it all — imperfect, emotional, but still marching forward. Around her, chaos unfolded. A top seed…
-

Anisimova’s Doha Defense Ends Early as Pliskova Advances After Retirement
A Tough Ending to a Title Defense in Doha Defending a first WTA 1000 title is never straightforward, and for Amanda Anisimova, the challenge in Doha proved heavier than expected. The world No. 4 was forced to retire from her second-round match at the Qatar Open against former world No. 1 Karolina Pliskova, bringing an…
-

Australian Open 2026 WTA Results: Full Tennis Scores, Daily Highlights, Charts, Draw, and Key Stats (finished)
The Australian Open 2026 is one of the four biggest tournaments of the season. With the first day of the main draw upon us, all qualifying results are in and the early contenders have begun to separate themselves. This page is built to follow the tournament match by match, day by day, with results updated…
-

Pegula Breaks the Melbourne Barrier to Reach First Australian Open Semifinal
Jessica Pegula has finally kicked in a door that had refused to budge for three straight years. The world No.6 reached her third career Grand Slam semifinal — and her first outside the United States — by beating Amanda Anisimova 6–2, 7–6(1) in a tense Australian Open quarterfinal that demanded both control and nerve. Pegula,…
-

Anisimova Digs Deep to Break Xinyu Wang’s Impressive Resistance
Amanda Anisimova advanced to the Australian Open 2026 Round of 16 after a straight-sets win over Xinyu Wang. Here’s how the match was decided—and what it means ahead of her clash with Jessica Pegula. Anisimova’s Tiebreak Edge Decides a Hold-Heavy Opener The opening set was all about serve stability and patience, with neither Xinyu Wang…
-

Anisimova Turns Melbourne Into Familiar Territory as Stearns Is Swept Aside
Amanda Anisimova is starting to make the Australian Open feel like unfinished business. The world No.4 rolled past fellow American Peyton Stearns 6–1, 6–4 in just over 70 minutes, extending a Grand Slam run that now looks less like a streak and more like a statement. It was her 11th win across her last 17…
-

Anisimova Gets Down to Business in Melbourne, Then Lets Her Personality Breathe
Amanda Anisimova opened her Australian Open with the brisk efficiency of a contender who knows exactly why she is here — and with just enough humanity to remind everyone she is still enjoying the ride. A 6–3, 6–2 dismissal of Simona Waltert took barely an hour, but it revealed both the steel and looseness of…
-

Brisbane International 2026 Results: Full Match Scores, Daily Highlights and Key Stats (WTA 500)
If you’re looking for every score, every round, and every update from Brisbane, you’re in the right place. The Brisbane International launches the 2026 WTA season from January 4–11, and this page will track the tournament from the opening ball to the final point, with full women’s singles results updated daily. Played at the Queensland…
-

Australian Open 2026 Women’s Entry List and Draw: Seeds, Cutoff, Qualifying, Wildcards Explained
The Australian Open 2026 women’s singles entry list outlines which players are eligible to compete in the tournament’s main draw, how seeding is determined, where the direct acceptance cut-off sits, and how protected rankings, wildcards, and qualifying shape the final field. As of January 9, this list is fully updated from the official December 22…
-

Iga Swiatek’s 2025: A Wimbledon Crown, a Paris Fall, and the Strange Shape of No.2
Iga Swiatek spent 2025 living in the penthouse without quite owning it. She delivered the year’s most ruthless scoreline on the sport’s biggest lawn, lifted a hard-court title, and still watched her season repeatedly slip sideways at the moments when she normally tightens the screws. For a player built on control, 2025 was oddly full…
-

WTA 2026 Watch: Who Has the Least Ranking Pressure at the Start of the Season?
The WTA calendar has a habit of biting back. Ranking points earned in one blazing fortnight can turn into pressure twelve months later, and the opening weeks of 2026 will feel unforgiving for those defending deep runs from last season. But for a select group, January arrives with opportunity rather than anxiety. With minimal points…
-

Amanda Anisimova’s 2025: From the Margins to the Top 4, and Above the Curve
On Christmas Day of the WTA season assessments, after working through 36 others, we arrive at the Top 4. Amanda Anisimova earns that place not on reputation, but on evidence. She began 2025 ranked outside the elite conversation (No.36)and finished it as one of the tour’s most complete competitors, a player who survived momentum swings,…
-

Naomi Osaka’s 2025: From Rust to Queens of New York Again
Naomi Osaka didn’t come back to make up the numbers. She came back to test a simple, ruthless question: Can my A-game still bend the sport?By the end of 2025, the answer wasn’t a throwback fairytale, but something more interesting: a season in three acts where she rebuilt her base, re-learned the grind, and reminded…
-

“I knew I’d have to bust my ass, but I was ready for that” — Anisimova’s Year of Reinvention
Amanda Anisimova did not so much climb back to the top of women’s tennis as hammer her way through the ceiling. A season that began with quiet optimism ended with the most complete year of her career: two Grand Slam finals, two WTA-1000 trophies, and a return to the world’s top five. Not bad for…
-

America’s Power Season: How the US Turned Depth Into a 2025 WTA Trophy Avalanche
The WTA season ended with an unmistakable truth: if 2025 belonged to anyone, it belonged to the United States. Fourteen singles titles — more than double the next nation — told the story of a country whose depth finally translated into silverware rather than merely seedings. Jessica Pegula, the quiet commander of this resurgence, supplied…
-

Raducanu’s 2025: A Year Played on the Border Between Comeback and Consequence
Some seasons shout; Emma Raducanu’s 2025 whispered, crackled, and occasionally roared — often in the space of a single match. It was the year she finally stopped being a walking comeback story and started being a functioning tour player again, complete with real wins, real losses, and real expectations. The tennis was fuller, the engine…
-

Nominations for the WTA Awards 2025: A Year So Chaotic Even the Shortlists Feel Like Plot Twists
The WTA season winds to a close this week, which means one thing: it’s time for the sport’s annual ritual of corralling a year’s worth of brilliance, bruises and borderline madness into a tidy set of award categories. No fan votes, no popularity contests — just cold, committee-issued judgment. And in a season where Anisimova…
-

WTA Rankings After 2025 WTA Finals: The Pack Is Growling Louder
As of November 10, 2025, this Final WTA rankings capture the complete aftermath of the WTA Finals in Riyadh. Aryna Sabalenka Still Perched on Top of Women’s Tennis For a second year running, Aryna Sabalenka ends the season as queen of the WTA hill — battle-scarred, exasperated at times, but still the one holding the…
-

Sabalenka Survives Anisimova’s Fury — Now Faces Rybakina for 2025 Riyadh Supremacy
Aryna Sabalenka has stared down pressure all year — but few storms have blown quite like this one. Under the Riyadh lights, the World No.1 was forced to dig deeper than she has all week, outlasting Amanda Anisimova 6–3, 3–6, 6–3 to book her place in the WTA Finals championship match against Elena Rybakina. For…
-

WTA Finals 2025: Results (Updated) & Schedule of Play
The WTA Finals 2025 — the grand conclusion to the women’s tennis season — are set to light up Riyadh from November 1–8, 2025, bringing together the sport’s eight best performers for one final showdown of the year. Defending champion Coco Gauff returned to the desert aiming to retain her crown after her thrilling triumph…
-

WTA Finals Semifinal Preview & Prediction: Sabalenka and Anisimova — Enough Non-Fossil Power to Light Riyadh’s Grid
It’s not just a semifinal. It’s a collision of voltage. When Aryna Sabalenka and Amanda Anisimova meet under the Riyadh floodlights on Friday night, expect enough baseline energy to make the Saudi capital glow. Two of the game’s cleanest hitters — one a reigning World No. 1, the other the only debutante in this elite…
-

Amanda Anisimova Outlasts Iga Swiatek in Epic Battle to Book WTA Finals Semifinal Spot
In a high-caliber clash between two players of the same generation, Amanda Anisimova produced one of her finest performances of the season to defeat Iga Swiatek and book her spot in the WTA Finals semifinals in Riyadh. With Elena Rybakina already securing top position in the group, everything was still on the line for these…
-

Calm, Composed, and Coming Back: Anisimova’s Words Reflect Her Rise
Amanda Anisimova’s words after her first victory at the WTA Finals captured the mood perfectly — determined, honest, and quietly confident. “It’s pretty difficult to adjust, especially when you lose the first match,” she admitted, summing up the mental grind that defines the round-robin format.“It’s a new experience for me. It’s not easy, but I’m…
-

Anisimova Keeps Semifinal Hopes Alive with Comeback Win over Madison Keys
Amanda Anisimova staged an impressive comeback in the WTA Finals round-robin stage, battling past fellow American Madison Keys 4–6, 6–3, 6–2 to keep her semifinal hopes alive in her debut appearance at the season-ending championship. The world No. 4 turned the match around after dropping the opening set, showing composure and grit against the powerful…

