Ashley Harkleroad
 |
| Country |
United States |
| Residence |
Wesley Chapel, Florida, United States |
| Date of birth |
May 2, 1985 (1985-05-02) (age 24) |
| Place of birth |
Rossville, Georgia, United States |
| Height |
1.65 m (5 ft 5 in) |
| Turned pro |
(June 12, 2000) |
| Plays |
Right, (two-handed backhand) |
| Career prize money |
$1,009,244 |
| Singles |
| Career record |
213â137 |
| Career titles |
0 (8 ITF titles) |
| Highest ranking |
No. 39 (June 9, 2003) |
| Grand Slam results |
| Australian Open |
3rd Round (2007) |
| French Open |
3rd Round (2003) |
| Wimbledon |
2nd Round (2006) |
| US Open |
2nd Round (2003) |
| Doubles |
| Career record |
96â77 |
| Career titles |
0 (4 ITF titles) |
| Highest ranking |
No. 39 (January 29, 2005) |
| Last updated on: May 12, 2009. |
Ashley Harkleroad (born May 2, 1985), is an American tennis player. Born in Rossville, Georgia, Harkleroad reached a career-high ranking of No. 39 on June 9, 2003. As of May 2009 she isn't currently playing as she recently had a child. Her career prize money to date is $1,009,2441 Harkleroad was the first WTA Tennis Player to pose naked for the Mens Magazine Playboy.
Career
Ashley Harkleroad turned pro on June 12, 2000, and was quickly billed as the next American tennis superstar. Her debut was at the ITF tournament in Largo, Florida, in 1999. The following year she played her first WTA qualifying event in Miami, Florida and her first Grand Slam at the U.S. Open. In 2001, she returned to the same events while improving her status on the ITF Circuit. In 2002 she won her first tour matches, reaching the second round at San Diego, Hawaii, and Bratislava, where she made her first doubles semi-final with partner Maria Emilia Salerni. She ended 2002 in the top 200 for the first time.
Her breakthrough year was in 2003, when at Charleston she defeated three top 20 players at the time (No.16 Elena Bovina, No.19 Meghann Shaughnessy, and No.9 Daniela HantuchovĂĄ), losing just 11 games along the way to reach her first tour semifinal before losing to Justine Henin-Hardenne. She became the lowest-ranked semifinalist (No. 101) in the event's history since unranked Jennifer Capriati reached the finals in 1990.
After that performance, on April 14, 2003 she broke out from No. 101 to climb to a No.56 ranking. Subsequently she reached the semifinals again at Strasbourg and scored her second Top 10 win and second over Daniela HantuchovĂĄ at Roland Garros while reaching the 3rd round and for the second time winning past the first round at a grand slam. On June 9, 2003 she soared into the Top 50 at No. 39 and reached the final in doubles at the Japan Open in Tokyo.
In 2004, she made her career first Tour final (at Auckland) before losing to defending champion Eleni Daniilidou. For most of the 2005 season, Harkleroad sat out due to various injuries and an illness in the family, but the time she was on court was spent on the ITF Women's circuit winning 2 titles. She did however reach a tour doubles final at Quebec City.
2006
Harkleroad played her first main tour event since 2005 at Auckland, successfully qualifying for the main draw only to fall in the opening round. She failed to qualify at Sydney before reaching the second round of the Australian Open (as a qualifier) where she pushed world number 4 Maria Sharapova in a tough match. On her way she upset a higher ranked opponent- Shuai Peng of China. This performance saw Harkleroad break back into the top 100 at number 83. Harkleroad ended 2006 at #86 in Singles and #55 in Doubles.
2007
Ashley was selected for the USA in the Hopman Cup after Venus Williams withdrew. She and partner Mardy Fish went 0â3 in the event. Harkleroad pushed Tatiana Golovin to 3 sets before losing 3â6,6â4,3â6. Ashley lost 3â6,0â6 to Nadia Petrova and 6â3,4â6,4â6 to Alicia Molik. Harkleroad started out the main WTA season in Hobart, Tasmania. She lost in the first round to Austrian Sybille Bammer 7â6(2),6â1. Bammer eventually defeated Serena Williams in the quarterfinals. She lost to Daniela HantuchovĂĄ in the third round of the Australian Open 7â6 (6),5â7,3â6. In the previous rounds, she beat Meng Yuan of China 6â3,6â0 and upset 17th seeded German Anna-Lena Groenefeld 6â2,6â2. Ashley struggled in the clay court season and finished at Roland Garros in the second round losing to Venus Williams 1â6,6â7(8-10). Harkleroad was down 1â6,1â5 before rebounding and holding set points. During this match, Harkleroad received the fastest recorded women's main draw serve,2 a record which Venus Williams broke in the U.S. Open on August 28, 2007.3 In the grass court season, Harkleroad's worst, Ashley played the Liverpool International Tennis Tournament for the second straight year as her Wimbledon warm-up. In 2006, she lost in the final to Caroline Wozniacki. This year, she defeated Wozniacki in the final to win the event. Ashley lost to Roberta Vinci, a good grass-court player in the first round of Wimbledon. In the U.S. Open Series, Ashley failed to qualify at the Acura Classic but qualified in Los Angeles and reached the second round before falling to Roland Garros runner-up Ana IvanoviÄ 4â6,2â6. At the U.S. Open (tennis), Ashley fell to Ioana Raluca Olaru 5â7,6â1,4â6. Ashley will be playing for the first time since the U.S. Open in San Francisco, where she won $50,000 at the ITF challenger for the second consecutive year. Ashley ended the year by winning a $75,000 challenger in Pittsburgh and a $50,000 challenger in La Quinta back to back. She also ended the year ranked 67, her second highest year end to date. Ashley also won the doubles title in la Quinta with Christina Fusano. Ashley finished with a 29-20 record in singles and a 13-11 record in doubles for the 2007 season.
2008
Starting the year off as usual in Auckland, Ashley reached the second round, defeating 8th seed Ămilie Loit before losing to home-crowd wild card Marina Erakovic. Jetting to Hobart, Harkleroad had a banner tournament. Staying in Australia, Harkleroad played in Hobart after winning three matches to qualify. She defeated three top-100 players before bowing out in the Semi-Finals to top seed Vera Zvonareva. In the Australian Open, Ashley lost to 30th seed Virginie Razzano.
Harkleroad debuted with the Fed Cup team for the United States just two weeks later. Facing Germany, Harkleroad, Lindsay Davenport, Laura Granville, and Lisa Raymond made up the United States team. Davenport was upset in a tie, giving the Germans a 1â0 lead. Harkleroad crushed Tatjana Malek and Sabine Lisicki, both in straight sets to help the U.S. win 4â1 and becoming the tie's hero.
She then reached the final of the $75,000 ITF event in Midland where she was defeated by compatriot Laura Granville.
Her next tournament was the Pacific Life Open in Indian Wells. She upset Lucie Ĺ afĂĄĹovĂĄ and eighth seed Dinara Safina. She then lost to Agnieszka RadwaĹska in the fourth round in three sets 6â2 4â6 6â4. At the Sony Ericsson Open, she reached the third round after taking out the 23rd seed Virginie Razzano impressively 6â4 6â4, but lost to Elena Vesnina 4â6 7â5 4â6. While at the Sony Ericsson Open, a large cyst on one of her ovaries burst and she was sent to the hospital. She made it through the ordeal but had to lose one of her ovaries.
At the 2008 French Open, she lost 6â2 6â1 against tournament favorite Serena Williams in the first round.
At the 2008 Wimbledon Championships, she lost 6â4 6â3 against 2006 winner AmĂŠlie Mauresmo in the first round.
2010 Comeback Plans
Ashley has stated her intentions to be match ready and fit to play by February 2010. 4
Personal
Harkleroad started playing tennis at age four.5 She is currently coached by Chuck Adams and formerly coached by JosĂŠ Luis Clerc and Jay Berger. Her father, Danny, works in the printing industry and played college football at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. Her mother, Tammy, is a school teacher, and played college tennis at Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson, Tennessee. Ashley got the nickname 'Pebbles' while living in Flintstone, Georgia, a small town that has one traffic light. She lists her tennis aspiration as becoming a Top 10 pro with an eye on No.11. Ashley married ATP pro Alex Bogomolov, Jr. in December 2004 but they divorced in October 2006.5 She is currently engaged to former ATP Pro Chuck Adams. During US Open coverage on the USA network on August 29, 2008, commentator John McEnroe announced that Harkleroad is pregnant with Adams's child. She gave birth to a son, Charlie on March 30, 2009.[1]
US Playboy's first professional tennis player
After losing a tennis match to Serena Williams on May 25, 2008 at the French Open, Ashley told reporters she would appear in the August 2008 issue of Playboy, a decision she made while convalescing from ovarian cyst surgery in March, 2008. In an on the air interview, broadcast during the 2008 Wimbledon Championships, Ashley stated that Amanda Beard's 2007 pictorial was partly an inspiration for her own, but that her own layout was more risquĂŠ, presumably referring to the fact that her layout depicted full nudity, including pubic hair, while Beard's did not. She later appeared as the cover girl of the magazine, as well as in a four page full frontal nude pictorial,6 thus becoming the first professional tennis player after Vanessa Menga (Playboy Brazil 2001) to grace the pages of Playboy. 7
Titles
Singles wins (0 WTA, 8 ITF)
| Legend |
| Grand Slam (0) |
| WTA Championships |
| Tier I (0) |
| Tier II (0) |
| Tier III (0) |
| Tier IV & V (0) |
| ITF Tour (8) |
| No. |
Date |
Tournament |
Surface |
Opponent in the final |
Score |
| 1. |
July 7, 2002 |
ITF / Los Gatos, California, United States |
Hard |
Tzipi Obziler |
6â2,6â2 |
| 2. |
August 18, 2002 |
ITF / Bronx, New York, United States |
Hard |
Ä˝ubomĂra KurhajcovĂĄ |
6â1, 6â3 |
| 3. |
July 17, 2005 |
ITF / Louisville, Kentucky, United States |
Hard |
SĂŠverine BrĂŠmond |
4â6,7â5,6â0 |
| 4. |
August 7, 2005 |
ITF / Washington, D.C., United States |
Hard |
Olga Poutchkova |
6â2,6â1 |
| 5. |
October 15, 2006 |
ITF / San Francisco, California, United States |
Hard |
Clarisa FernĂĄndez |
6â2,6â3 |
| 6. |
October 14, 2007 |
ITF / San Francisco, California, United States |
Hard |
Sunitha Rao |
6â1,6â2 |
| 7. |
November 11, 2007 |
ITF / Pittsburgh, United States |
Hard |
Olga Poutchkova |
4â6,6â4,6â3 |
| 8. |
November 18, 2007 |
ITF / La Quinta, United States |
Hard |
StĂŠphanie Dubois |
6â3,7â6(8â6) |
Grand Slam Singles Timeline
| Tournament |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 |
Career Record |
| Australian Open |
A |
A |
A |
1R |
A |
2R |
3R |
1R |
3â4 |
| French Open |
A |
A |
3R |
2R |
A |
2R |
2R |
1R |
5â5 |
| Wimbledon |
A |
A |
1R |
1R |
2R |
1R |
1R |
1R |
1â6 |
| U.S. Open |
1R |
1R |
2R |
A |
1R |
1R |
1R |
A |
1â6 |
| Yearly Record |
0â1 |
0â1 |
3â3 |
1â3 |
1â2 |
2â4 |
3â4 |
0â3 |
10-21 |
A = did not participate in the tournament.
Grand Slam Doubles Timeline
| Tournament |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 |
Career Record |
| Australian Open |
A |
A |
1R |
1R |
A |
A |
QF |
1R |
3â4 |
| French Open |
A |
A |
1R |
A |
A |
1R |
1R |
QF |
3-4 |
| Wimbledon |
A |
A |
1R |
A |
A |
3R |
1R |
1R |
2â4 |
| U.S. Open |
1R |
3R |
1R |
A |
1R |
3R |
2R |
- |
5â6 |
| Yearly Record |
0â1 |
2â1 |
0â4 |
0â1 |
0â1 |
4â3 |
4â4 |
3-3 |
13-18 |
A = did not participate in the tournament.
References
External links