American tennis player who was ranked number 1 in the world in 2001 and 2002. She won 3 grand slam tournaments and 11 other titles. Was elected best player in 2001.
Jennifer Capriati Detailed Biography
Jennifer Marie Capriati (born March 29, 1976, in Manhattan, New York) is a former World No. 1 woman tennis player from the United States. During her career, she has won three Grand Slam singles titles (2 Australian Open, 1 French Open), as well as the women's singles Gold Medal at the 1992 Olympic Games.
Capriati was introduced to tennis while she still a toddler by her father, Stefano Capriati, an Italian-American former boxer turned tennis coach, who has continued to coach her in her later professional career. In 1986, when Jennifer's burgeoning tennis talent became obvious, her family moved to Florida, where the ten-year-old player was enrolled in an intense training program run by Jimmy Evert, the father of Chris Evert.
In 1989, Capriati served notice to the tennis world by becoming the youngest player to win the French Open junior singles title at the age of 13 years and 2 months. (The record stood until 1993, when it was broken by Martina Hingis who won the title as a 12-year-old). Capriati went on to win the junior singles title at the 1989 US Open, and the junior doubles titles at both the US Open and Wimbledon (partnering Meredith McGrath).
Capriati turned professional at the beginning of March 1990, four weeks before her 14th birthday. In her debut tournament on the tour, at Boca Raton, Florida, she defeated four seeded players on her way to becoming the youngest-ever player to reach a tour final, where she lost 6-4, 7-5 to Gabriela Sabatini. Three months later, she became the youngest-ever semi-finalist at the French Open (aged 14 years and 2 months), where she lost to the eventual champion Monica Seles. Capriati went on to reach the fourth round at both Wimbledon and the US Open that year, and won her first top-level singles title that October at San Juan, Puerto Rico. She finished her first year on the tour ranked the World No. 8.
1991 saw Capriati reach the semi-finals at Wimbledon and the US Open. She became Wimbledon's youngest-ever semi-finalist after defeating the defending-champion Martina Navratilova in the quarter-finals, forcing Navratilova's earliest Wimbledon exit for 14 years. She won two singles titles that year, as well as her first (and only) tour doubles title (in Rome partnering Monica Seles).
The biggest moment of Capriati's early-career came in 1992, when she won the women's singles Gold Medal at the Olympic Games in Barcelona. In the final, she defeated Steffi Graf (who was the Gold Medalist four years earlier in Seoul) in three sets 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.
But despite her Olympic triumph, it became clear to observers that Capriati was struggling to cope with the pressures of playing at the top by the end of 1992. The enjoyment of playing the game which she exuded when she first joined the tour seemed to have drained away, and her results started to suffer.
After some disappointing losses in 1993, Capriati took a break from the tour to concentrate on her high school studies. She soon ran into personal and legal troubles. She was involved in a shoplifting incident in December 1993, and in May 1994 she was arrested for marijuana possession. In November 1994, a return to the tour lasted just one match, which she lost. After that, she went on a sabbatical of 15 months and did not play on the tour for the whole of 1995.
Returning to the tour in 1996, Capriati again had several false starts. In May 1999, she finally won her first tournament in six years at Strasbourg.
In 2001, 11 years after she had first taken the tour by storm as a young prodigy, Capriati finally made her Grand Slam breakthrough. She reached the final of the Australian Open against the then-World No. 1 player Martina Hingis, and won in straight sets 6-4, 6-3. She followed this up by capturing the French Open title five months later, beating Kim Clijsters in a dramatic final 1-6, 6-4, 12-10. In October 2001, Capriati reached the World No. 1 ranking.
Capriati won her third Grand Slam title in 2002, when she successfully defended her Australian Open crown. In the final against Hingis, Capriati was 4-6, 0-4 down at one point, but battled back to win 4-6, 7-6, 6-2. She fought off 4 Championship points during the final, which is a record for most match points saved during a Grand Slam tournament final.
In 2003, Capriati made an inspiring run to the U.S. Open semi-finals, only to lose a classic match to Belgium's Justine Henin-Hardenne in a third set tiebreak, with the final score 6-4, 5-7, 6-7(4). The battle concluded well past midnight, and left Henin-Hardenne needing medical attention due to dehydration and exhaustion. During the match, Capriati was just two points from victory a remarkable eleven times.
During her career, Capriati has won 14 professional singles titles and 1 doubles title. Recently, she has suffered several dramatic defeats and has struggled with various injuries that have kept her from playing a full tour schedule.
In 2005, TENNIS Magazine put her in 36th place in its list of 40 Greatest Players of the TENNIS era.
Legend (Singles)
Grand Slam (3)
WTA Championships (0)
Olympic Gold (1)
Tier 1 Event (2)
WTA Tour (8)
Singles (14)
No.
Date
Tournament
Surface
Opponent in the final
Score
1.
Oct 22, 1990
San Juan, Puerto Rico, USA
Hard
Zina Garrison (USA)
5-7 6-4 6-2
2.
Jul 29, 1991
San Diego , USA
Hard
Monica Seles (USA)
4-6 6-1 7-6
3.
Aug 5, 1991
Toronto, Canada
Hard
Katerina Maleeva (Bulgaria)
6-2 6-3
4.
Jul 27, 1992
Olympic Games (Barcelona, Spain)
Clay
Steffi Graf (Germany)
3-6 6-3 6-4
5.
Aug 24, 1992
San Diego, USA
Hard
Conchita Martinez (Spain)
6-3 6-2
6.
Jan 11, 1993
Sydney, Australia
Hard
Anke Huber (Germany)
6-1 6-4
7.
May 17, 1999
Strasbourg, France
Clay
Elena Likhovtseva (Russia)
6-1 6-3
8.
Nov 1, 1999
Quebec, Canada
Hard-Indoor
Chanda Rubin (USA)
4-6 6-1 6-2
9.
Sep 25, 2000
Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Carpet
Magdalena Maleeva (Bulgaria)
4-6 6-1 6-4
10.
Jan 15, 2001
Australian Open, Melbourne, Australia
Hard (Rebound Ace)
Martina Hingis (Switzerland)
6-4 6-3
11.
Apr 16, 2001
Charleston, USA
Clay
Martina Hingis (Switzerland)
6-0 4-6 6-4
12.
May 28, 2001
French Open, Paris, France
Clay
Kim Clijsters (Belgium)
1-6 6-4 12-10
13.
Jan 14, 2002
Australian Open, Melbourne, Australia
Hard (Rebound Ace)
Martina Hingis (Switzerland)
4-6 7-6 6-2
14.
Aug 18, 2003
New Haven, USA
Hard
Lindsay Davenport (USA)
6-2 4-0 Retired
Tournament
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
Australian Open
-
-
-
1r
W
W
SF
2r
-
1r
-
-
-
QF
QF
-
-
French Open
-
SF
4r
SF
W
1r
4r
-
-
1r
-
-
QF
QF
4r
SF
Wimbledon
-
QF
QF
QF
SF
4r
2r
2r
-
-
-
-
QF
QF
SF
4r
U.S. Open
-
SF
SF
QF
SF
4r
4r
1r
1r
1r
-
-
1r
3r
SF
4r
WTA Tour Championships
-
-
SF
SF
QF
4r
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
QF
QF
4r