Country (sports) | Germany |
---|---|
Born | 27 November 1976 |
Coaching career (2003–) | |
Angelique Kerber (2003–2004, 2011–2013, 2015–2017, 2020–2021) Carina Witthöft (2014) Donna Vekić (2017–2020) Emma Raducanu (2021) Anett Kontaveit (2022) | |
Coaching achievements | |
List of notable tournaments (with champion) 2016 Australian Open (Kerber) Contents | |
Last updated on: 27 July 2020. |
Torben Beltz (born 27 November 1976) [1] is a German tennis coach. Beltz is best known for having coached Angelique Kerber during her successful 2016 Australian Open and 2016 US Open campaigns.
Beltz first started working with Angelique Kerber when the German turned professional in 2003. However, it was not until 2011 that Kerber made her career breakthrough, reaching the semi-finals of the 2011 US Open when ranked 92nd in the world. Since then, Kerber has achieved a multitude of successes on the WTA Tour, winning her first two career titles in 2012, reaching a then-career high ranking of world number five and qualifying for the prestigious WTA Tour Championships in Istanbul. Beltz then parted ways with Kerber at the end of 2013. [1]
However, in the early part of 2015, Beltz was rehired as Kerber's coach after the German suffered from a series of poor results to start the season, including losing in the first round of the 2015 Australian Open and dropping out of the WTA's top 10 for the first time since 2012. [2] Upon their reunion, Kerber rediscovered the form that catapulted her into the world's top 10, winning four titles but not being able to reach a Grand Slam quarter-final during the year. [3]
Beltz has been credited with helping Kerber win her first Grand Slam title at the 2016 Australian Open, where the German defeated defending champion and then-world number one Serena Williams in the final in three sets. [4] [5] Kerber subsequently won the Olympic Silver Medal and a second Grand Slam title at the US Open (displacing Williams as the world number one in the process); [6] in addition, she also finished runner-up at the WTA Finals and finished the year on top of the world rankings. [7]
On November 16, 2017, Kerber announced on Twitter that she has parted with Beltz, and has hired Wim Fissette as her coach. [8] Shortly after, Beltz accepted Donna Vekic's request to be her coach. They parted ways in July 2020 in a non-conventional manner with Beltz announcing the dissolution of their partnership via Twitter. [9] Just over a week later, Beltz announced he would be rejoining Angelique Kerber's team. [10] In November 2021, Beltz and Kerber announced that they had dissolved their partnership again, and a few days later, Beltz was announced as the new coach of Emma Raducanu. After her surprise win at the US Open under her previous short-term coach, Raducanu had wanted to find a coach with tour experience once that partnership ended; Mats Wilander opined that an elite coach like Beltz could not help an eighteen-year-old (as Raducanu was) who is already elite and instead discovering their own game. [11] [12] After only five months of working together, Raducanu announced a departure from Torben Beltz. [13]
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Angelique Kerber is a German professional tennis player. She has been ranked as high as world No. 1, for a total of 34 weeks, and won three major titles at the 2016 Australian Open, the 2016 US Open, and the 2018 Wimbledon Championships. She is also an Olympic silver medalist and was the year-end world number one in 2016.
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The 2015 WTA Finals was a women's tennis tournament at Singapore. It was the 45th edition of the singles event and the 40th edition of the doubles competition. The tournament was contested by eight singles players and eight doubles teams.
The 2016 WTA Tour was the elite professional tennis circuit organised by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) for the 2016 tennis season. The 2016 WTA Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation, the WTA Premier tournaments, the WTA International tournaments, the Fed Cup, the year-end championships. Also included in the 2016 calendar is the Summer Olympic Games and Hopman Cup, which were organized by the ITF and did not distribute ranking points.
The 2017 WTA Tour was the elite professional tennis circuit organised by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) for the 2017 tennis season. The 2017 WTA Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation, the WTA Premier tournaments, the WTA International tournaments, the Fed Cup, the year-end championships. Also included in the 2017 calendar is the Hopman Cup, which is organized by the ITF and does not distribute ranking points.
Leylah Annie Fernandez is a Canadian professional tennis player. She has a career-high ranking of No. 15 by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA), achieved on 6 June 2022. Fernandez won her first WTA Tour title at the 2021 Monterrey Open. As a 19-year-old, she finished runner-up at the 2021 US Open to fellow teenager Emma Raducanu, defeating three top-5 players en route to the final.
The 2019 WTA Finals, also known by its sponsored name Shiseido WTA Finals Shenzhen, was a women's tennis tournament held in Shenzhen, China. It was the 49th edition of the singles event and the 44th edition of the doubles competition. The tournament was contested by eight singles players and eight doubles teams. This was the first time Shenzhen held the WTA Finals.
Sofia Kenin won her first Grand Slam title, defeating Garbiñe Muguruza in the final, 4–6, 6–2, 6–2. Kenin became the first American woman, other than Serena Williams, to win the Australian Open women's singles title since Jennifer Capriati in 2002. Kenin was the youngest Australian Open finalist since Ana Ivanovic and the youngest champion since Maria Sharapova, both in 2008. Muguruza was the first unseeded player, without being awarded a wildcard or entering through a protected ranking, to reach the Australian Open final since Serena Williams in 2007. This was the first Australian Open final in the Open Era to be contested between two players ranked outside the top ten, and the first Grand Slam final to feature two players outside the top ten since the 2018 US Open final. Kenin entered the world's top 10 rankings for the first time in her career by winning the title.
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Emma Raducanu is a British professional tennis player. She reached a career-high ranking of No. 11 by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) on 25 April 2022, and is the current British No. 1. Raducanu is the reigning US Open champion and the first British woman to win a Grand Slam singles title since Virginia Wade in the 1977 Wimbledon Championships.
Emma Raducanu defeated Leylah Fernandez in the final, 6–4, 6–3 to win the women's singles tennis title at the 2021 US Open. She became the first qualifier, male or female, to reach a major final and win a major title, as well as the first singles qualifier to reach the semifinals at the US Open. Additionally, she became the first British woman to win a singles major since Virginia Wade at the 1977 Wimbledon Championships and the second player to win the US Open on her debut appearance, following Bianca Andreescu in 2019. Aged 18, she also became the youngest major champion since Maria Sharapova at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships and with a WTA ranking of world No. 150, the lowest-ranked player to win a major since Kim Clijsters at the 2009 US Open. Raducanu won the title without losing a set during the tournament, including during her three qualification matches. Furthermore, she did not play a tiebreak in any set. This was her first WTA singles title, making her the fourth woman in the Open Era to win a major tournament as their maiden singles title.
The 2021 US Open Women's Singles final was the championship tennis match of the women's singles tournament at the 2021 US Open, contested by qualifier Emma Raducanu and unseeded Leylah Fernandez. The match was notable due to it being the first time that a qualifier had ever advanced beyond the semi-final of a grand slam, and the first all-teenage women's singles final since the 1999 US Open. Fernandez had defeated four players within the WTA top 10 to reach the final; Naomi Osaka, Angelique Kerber, Elina Svitolina, and Aryna Sabalenka. Meanwhile, Raducanu beat two seeds, eleventh seed and Tokyo 2020 gold medallist Belinda Bencic, and seventeenth seed Maria Sakkari, and had advanced through all her matches, including qualifiers, without dropping a set.