Australia Billie Jean King Cup team

Last updated

Australia
Flag of Australia.svg
Captain Alicia Molik (since 2013)
ITF ranking 1 Steady2.svg (19 April 2022)
Highest ITF ranking1 (8 November 2021)
Lowest ITF ranking26 (11 July 2006)
Colorsgreen & gold
First year 1963
Years played58
Ties played (W–L)186 (132–54)
Years in
World Group
41 (95–38)
Titles7 (1964, 1965, 1968, 1970,
1971, 1973, 1974)
Runners-up12 (1963, 1969, 1975, 1976,
1977, 1978, 1979, 1980,
1984, 1993, 2019), 2022)
Most total wins Wendy Turnbull (46–16)
Most singles wins Samantha Stosur (29–17)
Most doubles wins Wendy Turnbull (29–8)
Best doubles team Kerry Reid /
Wendy Turnbull (11–4)
Most ties played Wendy Turnbull (45)
Most years played Rennae Stubbs (17)

The Australia Billie Jean King Cup team represents Australia in international women's tennis and is directed by Tennis Australia. The team played in the first ever tournament in 1963, and is one of four teams that has taken part in every single edition since. [1]

Contents

The Australian national team is one of the most successful in world tennis. They are seven-time world champions and have reached a total of eighteen finals, second highest as Runners-up all-time behind United States. [2] Between 1963 and 1980, the Australian team played in every single final except for three. However, in recent times the Australian team has had a comparative lack of success, only appearing in the World Group five times between 1995 and 2010, and never going beyond the first round. [1] However, the team has experienced a resurgence in recent times, accumulating a 15–6 win–loss record since 2005 and returning to the World Group in 2011 and 2013. [3] [4] Samantha Stosur holds the record for most singles wins by an Australian in Fed Cup, while Wendy Turnbull holds the record for most doubles wins, most overall tie wins, and most ties participated in. [1]

Alicia Molik is the current captain and has held that position since 2013. [5] Currently, the team is No. 1 in the ITF rankings, their highest-ever rank since the inception of the rankings in 2002. [6]

Current team

Name [1] DOB [1] First [1] Last [1] Ties [1] Win/Loss [1] Ranks [lower-alpha 1]
SinDouTotSinDou
Storm Hunter 11 August 19942021202396–24–210–41223
Ellen Perez 10 October 19952021202340–01–31–33638
Taylah Preston 27 October 200500–00–00–0134357
Arina Rodionova 15 December 19892016201620–10–10–298334
Daria Saville 5 March 19942016202384–71–15–8115110

History

Players

Forty-four players have represented Fed Cup for Australia since its inception in 1963. [1] Wendy Turnbull holds the record for the most ties played, having appeared in forty-five ties during her eleven-year Fed Cup career. Rennae Stubbs is second, with forty-one ties, although she had by far competed for more years than anyone else (with seventeen) before her retirement after the team's 2011 tie against Italy. [15] Alicia Molik, the current captain, [5] is tenth, having played in twenty-two ties, one less than the highest active player Samantha Stosur. [1] Turnbull took the record for most ties in 1986, [16] taking the record from current third Dianne Balestrat. [17] Balestrat was also the youngest person to reach twenty ties, at 23 years old. [17] Margaret Court and Evonne Goolagong Cawley share the record of people to reach twenty ties to have the highest winning percentage, with 35–5 or 0.875%. [1]

Stosur holds the record for most Australia Fed Cup singles wins. She had her first win in 2004 against Napaporn Tongsalee, and went on to take the record from Balestrat nine years later after defeating Romina Oprandi in 2013. [1] [18] Court holds the record for most prolific singles player, averaging once win for every tie she played and also accumulating a 100% singles winning percentage. [1] Court was also the first player to accumulate ten wins for the team, having achieved the feat in 1965. [1] [19] Nicole Bradtke was the youngest person to achieve her tenth win, doing so in April 1995 against Radka Zrubáková while aged 22 years, 1 month. [20] Current captain Molik is once again tenth on this factor, sharing the record with Bradtke at twelve. [1]

Turnbull holds the record for most doubles wins, accumulating twenty-nine wins before her final tie in 1988 against West Germany, and taking this record from Kerry Melville Reid, the current third, in 1982. [16] Turnbull and Melville Reid together also hold the record for most doubles wins as a team, with eleven. [1] Of the players that have achieved ten doubles wins, Judy Tegart Dalton was the most prolific, averaging 0.8 wins per tie. [1] Goolagong Cawley achieved the highest win percentage, at 86.7%. [1] Court was once again the first player to reach ten doubles wins, doing so after beating Winnie Shaw and Virginia Wade alongside Melville Reid in 1968. [19] Stubbs, currently second, was the youngest person to achieve ten doubles wins, at 24 years, 1 month. [21] Of the active players, Casey Dellacqua, tenth, has the most doubles wins at seven. [1]

Jelena Dokic was the youngest player to compete for Australia, and also the youngest person to win a match for Australia when she defeated Mariana Díaz Oliva in 1998 aged 15 years, 3 months. [1] [22] Rennae Stubbs, on the other hand, was the oldest player to compete and win a match, winning her last match aged 39 years, 1 month, and playing her final tie aged 39 years, 10 months. [1] [21]

Most ties played

#NameAUS careerTiesTot W/L
1 Wendy Turnbull 1977–19884546–16
2 Rennae Stubbs 1992–20114128–13
3 Dianne Balestrat 1974–19833735–11
4 Elizabeth Smylie 1984–19943124–13
5 Samantha Stosur 2003–3036–18
6 Kerry Melville Reid 1967–19792937–10
7 Evonne Goolagong Cawley 1970–19822635–5
8 Rachel McQuillan 1990–20012311–21
8 Anne Minter 1981–19892320–6
10 Alicia Molik 1999–20102218–21

Most singles wins

#NameAUS careerTiesSin W/LDou W/L
1 Samantha Stosur 2003–2929–187–0
2 Dianne Balestrat 1974–19833724–911–2
3 Evonne Goolagong Cawley 1970–19822622–313–2
4 Margaret Court 1963–19712020–015–5
4 Kerry Melville Reid 1967–19792920–417–6
6 Wendy Turnbull 1977–19884517–829–8
7 Anne Minter 1981–19892316–64–0
8 Jelena Dokic 1998–20121715–21–1
9 Nicole Pratt 1998–20072014–121–1
10 Nicole Bradtke 1988–19961712–86–1
10 Alicia Molik 1999–20102212–156–6

Most doubles wins

#NameAUS careerTiesDou W/LSin W/L
1 Wendy Turnbull 1977–19884529–817–8
2 Rennae Stubbs 1992–20114128–100–3
3 Kerry Melville Reid 1967–19792917–620–4
3 Elizabeth Smylie 1984–19943117–57–8
5 Margaret Court 1963–19712015–520–0
6 Evonne Goolagong Cawley 1970–19822613–222–3
6 Casey Dellacqua 2006–20182113–46–5
8 Judy Tegart Dalton 1965–19701512–36–1
9 Dianne Balestrat 1974–19833711–224–9
10 Susan Leo 1980–1983139–32–0

Top ten players

Singles

PlayerRecordW%HardcourtClayGrassCarpet
Number 1 ranked players
Margaret Court 20–0100%0–07–013–00–0
Evonne Goolagong Cawley 22–388%6–110–12–04–1
Number 2 ranked players
Lesley Turner Bowrey 7–370%0–00–27–10–0
Number 3 ranked players
Wendy Turnbull 17–868%5–010–62–20–0
Number 4 ranked players
Dianne Balestrat 24–972.72%2–115–65–22–2
Jelena Dokic 13–286.67%6–11–11–05–0
Samantha Stosur 27–1367.50%17–98–22–00–2
Number 7 ranked players
Jan O'Neill 3–0100%0–00–03–00–0
Judy Tegart Dalton 6–185.71%0–06–10–00–0
Kerry Melville Reid 20–483.33%0–09–38–13–0
Lesley Hunt 1–0100%1–00–00–00–0
Number 8 ranked players
Alicia Molik 12–1544.44%5–43–93–11–1

Doubles

PlayerRecordW%HardcourtClayGrassCarpet
Number 1 ranked players
Margaret Court 15–575%0–05–210–30–0
Rennae Stubbs 28–1073.68%13–213–42–00–4
Samantha Stosur 7–0100%6–01–00–00–0
Number 3 ranked players
Casey Dellacqua 10–471.42%9–21–20–00–0
Number 5 ranked players
Ashleigh Barty 5–183%4–10–01–00–0
Wendy Turnbull 29–878.38%9–212–48–20–0
Elizabeth Smylie 17–577.27%7–210–30–00–0
Number 6 ranked players
Alicia Molik 6–650%5–11–20–00–3
Number 10 ranked players
Jelena Dokic 1–150%0–01–00–00–1
*Active players in bold, statistics as of 1 February 2016.

Results

Tournament 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 W–L
Federation Cup
World Group F W W SF SF W F W W SF W W F F F F F F SF SF QF F SF QF QF QF SF 2R 2R SF F 2R 92–25
Win–loss3–14–03–02–11–14–02–14–02–02–14–04–03–14–14–14–14–14–13–13–12–14–13–12–12–12–13–11–11–13–14–11–1
Tournament 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 W–L
Fed Cup
World Group AAAAA 11th 7th 1R 1R 1R AAAAAA QF A QF SF QF 1–13
World Group play-offs L A L AANH W W W L AAAAA W L W W A L 7–5
World Group II W L W L L Not HeldAA L AA W A W AAA4–4
World Group II play-offs A W A W W A W L A W AAAAAA8–1
Asia/Oceania Zone Group I AAAAAAAAAA 2nd W A 4th W AAAAAA12–2
Win–loss1–11–11–11–14–10–32–31–11–11–13–14–00–22–15–02–00–22–01–11-10-2124–50
Year End Ranking11121926161820147106859

Records

In terms of time, the longest rubber involving an Australian player was Fabiola Zuluaga's 2003, 2–6, 7–6(7–4), 8–10, defeat of Alicia Molik, which took two-hour, forty-three minutes. However, the longest rubber in terms of games was Margaret Court and Kerry Reid's 1968, 9–7, 3–6, 14–12, defeat of Winnie Shaw and Virginia Wade, which lasted fifty-one games and holds the overall Fed Cup record. [23] This match also holds the Australian Fed Cup record of most games in a set. [1]

The longest tie in terms of time and games was the Italy–Australia match in 2011, which lasted for ten hours and twenty-six minutes and featured a hundred and forty-nine games. The match also holds the overall Fed Cup record for most tiebreaks in a tie with five. [23] The Australian Fed Cup record for longest tiebreak was also set in 2011, with Anastasia Rodionova's, 6–7(3–7), 6–7(12–14), loss to Olga Savchuk. [1]

Australia was also featured in two of the five 0–2 comebacks featured since inception. The Australian team defeated Canada in the competition's first ever 0–2 comeback in 1996, while Austria beat the team three years later for the second event. [23]

The Australian team also holds the record for longest streak of consecutive finals, from 1973 to 1980. [2] It was during this period that they accumulated their longest tie winning streak at eleven. [1]

Longest winning streak

YearCompetitionDateLocationOpponentScoreResult
1973 World Group, Second Round2 May Bad Homburg (FRG)Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 3–0Won
World Group, Quarterfinals4 MayFlag of Indonesia.svg  Indonesia 3–0Won
World Group, Semifinals5 MayFlag of Germany.svg  West Germany 3–0Won
World Group, Final6 MayFlag of South Africa (1928-1982).svg  South Africa 3–0Won
1974 World Group, Second RoundMay Naples (ITA)Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 2–0Won
World Group, QuarterfinalsFlag of Italy.svg  Italy 3–0Won
World Group, SemifinalsFlag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain 3–0Won
World Group, FinalFlag of the United States.svg  United States 2–1Won
1975 World Group, Second RoundMay Aix-en-Provence (FRA)Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium 2–0Won
World Group, QuarterfinalsFlag of Italy.svg  Italy 3–0Won
World Group, SemifinalsFlag of the United States.svg  United States 2–1Won
World Group, FinalFlag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czechoslovakia 0–3Lost

Finals: 19 (7 titles, 12 runners-up)

OutcomeYearVenueSurfaceTeamOpponentsOpposing TeamScore
Runner-up1963 Queen's Club, London, United Kingdom Grass Margaret Smith
Jan O'Neill
Lesley Turner
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Darlene Hard
Billie Jean Moffitt
1–2
Winner1964 Germantown Cricket Club, Philadelphia, United States GrassMargaret Smith
Lesley Turner
Robyn Ebbern
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Billie Jean Moffitt
Nancy Richey
Karen Hantze Susman
2–1
Winner1965 Kooyong Stadium, Melbourne, Australia GrassMargaret Smith
Lesley Turner
Judy Tegart
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Billie Jean Moffitt
Carole Caldwell Graebner
2–1
Winner1968 Stade Roland Garros, Paris, France Red clayMargaret Court
Kerry Melville
Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands Astrid Suurbeck
Marijke Jansen
Lidy Venneboer
3–0
Runner-up1969Athens Tennis Club, Athens, Greece Red clayMargaret Court
Kerry Melville
Judy Tegart
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Nancy Richey
Julie Heldman
Jane Bartkowicz
1–2
Winner1970Freiburg Tennis Club, Freiburg, West Germany Red clayJudy Tegart
Karen Krantzcke
Flag of Germany.svg  West Germany Helga Niessen
Helga Hösl
3–0
Winner1971 Royal King's Park Tennis Club, Perth, AustraliaGrassMargaret Court
Evonne Goolagong
Lesley Hunt
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain Virginia Wade
Ann Jones
Winnie Shaw
3–0
Winner1973Bad Homburg Tennis Club, Bad Homburg, West GermanyRed clayEvonne Goolagong
Patricia Coleman
Janet Young
Flag of South Africa (1928-1982).svg  South Africa Patricia Walkden
Brenda Kirk
3–0
Winner1974Naples Tennis Club, Naples, Italy Red clayEvonne Goolagong
Dianne Fromholtz
Janet Young
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Julie Heldman
Jeanne Evert
Sharon Walsh
2–1
Runner-up1975Aixoise C.C., Aix-en-Provence, FranceRed clayEvonne Goolagong
Helen Gourlay
Dianne Fromholtz
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czechoslovakia Martina Navratilova
Renáta Tomanová
0–3
Runner-up1976 The Spectrum, Philadelphia, United StatesCarpet (i)Evonne Goolagong Cawley
Kerry Melville Reid
Dianne Fromholtz
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Billie Jean King
Rosemary Casals
1–2
Runner-up1977 Devonshire Park, Eastbourne, United KingdomGrassKerry Melville Reid
Dianne Fromholtz
Wendy Turnbull
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Chris Evert
Billie Jean King
Rosemary Casals
1–2
Runner-up1978Kooyong Stadium, Melbourne, AustraliaGrassKerry Melville Reid
Wendy Turnbull
Dianne Fromholtz
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Chris Evert
Tracy Austin
Billie Jean King
1–2
Runner-up1979RSHE Club Campo, Madrid, Spain Red clayKerry Melville Reid
Wendy Turnbull
Dianne Fromholtz
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Chris Evert Lloyd
Tracy Austin
Billie Jean King
Rosemary Casals
0–3
Runner-up1980 Rot-Weiss Tennis Club, West Berlin, West GermanyRed clayDianne Fromholtz
Wendy Turnbull
Susan Leo
Flag of the United States.svg  United States Chris Evert Lloyd
Tracy Austin
Rosemary Casals
Kathy Jordan
0–3
Runner-up1984 Esporte Clube Pinheiros, São Paulo, Brazil Red clay Elizabeth Sayers
Wendy Turnbull
Anne Minter
Elizabeth Minter
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czechoslovakia Hana Mandlíková
Helena Suková
Iva Budařová
Marcela Skuherská
1–2
Runner-up1993Waldstadion T.C., Frankfurt, Germany Red clay Nicole Provis
Michelle Jaggard-Lai
Elizabeth Smylie
Rennae Stubbs
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain Conchita Martínez
Arantxa Sánchez Vicario
Virginia Ruano Pascual
Cristina Torrens Valero
0–3
Runner-up 2019 Perth Arena, Perth, AustraliaHard Ajla Tomljanović
Ashleigh Barty
Samantha Stosur
Flag of France.svg  France Kristina Mladenovic
Caroline Garcia
Pauline Parmentier
2-3
Runner-up 2022 Emirates Arena, Glasgow, United KingdomHard (i) Ajla Tomljanović
Storm Sanders
Samantha Stosur
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland Belinda Bencic
Jil Teichmann
0-2

Head-to-head record

PlayerRecordW%HardClayGrassCarpet
Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands 8–280%3–04–21–00–0
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 8–657.14%0–46–21–01–0
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain 7–370%0–14–22–01–0
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland 6–185.71%1–03–12–00–0
Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 5–0100%2–02–01–00–0
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 5–0100%4–00–01–00–0
Flag of France.svg  France 5–183.33%0–02–03–00–1
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy 5–183.33%3–12–00–00–0
Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium 5–362.5%0–02–22–01–1
Flag of the United States.svg  United States 5–838.46%0–13–32–30–1
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 4–0100%1–02–01–00–0
Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 4–0100%1–02–01–00–0
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 4–0100%1–02–01–00–0
Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea 4–0100%4–00–00–00–0
Flag of Argentina.svg  Argentina 4–180%1–02–10–01–0
Flag of Indonesia.svg  Indonesia 4–180%1–12–01–00–0
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 4–357.1%2–01–01–10–2
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei 3–0100%3–00–00–00–0
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 3–537.5%0–23–30–00–0
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain 3–730%3–30–40–00–0
PlayerRecordW%HardClayGrassCarpet
Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil 2–0100%0–01–01–00–0
Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 2–0100%0–01–01–00–0
Flag of India.svg  India 2–0100%2–00–00–00–0
Flag of Romania.svg  Romania 2–0100%1–00–00–01–0
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 2–0100%1–00–01–00–0
Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 2–0100%0–02–00–00–0
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 2–166.67%1–11–00–00–0
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 2–166.67%1–11–00–00–0
Flag of Austria.svg  Austria 2–340%0–01–31–00–0
Flag of Colombia.svg  Colombia 1–0100%1–00–00–00–0
Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 1–0100%0–01–00–00–0
Flag of Israel.svg  Israel 1–0100%1–00–00–00–0
Flag of Latvia (physical).svg  Latvia 1–0100%0–01–00–00–0
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 1–0100%0–01–00–00–0
Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 1–0100%0–01–00–00–0
Flag of the Philippines.svg  Philippines 1–0100%0–01–00–00–0
Flag of Serbia.svg  Serbia 1–0100%0–01–00–00–0
Flag of Uzbekistan.svg  Uzbekistan 1–0100%1–00–00–00–0
Flag of Thailand.svg  Thailand 1–150%1–10–00–00–0
Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine 1–233.33%0–11–10–00–0
*Previous champions in bold, teams that have been ranked no. 1 in italics, statistics as of 19 April 2015.

See also

Notes

  1. Most recent Year-End ranks (2015). See [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]

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