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Martina Hingis - Biography
Name : Martina
Hingis
Birthdate : September 30, 1980
Birthplace : Kosice, Slovakia
Nationality : Swiss
Profession : Tennis player
Plays : Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
Best Known As : Three-time Australian Open winner |
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Martina Hingis Detailed
Biography
Martina was born on 30
th September, 1980 in Kosice in now Slovakia to mother Melanie Molitor and
father Karol Hingis. Both Martina'a mother and father played tennis quite
well. They married and Martina was born four years later. As a toddler she
used to sit on a blanket watching her parents and she started "playing' at
the age of 2. Melanie divorced and moved with Martina to Roznov, in the now
Czech Republic. Martina entered her first tournament at the age of 4, when
she couldn't even see above the net! Her first match ended 6-0, 6-0. For her
much older opponent. But soon Martina started winning her matches. When
martina was 8, Melanie remarried with the Swiss computer scientist Andreas
Zogg. Together they moved to Trubbach, a small town in the north of German
speaking Switzerland, where Martina still lives in her own apartment
attached to the main house. Melanie later divorced again and is currently
engaged with Mario Widmer, a Swiss sports journalist. She is Martina's coach
and mother, a double role that led to some teen troubles in the past. But
Martina always calls her mother "best friend". The two of them also own a
house in Roznov, and recently acquired a villa in Saddlebrook, Florida, near
the harry Hopmans Tennis Academy where Martina lives when in the USA.
Martina is 20 years old, 1.70m x 59 kg, has natural chestnut hair and blue
eyes. She plays right-handed forehand and two-handed backhand, she is the
archetipal all-court player, at ease playing from the baseline or with a
natural serve and volley. Her astonishing talent and wide array of shots are
coupled with a strong mind and a tactical sense that many chess masters
dream to have, making her extremely dangerous on court.
History of Champion
Australian Open: Singles - 1997 1998 1999, Doubles - 1997 1998 1999
French Open: Doubles - 1998 1999 2000
Wimbledon: Singles - 1997, Doubles - 1996 1998
U.S. Open: Singles - 1997, Doubles - 1998
Masters: Singles - 1998, Doubles - 1999
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