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The top 10 teenagers in women's tennis

Over the past few months, there have been a number of teenagers making their presence felt on the WTA Tour. The last teenager to win a Grand Slam title in the women’s game was Maria Sharapova, who was 17 when she won Wimbledon in 2004. And with the WTA’s age-restriction rules which limits players to only a certain number of events before they turn 18, we may not see another teenaged Grand Slam champion for a while now. But these teens, there are 11 in all inside the top 100, and a dozen others between the 100 and 200 ranks, are injecting some fresh air into the women’s game. Here’s a look at the top 10 teenagers in the world based on the rankings for the week of 22nd April.

1 – Laura Robson (Great Britain)


Does not turn 20 years old until – January 2014
Current World Ranking – No. 38 (Highest no. 38)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 1 (March 2009)
Best Junior Performance – Winning Wimbledon juniors in 2008 as a 14 year old; also reached the finals of the Australian Open juniors in 2009 and 2010
Last played juniors – September 2010
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Won the Olympic mixed doubles silver medal with Andy Murray; Beat #25 Kim Clijsters and #9 Li Na to reach the fourth round of the 2012 US Open; became first British woman in 22 years to reach a WTA Final in Guangzhou last September; defeated #8 Petra Kvitova to reach the third round of the Australian Open this January.

2 – Kristina Mladenovic (France)


Does not turn 20 years old until – May 2013
Current World Ranking – No. 51 (Highest No. 48 in March 2013)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 1 (June 2009)
Best Junior Performance – Won French Open juniors in 2009
Last played juniors – December 2009
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Defeated 3 top 25 players (#19 Julia Georges, #22 Yanina Wickmayer and #8 Petra Kvitova) to reach the semis at the WTA Paris Indoors in February; also reached the semis of WTA events in Quebec City and Florianopolis; won the WTA $125K Challenger in Taipei; and has 4 WTA doubles titles to her credit

3 – Annika Beck (Germany)


Does not turn 20 years old until – February 2014
Current World Ranking – No. 60 (Highest no. 60)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 24 (July 2012)
Best Junior Performance – Won French Open juniors in 2012
Last played juniors – June 2012
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Won 5 ITF titles last year, all coming post July; has wins over #25 Su Wei-Hseih and #28 Yaroslava Shvedova; reached her firstWTA semi-final in Katowice this month

4 – Madison Keys (USA)


Does not turn 20 years old until – February 1995
Current World Ranking – No. 63 (Highest no. 62 in April 2013)
Best Junior Ranking –No. 16 (September 2011)
Best Junior Performance – Third round at Wimbledon juniors in 2011
Last played juniors – September 2011
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Reached the quarters in Charleston last month; defeated #30 Tamira Paszek to reach the third round of the Australian Open; as a qualifier, defeated #17 Lucie Safarova en route to quarter-finals of WTA Sydney where she nearly knocked out Li Na.

5 – Lauren Davis (USA)


Does not turn 20 years old until – October 2013
Current World Ranking – No. 66 (Highest no. 63 in April 2013)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 3 (December 2010)
Best Junior Performance – Won Eddie Herr & Orange Bowl titles in 2010
Last played juniors – January 2011
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – As a qualifier, defeated #27 Yanina Wickmayer en route to reaching quarters in Quebec City last year; came through qualifying and beat #27 Sorana Cirstea to reach quarters in Hobart and reached quarters at Monterrey this year

6 – Garbine Muguruza (Spain)


Does not turn 20 years old until – October 1993
Current World Ranking – No. 79 (Highest No. 73 in March 2013)
Best Junior Ranking –No. 302 (January 2011)
Best Junior Performance – 2nd round of French Open juniors in 2010
Last played juniors – October 2011
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Defeated #9 Vera Zvonerava and #26 Flavia Pennetta to reach the 4th round in Miami in 2012; quarter-finals at WTA Fes; defeated #19 Ekaterina Makarova to reach 4th round in Indian Wells last month; defeated #9 Caroline Wozniacki and #25 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova to reach 4th round in Miami last month

7 – Donna Vekic (Crotia)


Does not turn 20 years old until – June 2016
Current World Ranking – No. 82 (Highest no. 82)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 21 (January 2012)
Best Junior Performance – Quarter-Finals at Wimbledon juniors in 2012
Last played juniors – July 2012
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Reached finals of first WTA main draw event in Tashkent. In the process, became the youngest WTA finalist in six years

8 – Jana Cepelova (Slovakia)


Does not turn 20 years old until – May 2013
Current World Ranking – No. 84 (Highest no. 83 in April 2013)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 8 (February 2010)
Best Junior Performance – Quarter-finals at US Open juniors in 2009
Last played juniors – June 2011
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Qualified and beat #28 Anabel Medina Garrigues to reach the third round at Wimbledon in 2012; qualified and reached the third round in Washington last August; quarter finalist at Florianopolis this year

9 – Elina Svitolina (Ukraine)


Does not turn 20 years old until – September 2014
Current World Ranking – No. 89 (Highest no. 87 in February 2013)
Best Junior Ranking –No. 1 (June 2010)
Best Junior Performance – Won French Open juniors in 2010, reached Wimbledon juniors final in 2012
Last played juniors – July 2012
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Won the WTA $125K Challenger in Pune and reached the semis of the WTA$125K Challenger in Cali, Colombia

10 – Eugenie Bouchard (Canada)


Does not turn 20 years old until – February 1994
Current World Ranking – No. 92 (Highest no. 92)
Best Junior Ranking – No. 2 (July 2012)
Best Junior Performance – Won Wimbledon juniors in 2012
Last played juniors – September 2010
Best Performance on the Pro Circuit – Reached quarters in Charleston beating #42 Laura Robson and #9 Samantha Stosur (retired injured in the second set)

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