The Baseline Top 5: WTA breakout performers of 2019

As the regular season wraps up, here's some of the players who had their best season.



Buy, Sell or Hold: Will Coco Gauff finish 2020 ranked In the Top 20?

The WTA rankings saw a number of players—from teenage sensations to veterans—make major moves in 2019. As the regular season wraps up, here’s a look at five of them and their results during their career-best campaigns. While they didn't make it to the top 10, they're definitely headed in the right direction. (All photos: Getty Images)

1

Cori Gauff

Arguably the story of the year among up-and-coming players, “Coco” has had a season to remember. Only 15, she first made waves at Wimbledon, where she upset Venus Williams in the first round and proceeded to advance to the fourth round. Over the summer, she and her countrywoman Caty McNally won their first doubles title in Washington, DC. Gauff’s second title with McNally this week in Luxembourg comes on the heels of her singles breakthrough in Linz, Austria, where she captured the singles crown as a lucky loser and cracked the top 75.

2

Marketa Vondrousova

PARIS, FRANCE - JUNE 07: Marketa Vondrousova of The Czech Republic celebrates victory during her ladies singles semi-final match against Johanna Konta of Great Britain during Day thirteen of the 2019 French Open at Roland Garros on June 07, 2019 in Paris, France. (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)
© 2019 Getty Images

If not for a wrist injury, the Czech could have made her presence felt even more on the WTA Tour this season and perhaps found a spot in the year-end championships. Her year started off strong, with a final in Budapest and quarterfinal runs in Indian Wells and Miami. It was at the French Open, though, where she made her biggest statement as she became the first teenager to reach a Grand Slam final in 10 years, a result that sent her into the world’s top 15. Vondrousova had to cut her season short due to the aforementioned wrist issue, but showed she was a force in only half a year.

3

Alison Riske

With only one fourth-round Grand Slam showing in her decade-long career prior to this year, Riske finally surpassed that mark at Wimbledon, where she reached the quarterfinals and gave Serena Williams all she could handle. Prior to that tournament, she was already cruising on the grass, having posted a 10-match winning streak with an ITF title in Surbiton and the second WTA victory of her career in the Netherlands. A run to her biggest final in Wuhan, China, a couple of weeks ago landed her in the top 20 for the first time and also earned her a special nod, which she appreciated.

4

Sofia Kenin

HOBART, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 12: Sofia Kenin of the USA poses after winning the singles final against Anna Karolina Schmiedlova of Slovakia during day eight of the 2019 Hobart International at Domain Tennis Centre on January 12, 2019 in Hobart, Australia. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)
© 2019 Getty Images

For the young American, titles came in bunches in 2019. She started off the year with her first doubles victory in Auckland, then a week later, she captured her first singles tournament in Hobart. She tacked on two more singles titles and another in doubles, giving her five between the two disciplines. No top player was safe against the 20-year-old this year as she defeated Ashleigh Barty, Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka to help her reach the top 15 in the rankings.

5

Rebecca Peterson

Rebecca Peterson of Sweden poses with the trophy after winning the women's singles final match against Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan at the Jiangxi Open tennis tournament in Nanchang in China's central Jiangxi province on September 15, 2019. (Photo by STR / AFP) / China OUT        (Photo credit should read STR/AFP/Getty Images)
© AFP/Getty Images

At this point, the only thing stopping the Swede from rising even higher up the rankings is that there are no more regular-season tournaments for the year. During the summer hard-court swing, Peterson picked up wins against Johanna Konta and Sloane Stephens. While she wasn’t able to build upon that at the US Open, where she fell in the first round, she tore through the Asian Swing with two titles, the first ones of her career. That run brought Peterson into the top 50 for the first time.

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