Tereza Mihalikova

Tennis Player

Tereza Mihalikova was born in Topoľčany, Nitra Region, Slovakia on June 2nd, 1998 and is the Tennis Player. At the age of 25, Tereza Mihalikova biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
June 2, 1998
Nationality
Slovakia
Place of Birth
Topoľčany, Nitra Region, Slovakia
Age
25 years old
Zodiac Sign
Gemini
Profession
Tennis Player
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Tereza Mihalikova Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 25 years old, Tereza Mihalikova has this physical status:

Height
179cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Tereza Mihalikova Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Tereza Mihalikova Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Tereza Mihalikova Life

Tereza Mihalková (born 2 June 1998) is a Slovak tennis player. Mihalková won the Australian Open girls' singles event in 2015, defeating Katie Swan in the final.

Anna Kalinskaya won the girls' doubles title partnering at the 2016 Australian Open.

Source

Tereza Mihalikova Career

Junior career

Singles:

Doubles:

Mihalková climbed to the final of the US Open girls' doubles tournament in 2014, collaborating with Vera Lapko.

She was also a member of the Slovak Junior Fed Cup team (U16). She reached the final in 2014, with Viktoria Kumová and Tamara Kupková, when they lost to the United States team (CiCi Bellis, Tornado Alicia Black, Sofia Kenin).

Mihalková qualified in doubles at the 2015 Australian Open, joining Lapko in a doubles competition. Miriam Kolodziejová and Markéta Vondrouová, the eventual champions, lost their quarterfinal match against them. She won the singles tournament, defeating British Katie Swan in the final. Mihalková took the girls' doubles event with Anna Kalinskaya and ended as runner-up in the girls' singles competition, losing the final to Vera Lapko at the 2016 Australian Open.

Professional career

Mihalková made a leap in her doubles career after posting some promising results in the 2021 season. She rises to the top of the $25K Hamburg tournament in the early season, partnering with Anna Bondár. They advanced to another final two months later, but this time they finished as a runner-up at the $25K tournament in Manacor, but not for the second time. Her progress in June continued with her first WTA Challenger Tour final at the Bol Ladies Open. She lost to Aliona Bolsova and Katarzyna Kawa together with Ekaterine Gorgodze. She reached another Challenger final at the Swedish Open the following month alongside Kamilla Rakhimova. She lost in three sets, much like the previous final.

When she reached her first WTA Tour doubles final in September, she got even better. She defeated Aleksandra Kruni/Lesley Pattinama Kerkhove in three sets, partnering with Anna Kalinskaya. She won two ITF $60k tournaments in October, the first one at the Henderson Open in Las Vegas followed by the Rancho Santa Fe Open. She was successful in her third attempt in a WTA Challenger final in the first half of December. Greet Minnen and former Grand Slam tournament doubles champion Vera Zvonareva won the title and former Grand Slam doubles finalist Monica Niculescu were among the others. For the first time, her December debut pushed her into the top 100 for the first time.

WTA career finals

Note: Tournaments are retrieved from official WTA archives.

Source

Neal Skupski and Wesley Koolhof's quarter-finals keep British hopes alive

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 12, 2023
IAN HERBERT ON NO 3 COURT: There is no ostentation about the pair, who are quietly carrying the hope of British triumph into the final days of the championships. Well, the matching red rackets are apparent, but the Anglo-Dutch men's doubles team of Neal Skupski and Wesley Koolhof are otherwise enjoying their way with little fuss, as they do. Given the fact that he has so consistently carried the country's torch when others are not exiled here, Skupski, from Liverpool, should be a more familiar name than he is. In the last two years, he has been a member of the mixed doubles winning team. Now for the men's doubles, with a tilt at silverware that he and Koolhof have been working for since losing in the Flushing Meadow final last year.