russian woman Veronika Kudermetova moved from ninth to tenth place in the race for the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) championship, a new version of which is posted on the organization’s website.
Last week, Kudermetova reached the quarter-finals of the Berlin tournament, but pulled out of the match against compatriot Ekaterina Aleksandrova, who in turn moved up to 19th place in the race.
Another representative of Russia, Elina Avanesyan, who also reached the quarter-finals in Berlin, rose 18 lines and became 61st. Anastasia Potapova fell from 20th to 18th place.
Representative of the Czech Republic Petra Kvitova, who won the Berlin tournament, moved up to sixth place, Arina Sobolenko of Belarus retains the lead.
WTA Championship race on June 26:
eleven). Arina Sobolenko (Belarus) – 5,675
2 (2). Iga Shventek (Poland) – 5,145
3(3). Elena Rybakina (Kazakhstan) – 4,461
4(4). Jessica Pegula (USA) – 2,445
5 (5). Karolina Muchova (Czech Republic) – 2,140
6 (11). Petra Kvitova (Czech Republic) – 2115
7(8). Barbora Kreychikova (Czech Republic) – 1921
8(6). Corey Gauff (USA) – 1920
9(7). Belinda Bencic (Switzerland) – 1,800
10(9). Veronika Kudermetova (Russia) — 1,788…
18 (20). Anastasia Potapova – 1301
19 (22). Ekaterina Alexandrova – 1293 …
21 (18). Darya Kasatkina – 1,214
26 (25). Ludmila Samsonova – 929 …
39 (41). Anna Blinkova — 710…
47 (46). Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova – 584 …
59 (57). Anna Kalinskaya – 483 …
61 (79). Elina Avanesyan – 465 …
73 (71). Kamilla Rakhimova – 387 …
90 (88). Mirra Andreeva (all – Russia) – 290
WTA official website
Source : MatchTV
I’m Rose Brown , a journalist and writer with over 10 years of experience in the news industry. I specialize in covering tennis-related news for Athletistic, a leading sports media website. My writing is highly regarded for its quick turnaround and accuracy, as well as my ability to tell compelling stories about the sport.


