Britain's last female Grand Slam singles champion — Virginia Wade's 1977 Wimbledon title, won on the Silver Jubilee year in front of the Queen, remains the most celebrated moment in British women's tennis history. Three Grand Slam singles titles in total, including the US Open in 1968 and the Australian Open in 1972, confirmed her quality across surfaces. Her serve-and-volley game was the finest produced by a British woman of the twentieth century, and her subsequent broadcasting career has made her the voice of British tennis for two generations of fans.
Tennis requires exceptional technical precision, physical endurance and the mental resilience to compete across hundreds of matches every season. Career highlights included Wimbledon 1977, US Open 1968, Australian Open 1972. The true measure of a great tennis athlete is the ability to perform consistently over an extended period, and Virginia's career record demonstrates precisely that quality of sustained excellence. Across a career marked by sustained excellence, Virginia established a legacy that endures in the record books and in the lasting memory of tennis fans worldwide. Virginia Wade's achievements in tennis were built on technical discipline, physical preparation and competitive commitment that allowed performance to be maintained at the very top across multiple seasons. The dedication required to perform consistently in tennis at international level defined every aspect of Virginia Wade's approach to the sport.
Wimbledon 1977
She remains the last British woman to win Wimbledon — a wait for a successor that has now extended to nearly 50 years.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- Wimbledon 1977
- US Open 1968
- Australian Open 1972
- 55 career titles