Spain's greatest tennis player — four Grand Slam singles titles, the first Spanish woman to win a Grand Slam, and the tireless retriever whose extraordinary fighting spirit and court coverage made her one of the most difficult players in history to beat.
Arantxa Sánchez Vicario was born in Barcelona in 1971 and turned professional in 1985, winning 4 Grand Slam singles titles — 3 French Opens (1989, 1994, 1998) and the US Open (1994) — and 29 WTA titles. She reached world number one in 1995. Her 1989 French Open victory at 17 — defeating the dominant Steffi Graf — was the biggest upset in women's tennis since the 1970s. She won 6 Grand Slam doubles titles alongside her singles achievements. She won Olympic silver at the 1992 and 1996 Games. Her greatest strength was extraordinary defensive retrieval — she could return balls from positions that seemed impossible, grinding opponents down through court coverage and relentless consistency rather than power. She was Spain's most celebrated female athlete before her country's football dominance in the 2000s and remains one of Spanish tennis's most significant historical figures. She won the French Open three times across a decade — at 17, 22 and 26 — demonstrating longevity at the very highest level on clay. She later served as Spain's Fed Cup captain.
French Open 1989, 1994, 1998
Career Honours
- French Open 1989, 1994, 1998
- US Open 1994
- Olympic Silver 1992, 1996 (singles)
- 29 WTA titles
- 6 Grand Slam doubles titles
- Spain Fed Cup captain