WTA ranking: Jabeur drops three places, the ranking

WTA ranking Jabeur drops three places the ranking

WTA RANKING. Finalist at Wimbledon, Ons Jabeur fell three places and took fifth place. Titled on the London turf, Elena Rybakina remains 23rd. Note the disappearance in the ranking of Serena Williams.

New classification WTA this Monday, July 11 after Wimbledon where no points were distributed. Finalist of the London Grand Slam, Ons Jabeur leaves the podium and loses 3 places. The Tunisian is now 5th in the ranking where Iga Swiatek always takes the lead. Anett Kontaveit (2nd, +1) becomes the Polish runner-up again while Maria Sakkari (3rd, +2) returns to the podium. Titled at Wimbledon, Elena Rybakina remains 23rd in the world when she could have entered the top 10. Away from the field for more than a year, Serena Williams made her return to WImbledon (elimination in the first round against Harmony Tan) . Ejected from the WTA ranking, the American should play the US Open (August 29 – September 11).

From side of the French, they are only four in the top 100: Alizé Cornet loses a place (38th, -1) and remains the French number 1, Caroline Garcia (48th, +7), Diane Parry (77th), Oceane Dodin (77th, +7). After falling eleven places, Clara Burel (106th, -11) leaves the first hundred places.

Iga Swiatek is world number 1. The Pole is ahead of the Estonian Anett Kontaveit and the Greek Maria Sakkari. Classification :

Titled at Roland Garros, Rome, Indian Wells, Miami, Doha and Stuttgart, this season, Iga Swiatek is ahead of the Tunisian Ons Jabeur, crowned in Madrid and Berlin. Semi-finalist in Berlin, Coco Gauff completes the podium at the Race. Classification :

Unlike the “classic” WTA ranking updated each week by taking into account the points earned over the previous 52 weeks, the WTA Race ranking only takes into account the points earned during the current season and gradually accumulates the eighteen best results. .

Computerized from 1973, the WTA ranking is updated every Monday, except during Grand Slam tournaments since November 3, 1975. The WTA ranking, which follows the principles and rules decreed by the WTA, is cumulative over a period of 52 weeks. , that is to say determined by the number of tournaments played during the 52 weeks as well as the best results obtained over this period and fixed at sixteen tournaments to determine the WTA ranking of a singles player.

This ranking includes the points obtained during the four Grand Slam tournaments, the points obtained during the tournaments of the Premier Mandatory category, those of the two best results among the tournaments of the Premier 5 category for the players member of the top 20 and the points obtained at the Masters (tournament where the eight best players of the current season compete).

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