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Born in 2007, Mirra Andreeva showed exceptional promise from a very young age. Raised in a family deeply rooted in tennis – her older sister, Erika Andreeva, is also a professional player – she grew up in an environment designed to nurture talent. To support the development of both daughters, the family relocated to Europe, and Mirra spent part of her training in France at the Elite Tennis Center in Cannes, where she refined her game and sharpened her tactical maturity.
It was on the junior circuit that she first made her name, notably reaching the Australian Open girls’ final in 2023. With outstanding court sense and remarkable baseline stability, she quickly proved she could compete with the best players of her generation. Her transition to the professional tour was electric. In 2023, at only 16 years old, she announced herself to the wider public by reaching the round of 16 at Wimbledon after coming through qualifying, impressing many with her calmness and composure. That same year, she also produced a strong run at Roland‑Garros, advancing to the third round.
In 2024, now coached by Conchita Martinez, Andreeva confirmed her extraordinary potential by reaching the semi‑finals in Paris. At just 17, she became the youngest player to reach a Grand Slam last four since Martina Hingis in 1997. Her rise continued in 2025, a season in which she reached two additional Grand Slam quarter‑finals – at Roland‑Garros and Wimbledon – and captured her first WTA 1000 titles in Dubai and Indian Wells.
Her game is built on exceptional tactical intelligence, clean and reliable ball‑striking off both wings and a striking level of consistency. Mentally strong for her age, she stands – alongside Victoria Mboko, Iva Jovic, Alex Eala and Sara Bejlek – as one of the leading figures of a new generation poised to carry women’s tennis into a bright future.
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