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Jodie Burrage

British tennis player (born 1999) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jodie Burrage

Jodie Anna Burrage (born 28 May 1999) is a British professional tennis player. She has a career-high WTA singles ranking of world No. 85, achieved on 11 September 2023, and a best doubles ranking of No. 147, set on 15 January 2024. Burrage has won one doubles title on the WTA Tour and one doubles title on the WTA Challenger Tour, along with six titles in singles and seven in doubles on the ITF Circuit.

Quick Facts Full name, Country (sports) ...
Jodie Burrage
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Burrage at the 2023 Transylvania Open
Full nameJodie Anna Burrage
Country (sports) United Kingdom
ResidenceLondon, England
Born (1999-05-28) 28 May 1999 (age 25)[1]
Kingston upon Thames, London, England[2]
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
PlaysRight-handed (two-handed backhand)
CoachCraig Veal
Prize moneyUS$ 1,112,793
Singles
Career record258–179
Career titles6 ITF
Highest rankingNo. 85 (11 September 2023)
Current rankingNo. 174 (31 March 2025)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian Open2R (2025)
French OpenQ1 (2021)
Wimbledon2R (2023)
US Open2R (2023)
Doubles
Career record80–58
Career titles1 WTA, 1 WTA Challenger
Highest rankingNo. 147 (15 January 2024)
Current rankingNo. 257 (31 March 2025)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian Open1R (2025)
Wimbledon1R (2021, 2022, 2023)
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
Wimbledon1R (2021, 2023)
Last updated on: 31 March 2025.
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Early and personal life

Burrage was born in Kingston upon Thames and grew up in Hindhead, Surrey. She was first introduced to tennis through her mother. Burrage won a scholarship to Talbot Heath School in Bournemouth, which enabled her to develop her tennis at the nearby West Hants Club. Following the completion of GCSE exams Burrage relocated to Junior Tennis Coaching (JTC) in Chiswick, London, where she was guided by former tour professionals Colin Beecher and Lucie Ahl.[3]

Career

Summarize
Perspective

2020–2021: WTA Tour and majors debut

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Burrage at the 2021 Nottingham Open

Burrage made her WTA Tour main-draw debut at the 2020 Linz Open, having received a wildcard into the doubles tournament, partnering Sabine Lisicki.[4] But the pair had to retire in the first set of their opening match when Lisicki suffered an injury.[5]

In January 2021, she made her WTA Tour main-draw debut in singles at the Abu Dhabi Open as a lucky loser. In June, she had her main-draw Grand Slam debut, after being handed a wildcard to the 2021 Wimbledon Championships.[6][7] She lost in the first round to Lauren Davis.[8]

2022: First top-5 win, top 150 debut

At the Eastbourne International, she defeated top seed and world No. 4, Paula Badosa.[9][10][11] As a result, she made her top 150 debut in the WTA singles rankings.[12] She ended the year at a career high ranking of 126 having improved 90 places during the season.[13]

2023: Maiden career singles final and doubles title, top 100

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Burrage at the 2023 US Open

At the Nottingham Open, she reached her first WTA Tour quarterfinal defeating third seed Magda Linette.[14] She then defeated another Polish player, Magdalena Fręch, to reach a WTA Tour semifinal for the first time in her career.[15] Finally, she defeated Alizé Cornet to set up an all-British final with Katie Boulter, the first since 1977.[16][17] Boulter won in straight sets.[18]

At Wimbledon, she recorded her first major win defeating Caty McNally,[19] before losing in round two to Daria Kasatkina, in straight sets.[20] As a result, she reached the top 100 in the rankings for the first time.[21]

Burrage won a round in the Poland Open against Ankita Raina,[22] but lost in straight sets against Lucrezia Stefanini.[23] She reached the quarterfinals at the Stanford WTA Challenger, beating Diana Shnaider[24] and Kayla Day,[25] before a narrow three-set loss to Moyuka Uchijima.[26] At the same event, she won her first Challenger doubles title partnering Olivia Gadecki.[27]

She achieved her first main-draw win at the US Open, defeating world No. 38, Anna Blinkova,[28][29] before falling in straight sets to world No. 2, Aryna Sabalenka in the second round.[30][31]

Burrage captured her maiden WTA Tour title winning the doubles with Jil Teichmann at the 2023 Transylvania Open, defeating Léolia Jeanjean and Valeriya Strakhova in straight sets in the final.[32][33]

She made her debut for Great Britain's Billie Jean King Cup team in November 2023 in a play-off tie with Sweden held indoors at the Copper Box Arena in London. Playing world No. 372, Kajsa Rinaldo Persson in the opening match of the contest, she raced into a 4–0 lead in the first set only to lose 12 of the next 13 games to go down to a 4–6, 1–6 defeat.[34] She was replaced by Harriet Dart for day two of the tie which Great Britain won 3–1.[35]

2024: Australian Open debut, WTA 500 quarterfinal, injury woe

Burrage made her main-draw debut at the Australian Open in January 2024 going out in the first round to Tamara Korpatsch.[36] At the Linz Open in Austria, she came through two qualifying rounds and then beat Varvara Gracheva[37] and Jaqueline Cristian[38] to reach her first WTA 500 event quarterfinal, before losing out to Jelena Ostapenko.[39]

Burrage underwent surgery having suffered an injury to her left wrist while practicing prior to her defeat in the first round of qualifying at the San Diego Open.[40] After recovering from the surgery, Burrage was set to return to action at the French Open in May for what would have been her first main-draw appearance at the clay-court event, but she was forced to pull out just days before the tournament began when she injured her ankle in practice.[41] She subsequently announced the injury would force her to miss the entire grass-court season including Wimbledon.[42]

Having missed six months of the season, Burrage returned to the competitive court in September in the qualifying stages at the Jasmin Open in Tunisia, winning her first match against Lina Soussi in straight sets.[43] Partnering with Anastasia Tikhonova, Burrage won the doubles title at her second comeback tournament, the W100 Caldas da Rainha Ladies Open in Portugal, defeating third seeds Francisca Jorge and Matilde Jorge in straight sets in the final.[44] Alongside Freya Christie, she won the doubles title at the W75 Glasgow in October, also reaching the singles semifinals at the event.[45]

In December, Burrage reached her first singles final of the year at the W75 Trnava event, losing to top seed Tatjana Maria.[46] The following week, having received a wildcard entry, she went one step better, winning the biggest title of her career to date at the W100 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge in Dubai, defeating top seed Polina Kudermetova in the final.[47][48] As a result, Burrage re-entered the WTA rankings top-200, gaining 59 places to world No. 179 on 9 December 2024.[49]

2025: Australian Open first win

Burrage started her 2025 season at the Auckland Open where she entered the main draw as a lucky loser and defeated wildcard entrant Vivian Yang in the first round,[50] before losing her next match to Hailey Baptiste in a deciding set tiebreak.[51]

Using her protected ranking to gain entry into the main draw at the Australian Open, she defeated qualifier Léolia Jeanjean to reach the second round,[52] where she lost to third seed Coco Gauff.[53]

In February, again using her protected ranking, Burrage entered the ATX Open, defeating Petra Kvitová in the first round,[54][55] before losing to Ajla Tomljanović.[56]

Performance timelines

Summarize
Perspective
Key
W  F  SF QF #R RRQ# P# DNQ A Z# PO G S B NMS NTI P NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (P#) preliminary round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (Z#) Davis/Fed Cup Zonal Group (with number indication) or (PO) play-off; (G) gold, (S) silver or (B) bronze Olympic/Paralympic medal; (NMS) not a Masters tournament; (NTI) not a Tier I tournament; (P) postponed; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Billie Jean King Cup, United Cup, Hopman Cup and Olympic Games are included in win–loss records.

Singles

Current through the 2024 Wuhan Open Open.

More information Tournament, SR ...
Tournament 2021 2022 2023 2024 SR W–L Win%
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian Open A Q1 Q3 1R 0 / 1 0–1 0%
French Open Q1 A A A 0 / 0 0–0   
Wimbledon 1R 1R 2R A 0 / 3 1–3 25%
US Open Q2 Q1 2R A 0 / 1 1–1 50%
Win–loss 0–1 0–1 2–2 0–1 0 / 5 2–5 29%
WTA 1000
Dubai / Qatar Open[a] A A A A 0 / 0 0–0   
Indian Wells Open A A Q1 A 0 / 0 0–0   
Miami Open A A Q2 A 0 / 0 0–0   
Madrid Open A A Q2 A 0 / 0 0–0   
Italian Open A A A A 0 / 0 0–0   
Canadian Open A A Q1 A 0 / 0 0–0   
Cincinnati Open A A A A 0 / 0 0–0   
Guadalajara Open NH A A A 0 / 0 0–0   
Wuhan Open NH A 0 / 0 0–0   
China Open NH Q1 A 0 / 0 0–0   
Win–loss 0–0 0–0 0–0 0–0 0 / 0 0–0   
Career statistics
2021 2022 2023 2024 SR W–L Win%
Tournaments 4 4 9 Career total: 17
Titles 0 0 0 Career total: 0
Finals 0 0 1 Career total: 1
Hard win–loss 0–2 1–1 3–5 0 / 8 4–8 33%
Clay win–loss 0–0 0–0 0–0 0 / 0 0–0   
Grass win–loss 0–2 3–3 6–4 0 / 9 9–9 50%
Overall win–loss 0–4 4–4 9–9 0 / 17 13–17 43%
Year-end ranking[b] 221 127 93 179 $783,566
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Doubles

Current through the 2024 Wimbledon Championships.

More information Tournament, SR ...
Tournament 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 SR W–L
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian Open A A A A A 0 / 0 0–0
French Open A A A A A 0 / 0 0–0
Wimbledon A 1R 1R 1R A 0 / 3 0–3
US Open A A A A A 0 / 0 0–0
Win–loss 0–0 0–1 0–1 0–1 0–0 0 / 3 0–3
Career statistics
Tournaments 1 3 2 2 0 Career total: 8
Overall win–loss 0–1 0–3 0–2 0–2 0–0 0 / 8 0–8
Year-end ranking 368 385 398 149 242
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WTA Tour finals

Singles: 1 (runner-up)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
Legend
Grand Slam
WTA 1000
WTA 500
WTA 250 (0–1)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–0)
Grass (0–1)
Clay (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
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More information Result, W–L ...
Result W–L    Date    Tournament Tier Surface Opponent Score
Loss 0–1 Jun 2023 Nottingham Open, United Kingdom WTA 250 Grass United Kingdom Katie Boulter 3–6, 3–6
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Doubles: 1 (title)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
Legend
Grand Slam
WTA 1000
WTA 500
WTA 250 (1–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (1–0)
Grass (0–0)
Clay (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
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More information Result, W–L ...
Result W–L    Date    Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 1–0 Oct 2023 Transylvania Open, Romania WTA 250 Hard (i) Switzerland Jil Teichmann France Léolia Jeanjean
Ukraine Valeriya Strakhova
6–1, 6–4
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WTA Challenger finals

Doubles: 1 (title)

More information Result, W–L ...
Result W–L    Date    Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 1–0 Aug 2023 Golden Gate Open,
United States
Hard Australia Olivia Gadecki United States Hailey Baptiste
United States Claire Liu
7–6(7–4), 6–7(6–8), [10–8]
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ITF Circuit finals

Singles: 16 (6 titles, 10 runner-ups)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
Legend
$100,000 tournaments (1–1)
$60,000 tournaments (1–3)
$25,000 tournaments (2–4)
$15,000 tournaments (2–2)
Finals by surface
Hard (5–9)
Grass (0–1)
Carpet (1–0)
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More information Result, W–L ...
Result W–L    Date    Tournament Tier Surface Opponent Score
Loss 0–1 Mar 2017 ITF Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt 15,000 Hard Germany Julia Wachaczyk 6–2, 3–6, 2–6
Win 1–1 Jul 2017 ITF Dublin, Ireland 15,000 Carpet Republic of Ireland Sinéad Lohan 7–6(5), 6–4
Win 2–1 Mar 2018 ITF Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt 15,000 Hard United States Nadja Gilchrist 6–2, 6–1
Loss 2–2 Feb 2019 ITF Jodhpur, India 25,000 Hard Japan Miharu Imanishi 3–6, 6–3, 3–6
Loss 2–3 Apr 2019 ITF Bolton, United Kingdom 25,000 Hard Russia Vitalia Diatchenko 2–6, 2–6
Win 3–3 May 2019 ITF Jerusalem, Israel 25,000 Hard Latvia Daniela Vismane 2–6, 6–2, 6–3
Loss 3–4 Jan 2020 ITF Monastir, Tunisia 15,000 Hard France Victoria Muntean 1–6, 6–0, 6–7(5)
Loss 3–5 Sep 2020 ITF Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal 25,000 Hard Brazil Beatriz Haddad Maia 1–6, 4–6
Win 4–5 Apr 2021 ITF Dubai, United Arab Emirates 25,000 Hard Belarus Yuliya Hatouka 6–4, 6–3
Loss 4–6 Jul 2021 ITF Les Contamines-Montjoie, France 25,000 Hard Switzerland Ylena In-Albon 6–4, 5–7, 5–7
Loss 4–7 Jun 2022 Ilkley Trophy, United Kingdom 100,000 Grass Hungary Dalma Gálfi 5–7, 6–4, 3–6
Loss 4–8 Aug 2022 Lexington Challenger, United States 60,000 Hard United Kingdom Katie Swan 0–6, 6–3, 3–6
Loss 4–9 Jan 2023 Canberra International, Australia 60,000 Hard United Kingdom Katie Boulter 6–3, 3–6, 2–6
Win 5–9 Apr 2023 Open de Seine-et-Marne, France 60,000 Hard (i) Italy Lucia Bronzetti 3–6, 6–4, 6–0
Loss 5–10 Dec 2024 Empire Women's Indoor, Slovakia 60,000 Hard (i) Germany Tatjana Maria 4–6, 1–6
Win 6–10 Dec 2024 Al Habtoor Tennis Challenge, Dubai 100,000 Hard Polina Kudermetova 6–3, 6–3
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Doubles: 11 (7 titles, 4 runner–ups)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
Legend
$100,000 tournaments (1–0)
$60,000 tournaments (1–2)
$25,000 tournaments (2–1)
$15,000 tournaments (3–1)
Finals by surface
Hard (7–4)
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More information Result, W–L ...
Result W–L    Date    Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 1–0 Nov 2017 ITF Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt 15,000 Hard United Kingdom Freya Christie Sweden Linnéa Malmqvist
South Korea Park Sang-hee
7–5, 3–6, [13–11]
Win 2–0 Nov 2017 ITF Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt 15,000 Hard United Kingdom Freya Christie Thailand Watsachol Sawatdee
Thailand Chanikarn Silakul
6–4, 7–5
Loss 2–1 Mar 2018 ITF Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt 15,000 Hard Sweden Jacqueline Cabaj Awad Thailand Kamonwan Buayam
Russia Angelina Gabueva
5–7, 7–5, [7–10]
Win 3–1 Apr 2019 ITF Bolton, United Kingdom 25,000 Hard United Kingdom Alicia Barnett Romania Laura Ioana Paar
Belgium Hélène Scholsen
6–3, 6–3
Loss 3–2 May 2019 ITF Les Franqueses del Vallès, Spain 60,000 Hard United Kingdom Olivia Nicholls France Jessika Ponchet
United Kingdom Eden Silva
3–6, 4–6
Win 4–2 Jan 2020 ITF Monastir, Tunisia 15,000 Hard Slovakia Tereza Mihalíková France Mallaurie Noël
Finland Oona Orpana
6–1, 6–2
Loss 4–3 Sep 2020 ITF Montemor-o-Novo, Portugal 25,000 Hard United Kingdom Olivia Nicholls Spain Marina Bassols Ribera
Romania Ioana Loredana Roșca
6–7(5), 6–4, [6–10]
Win 5–3 May 2021 ITF Salinas, Ecuador 25,000 Hard New Zealand Paige Hourigan Portugal Francisca Jorge
Sweden Jacqueline Cabaj Awad
6–2, 2–6, [10–8]
Loss 5–4 Apr 2023 Open de Seine-et-Marne, France 60,000 Hard (i) Turkey Berfu Cengiz Belgium Yanina Wickmayer
Belgium Greet Minnen
4–6, 4–6
Win 6–4 Sep 2024 Caldas da Rainha Open, Portugal W100 Hard Russia Anastasia Tikhonova Portugal Francisca Jorge
Portugal Matilde Jorge
7–6(3), 6–4
Win 7–4 Oct 2024 GB Pro-Series Glasgow, United Kingdom W75 Hard (i) United Kingdom Freya Christie Georgia (country) Mariam Bolkvadze
Netherlands Isabelle Haverlag
6–4, 3–6, [10–5]
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Head-to-head record

Record against top 10 players

  • She has a 1–3 (25%) record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10.
More information Result, W–L ...
Result W–L Opponent Rank Event Surface Round Score Rank H2H
2022
Win 1–0 Spain Paula Badosa No. 4 Eastbourne International, UK Grass 2R 6–4, 6–3 No. 169 1–0
2023
Loss 1–1 United States Coco Gauff No. 7 Eastbourne International, UK Grass 2R 1–6, 1–6 No. 128 0–1
Loss 1–2 Russia Daria Kasatkina No. 10 Wimbledon Championships, UK Grass 2R 0–6, 2–6 No. 108 0–1
Loss 1–3 Belarus Aryna Sabalenka No. 2 US Open, United States Hard 2R 3–6, 2–6 No. 96 0–1
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Notes

  1. The first Premier 5 event of the year has switched back and forth between the Dubai Tennis Championships and the Qatar Ladies Open since 2009. Dubai was classified as a Premier 5 event from 2009 to 2011 before being succeeded by Doha for the 2012–2014 period. In 2015, Dubai regained its Premier 5 status while Doha was demoted to Premier status. The Premier 5 tournaments were reclassified as WTA 1000 tournaments in 2021.
  2. 2017: WTA ranking–587, 2018: WTA ranking–411, 2019: WTA ranking–287, 2020: WTA ranking–260.

References

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