Fixtures

Wimbledon Women 07/02 13:30 24 Beatriz Haddad Maia vs Dalma Galfi View

Results

Wimbledon Women 06/30 12:35 23 [20] Beatriz Haddad Maia v Rebecca Sramkova [34] 7-6,6-4
WTA Bad Homburg 06/26 09:30 27 [21] Beatriz Haddad Maia v Jasmine Paolini [4] 5-7,5-7
WTA Bad Homburg 06/25 12:00 26 [14] Elina Svitolina v Beatriz Haddad Maia [21] 6-3,4-6,6-7
WTA Bad Homburg 06/24 09:30 25 [31] Ashlyn Krueger v Beatriz Haddad Maia [21] 1-6,4-6
WTA Bad Homburg 06/24 09:00 25 Xinyu Wang v Beatriz Haddad Maia CANC
WTA Nottingham 06/17 16:40 25 [21] Beatriz Haddad Maia v McCartney Kessler [42] 5-7,7-6,5-7
WTA Queens 06/11 12:00 26 [10] Emma Navarro v Beatriz Haddad Maia [22] 1-6,7-6,6-3
WTA Queens 06/09 11:00 25 Pedro Gabriel Rodrigues v Beatriz Haddad Maia 6-2,4-6,4-6
French Open Women 05/27 09:00 23 [23] Beatriz Haddad Maia v Hailey Baptiste [70] 6-4,3-6,1-6
WTA Strasbourg 05/23 12:30 28 [12] Elena Rybakina v Beatriz Haddad Maia [23] 7-6,1-6,6-2
WTA Strasbourg 05/22 10:55 27 [23] Beatriz Haddad Maia v Emma Navarro [9] 3-6,7-6,6-2
WTA Strasbourg 05/21 09:00 26 [23] Beatriz Haddad Maia v Ashlyn Krueger [37] 7-6,6-3

Wikipedia - Beatriz Haddad Maia

Beatriz "Bia" Haddad Maia (Brazilian Portuguese: [beaˈtɾiz ʁadaˈdʒi ˈmajɐ]; born 30 May 1996) is a Brazilian professional tennis player. She reached a career-high of world No. 10 in singles and in doubles, becoming the first Brazilian woman to enter the top 10 in singles in the history of the WTA rankings. Haddad Maia has won four singles titles and seven doubles titles on the WTA Tour, and reached a major semifinal at the 2023 French Open and a major quarterfinal at the 2024 US Open.

Playing for the Brazil Fed Cup team, Haddad Maia has a win–loss record of 33–14 (12–2 in doubles) as of June 2025.

History

Haddad Maia peaked at No. 15 in the ITF junior rankings. She won her first professional doubles title at the 10k tournament in Mogi das Cruzes in September 2010, aged 14, playing alongside Flávia Guimarães Bueno, and her first professional singles title at the 10k event in Goiânia in 2011, aged 15. In the beginning of her career, Haddad Maia received part of her training as an athlete at the Esporte Clube Pinheiros in São Paulo.

Her best achievement as a junior player was being doubles runner-up at the French Open twice in 2012 and 2013 partnering with Paraguayan Montserrat González and Ecuadorian Doménica González respectively. She was also a doubles semifinalist at the Wimbledon Championships in 2011 playing alongside Mayya Katsitadze from Russia.

She turned professional in 2014, and in December of that year, she became Brazil's second highest ranked female tennis player.

She made her WTA Tour-level debut at the 2013 Brasil Tennis Cup in Florianópolis as a wildcard. She scored her first WTA Tour main-draw win against Hsu Chieh-yu in the first round, losing to Melinda Czink in the second round. At the same tournament, Haddad Maia made her WTA Tour-level doubles main-draw debut with partner Carla Forte.

In 2014, she was handed a wildcard at both the Rio Open and Brasil Tennis Cup main draws, losing in the first round of singles and doubles of both tournaments.

Haddad at the 2015 French Open

In February 2015, she reached the quarterfinals of the Rio Open as a wildcard. Playing alongside Teliana Pereira, she reached the semifinals in the doubles competition but was forced to withdraw due to the injury sustained in the singles competition.

At Bogotá, Haddad won her first WTA Tour doubles title with compatriot Paula Cristina Gonçalves, defeating Irina Falconi and Shelby Rogers in the final. In July 2015, she suffered a shoulder injury at the Pan American Games in Toronto, resulting in season-ending surgery.

In 2016, Haddad Maia was awarded wildcards from the Rio Open, Miami Open, and Brasil Tennis Cup.

Having fallen to the 367th position in the rankings by 18 July 2016, Haddad Maia recovered almost 200 spots during the second half of 2016, finishing the year with two consecutive 50k titles in Scottsdale and Waco.

2017: Top 100, first singles final

Haddad Maia at the 2017 Wimbledon Championships

Haddad Maia started her 2017 season in Australia, playing two tournaments in Perth and winning the $25k event in Clare, South Australia in both singles and doubles with partner Genevieve Lorbergs.

At Bogotá, she won her second title at the event. Playing with Argentinian Nadia Podoroska, she defeated Cepede Royg and Magda Linette in the final.

During the European clay court season, she entered the qualifying tournament at Stuttgart and lost to Kristýna Plíšková in the quarterfinals.

The following week, Haddad had the best performance of her career at the 100k Open de Cagnes-sur-Mer, when she won the title without dropping a set, defeating Jil Teichmann in the final. As a result, Haddad Maia made her debut in the top 100 of the WTA rankings.

At the French Open's qualifying tournament, Haddad Maia won all three of her qualifying matches, earning a spot in the main draw of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time in her career. Also on clay, she reached the semifinals of the Bol Open, a WTA 125 event, losing to the eventual champion, Aleksandra Krunić.

Haddad Maia received her first direct acceptance at a Grand Slam main draw at Wimbledon, losing in the second round to Simona Halep. In the doubles competition, she reached the third round with Croatian partner Ana Konjuh, losing to Chan Hao-ching and Monica Niculescu.

She gained her first direct acceptance at a WTA Tour tournament at the Korean Open. Haddad Maia reached her first tour-level singles final at the tournament, losing to Jeļena Ostapenko.

2018: Injury and hiatus

After the Australian Open, she played for Brazil at the American Fed Cup Zone six rubbers between both singles and doubles and won five of them.

2019–20: Doping suspension and return

Haddad Maia at the 2019 Prague Open

Haddad Maia qualified for the Australian Open, reaching the second round of the main draw. She also reached the quarterfinals, as a qualifier, at the WTA Tour event in Acapulco in late February, losing to eventual champion Wang Yafan.

Again out of the qualifying, Haddad Maia reached the semifinals at the Copa Colsanitas, losing to eventual champion Amanda Anisimova. After retiring due to injury in the first round of qualifying at the French Open, she played a WTA Challenger event in Bol, Croatia during the second week of the French Open in early June.

In July 2019, she was provisionally suspended by the ITF for testing positive for ostarine (SARM S-22) and ligandrol (LGD-4033) at the event in Bol. In February 2020, Haddad Maia was served with a ten-month ban for the period July 2019 to May 2020 for unintentional use of the banned substances, as she was able to prove that the sources were contaminated supplements that she had been prescribed by her sports medicine specialists. The judgement declared that she bore "No Significant Fault or Negligence" for the violation, but given prior similar cases involving Brazilian players such as Marcelo Demoliner, Thomaz Bellucci and Igor Marcondes, the ITF determined that she should have been aware of the risks of using supplements and therefore issued her with the ban.

Having dropped to a ranking of 1342 during the suspension, she could not compete in that major event, having to start again in small tournaments. After widespread cancellation of tournaments due to the COVID-19 pandemic, she returned to play in September 2020 at the ITF event of Montemor-o-Novo in Portugal. Haddad won the title and three more on Portuguese soil in the next month. A hand injury led to an enchondroma diagnosis, forcing her to go through a season-ending surgery.

2021: Indian Wells 4th round, back to top 100

In October, at the rescheduled Indian Wells Open, Haddad Maia lost in qualifying but was awarded a spot in the main draw following the withdrawal of 29th seed Nadia Podoroska. She upset Karolína Plíšková to advance to the fourth round. The performance was enough to return to the top 100.

2022: Major doubles & WTA 1000 singles finals

Haddad Maia at the 2022 French Open

Haddad Maia played doubles at Melbourne with Anna Danilina, and they reached the final, making Haddad only the third Brazilian woman in a final of a Grand Slam tournament, after Maria Bueno and Cláudia Monteiro. Haddad Maia rose to No. 40 in the WTA doubles rankings.

Her best performance after the Australian Open was in the Monterrey Open, reaching the semifinals, where she lost to eventual champion Leylah Fernandez. Haddad also managed another upset over a top-5 player at the Miami Open, beating world No. 3, Maria Sakkari, to reach the third round on a WTA 1000 level for the third time in her career.

In May, she won her first WTA 125 tournament, the Open de Saint-Malo, defeating Anna Blinkova in the final, and she won the doubles at the Trophee Lagardère in Paris with Mladenovic while also being runner-up in the singles to Claire Liu. As a result, Haddad Maia surpassed her previous career-high of 57 in the singles rankings with No. 49, becoming the first Brazilian in the top 50 since Teliana Pereira in 2015.

Haddad won her biggest singles title at the WTA 250 Nottingham Open, while also winning the doubles tournament alongside Zhang Shuai. The results boosted her to the top 40 in the singles and top 30 in doubles rankings. She followed this victory up with facing Zhang in the final of the Birmingham Classic where Haddad won her second singles title, when the Chinese retired in the first set. The title propelled her into the top 30 in singles for the first time in her career. She joined Ons Jabeur, who won in Berlin less than an hour earlier, and Iga Świątek as players to win multiple WTA Tour titles in the season. She was also the first Brazilian to win in the tournament 40-year history. Gisele Miró had the best previous result by a player from Brazil, reaching the second round in 1989. When Haddad lost her Eastbourne International semifinal match to Petra Kvitová, she had 12 wins and a walkover, the longest winning streak on grass courts since Serena Williams a decade earlier. Despite impressive form in the warm-up grass-court tournaments, she lost in the first round of Wimbledon.

Ranked No. 24 in singles at the start of the Canadian Open, she reached the final by defeating Martina Trevisan, Leylah Fernandez, Iga Świątek, and Belinda Bencic. As a result, she reached the top 20 in the singles rankings, on 15 August 2022. Haddad Maia then breezed past former No. 1, Karolína Plíšková, to become the first Brazilian woman ever to reach a WTA 1000 final. She lost the final against Simona Halep, in three sets.

At the WTA 1000 Guadajalara Open, Haddad and Danilina reached the final, and she became the first Brazilian woman in history to qualify for the WTA Finals. Thanks to this result, she also entered the world's top 15 in doubles for the first time. In an unprecedented Brazilian final at the WTA 1000 level against Luisa Stefani and Storm Sanders, they ended runners-up in a tight result, with a score of 7–6, 6–7 and [10–8] in favour of Stefani/Sanders. Haddad Maia finished the season being awarded by the WTA as Most Improved Player of 2022.

2023: WTA 1000 doubles title, singles top 10

Haddad Maia at Roland Garros, 2023

At the WTA 500 in Abu Dhabi, she reached the quarterfinals after more than a three-hour battle with Yulia Putintseva. Next, she reached the semifinals by defeating Elena Rybakina and recording a six-match winning streak against top-10 players. She lost the semifinal match to Belinda Bencic in straight sets. Nevertheless, she moved to a career-high ranking of No. 12 on 13 February 2023.

Playing with Laura Siegemund, Haddad reached her second WTA 1000 doubles final in Indian Wells.

She won her first WTA 1000 doubles title at Madrid with Victoria Azarenka, defeating Jessica Pegula and Coco Gauff in a final that was followed by controversy as none of the participating players were allowed to make a speech on the podium during the awards ceremony. The organizers subsequently apologized for the mistake. As a result, she reached the top 10 in the doubles rankings on 8 May 2023.

At the Italian Open, Haddad Maia reached quarterfinals at a WTA 1000 level for the second time. Haddad was close to qualifying for the semifinals, but in an extremely long match lasting 3 hours and 41 minutes, the longest of the season, she lost to Anhelina Kalinina. Still in the first set, Haddad felt an injury to her left leg, which ended up limiting her movement in decisive moments of the game.

At the French Open, she became the first Brazilian woman to reach the semifinals since Maria Bueno in 1966. Haddad lost the semifinal to top seed and world No. 1, Iga Świątek. She entered the top 10 in singles on 12 June 2023, becoming the first Brazilian woman to reach this milestone since the introduction of the WTA rankings.

Haddad played on the grass courts of the Nottingham Open. In her first-round match, she slipped and felt a strong pain in the back of her knee that limited her movement, leaving her with edema in the region. She lost the match and had to withdraw from the following week's tournament in Birmingham. In the third week of the grass-court season, at the Eastbourne International, she won the first match but was forced to retire from her match against Petra Martić, still due to her knee injury with the score at 4–6, 2–3.

She made up for these losses by having the best campaign of her career at Wimbledon. Haddad won the first three matches and reached the fourth round, during which she was forced to retire due to a lower back injury.

At the US Open, she reached the doubles quarterfinals losing in a close match to former champions Laura Siegemund and Vera Zvonareva.

Haddad won both tournaments at the 2023 WTA Elite Trophy, in doubles partnered with Veronika Kudermetova. She finished the season at No. 11, her best end of the season ranking.

2024: First WTA 500 singles title, Olympics debut

Her first competition of the season was representing Brazil in the United Cup in Perth, Australia, a mixed team competition for countries. Haddad's evolution in the previous season was decisive for Brazil to qualify for this tournament for the second consecutive time. Although the team's performance was not good and Brazil was disqualified in the group stage, the Brazilian No. 1 was the only one to record a win for the team in the women's singles match against Sara Sorribes Tormo in straight sets. Still on the Australian swing, Haddad participated in the Adelaide International. In the doubles bracket, she formed a partnership with Taylor Townsend. They won the tournament title beating Caroline Garcia and Kristina Mladenovic, in straight sets in the final. Haddad had a direct entry into the Australian Open. In the singles main draw, as No. 10 seed, she got past Linda Fruhvirtová in the first round in a three-set match, then defeated Alina Korneeva in the second in straight sets, becoming the first Brazilian to advance to the third round in Australia in the Open Era and the first since Maria Bueno in 1965, but then lost to qualifier Maria Timofeeva in straight sets. In the doubles bracket, keeping partnership with Townsend and as No. 8 seeds, they reached the round of 16, where they fell to the pair Cristina Bucșa / Alexandra Panova in straight sets. This campaign at the Australian Open placed Haddad back in the top 20 of the doubles rankings, occupying 20th position, gaining three places.

For the Abu Dhabi Open, in preparation for the 2024 Paris Olympics, Haddad decided to partner with compatriot Luisa Stefani, as both have the rankings to play the doubles tournament together, and previously won two ITF tournaments in 2019. She reached both semifinals of Abu Dhabi, but after losing a long match to Daria Kasatkina in the singles tournament, she pulled out of the doubles match the following day. Her next tournament was the Qatar Ladies Open where she lost in the first round to Wang Xinyu, in straight sets.

In August, at the Cleveland Open, she reached her sixth WTA Tour final, defeating qualifier Viktorija Golubic, Cristina Bucșa, Clara Burel, and third seed Kateřina Siniaková before losing to wildcard entrant McCartney Kessler.

Haddad Maia won her first WTA 500 singles title at the Korea Open, defeating three Russian players, sisters Polina and Veronika Kudermetova in the same day and then Daria Kasatkina in the final, in three sets.

2025: Best French Open performance in doubles, 8th WTA doubles title

Beatriz Haddad Maia began her 2025 season representing Brazil in the United Cup, held in Perth, Australia. In her first match, she faced the Chinese player Gao Xinyu, ranked 175th in the world. Despite being the favorite, Haddad Maia suffered a dramatic defeat in a match lasting 3 hours and 20 minutes. She lost in three sets after experiencing severe cramping that forced her to serve underarm in the decisive moments.

In Brazil's second tie of the event, Haddad faced Laura Siegemund of Germany and lost in straight sets. Brazil was eliminated, after suffering additional defeats in singles and mixed doubles, concluding the United Cup without advancing through the group stage.

Following the United Cup, Haddad Maia participated in the WTA 500 Adelaide International. She was seeded 15th in the singles draw and faced Madison Keys in the first round but suffered two set loss, marking her worst start to a season in four years. At the same tournament, partnering with Laura Siegemund, Haddad was runner-up in the doubles losing to Guo Hanyu and Alexandra Panova in the final.

After Adelaide, Haddad Maia went to Melbourne for the Australian Open, where she was at both singles and doubles competitions.

In her first singles match, Haddad Maia faced the Argentine player Julia Riera and won in three sets. This match marked her first singles win of the 2025 season.

Advancing to the second round, she competed against Erika Andreeva from Russia, winning in straight sets. With this victory, Haddad reached the third round of the Australian Open, equaling the best performance by a Brazilian in the Open era.

In the doubles tournament, Haddad Maia partnered again with Laura Siegemund. In the first round they faced Suzan Lamens from the Netherlands and Quinn Gleason from the United States, with a final score of 6/1 6/3. The pair advanced to the second round of the Australian Open, continuing Haddad's strong presence in doubles competitions.

Haddad Maia’s run at the Australian Open would end at the third round of both singles and doubles. In singles she lost to Russian Veronika Kudermetova in straight sets and in doubles she and Siegemund were defeated by Erin Routliffe and Gabriela Dabrowski in three sets.

In her next eight singles matches, Haddad Maia would not get a single victory, loosing to Magdalena Fręch at the WTA Qatar Open, Anastasia Potapova at the Dubai Tennis Championships, Rebecca Šramková at the Mérida Open, Sonay Kartal at the Indian Wells Open, Linda Fruhvirtová at the Miami Open, Linda Nosková and Jéssica Bouzas Maneiro at the Billie Jean King Cup and Emma Navarro at the Women's Stuttgart Open. Haddad Maia would only win again in singles matches against Bernarda Pera at the first round of the Madrid Open.

Despite of that, Haddad Maia would lose at her Madrid's second match against Belinda Bencic and at the Italian Open against Marie Bouzková on her opening match.

In her next tournament, the Internationaux de Strasbourg, Haddad delivered her best singles performance of the 2025 season so far, reaching the semifinals and losing to Elena Rybakina in a hard-fought three-set match.

In that same period, she continued playing at the doubles circuit. Haddad Maia once again partnered with Laura Siegemund, reaching the WTA Qatar Open semifinals, the quarterfinals at the Dubai Tennis Championships, the round of 16 at the Indian Wells Open and the quarterfinals at the Madrid Open. She also partnered with Luisa Stefani to play and win against Linda Nosková and Tereza Valentová at the Billie Jean King Cup.

Haddad Maia's next tournament was the French Open, where she lost to Hailey Baptiste at the singles first round, in a three set match.

However, at the doubles draw, she again played alongside Laura Siegemund and delivered the best performance on that tournament in her career so far, reaching the round of 16 for the first time ever, but losing to the Italians Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini, that would later be the tournament's champions.

Haddad Maia then went to play at the grass courts tournaments. First she went to London and played at the Queen's Club Championships at both the singles and doubles events. In singles she won her first match in a comeback win of three sets, facing former world number 2 and Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitová, marking their third encounter. At the second round Haddad Maia faced Emma Navarro in their third encounter of the season and the first ever on grass. Navarro won in three sets.

At the doubles competition she participated alongside Cristina Bucșa from Spain and together they were defeated at the first round by the Kazakhstan pair of Yulia Putintseva and Elena Rybakina in a three set match.