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Elizabeth Smylie

Australian tennis player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Elizabeth Smylie (née Sayers, born 11 April 1963), sometimes known as Liz Smylie, is a retired Australian tennis player. During her career, she won four Grand Slam titles, one in women's doubles and three in mixed doubles. She also won three singles titles and 36 doubles titles on the tour. Liz also taught junior tennis players at Smith's Tennis Center, North Curl Curl. Sydney in the early 1990s.

Quick Facts Country (sports), Born ...
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Career

Smylie turned professional in 1982.[2] She won the women's doubles title at Wimbledon in 1985 with Kathy Jordan.[3] In mixed doubles, she teamed with John Fitzgerald to win the 1983 US Open and 1991 Wimbledon titles and with Todd Woodbridge to win the 1990 US Open. She won the Virginia Slims Championships with Jordan in 1990. Her best Grand Slam performance in singles came at the Australian Open in 1987, when she reached the quarterfinals. Her highest ever singles ranking was world No. 20 and her highest in doubles was world No. 5.

She played Federation Cup from 1984 to 1994, and won a bronze medal in women's doubles with Wendy Turnbull at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul.

Over her career, Smylie won three singles titles and 36 doubles titles. She won the Western Australian Sports Star of the Year award in 1985 and the Comeback Player of the Year award in 1990 and 1993.

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Personal life

She is married to player-manager Peter Smylie and they have three children including professional golfer Elvis Smylie.[4] She was the long-time tournament director of the Australian Women's Hardcourts and also works as a sports television commentator. Her brother Mervyn Sayers played one first-class cricket game for Western Australia in 1979.

Grand Slam tournaments

Doubles: 5 (1 title, 4 runner-ups)

More information Result, Year ...

Mixed doubles: 8 (3 titles, 5 runner-ups)

More information Result, Year ...

Olympic Games

Doubles: 1 (bronze medal)

More information Result, Year ...

Smylie and Turnbull lost their semifinal match to Zina Garrison and Pam Shriver 6–7(5), 4–6. In 1988, there was no bronze medal play-off match, both beaten semifinal pairs received bronze medals.[5][6]

Other significant finals

Year-end championships

Doubles: 1 (title)

More information Result, Year ...

WTA Tour finals

Singles: 6 (3–3)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
More information Result, W/L ...

Doubles: 69 (36–33)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
More information Result, W/L ...
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Grand Slam performance timelines

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RRQ# DNQ A NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.

Singles

More information Tournament, Career SR ...

Doubles

More information Tournament, Career SR ...
  • NR = not ranked

Mixed doubles

More information Tournament, Career SR ...
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References

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