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Laura Samson

Czech tennis player (born 2008) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Laura Samson (formerly known as Laura Samsonová; born 10 March 2008) is a Czech professional tennis player.[1]

Quick facts Country (sports), Born ...

She won the girls' doubles title at the 2023 Wimbledon Championships and was a runner-up in girls' singles at the 2024 French Open.

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Personal info

In 2024, she changed her surname to the gender neutral form to be distinguished from another WTA Tour tennis player, Russian Liudmila Samsonova, with whom she shared the same abbreviated name (L. Samsonova).[2]

Career

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Juniors

A member of TK Sparta Prague, Samson won her first junior title as a 13-year-old at a J5 event in Prostějov in an October 2021, without dropping a set. It was her first junior-level event. She then won her second J5 event in November 2021 in Silla-Saledar in Spain, and reached the final in her third, in Montemar.[3][4]

In July 2023, she won the Wimbledon girls' doubles title with compatriot Alena Kovačková. In the final, they faced Hannah Klugman and Isabelle Lacy of Great Britain, winning in straight sets.[5] They were the first Czech pairing to win the title since Barbora Krejčíková and Kateřina Siniaková in 2013.[6]

In June 2024, she reached the final of the French Open girls' singles tournament but lost to compatriot Tereza Valentová.[7] Defending the Wimbledon girls' doubles title alongside Kovačková in 2024, they lost in the quarterfinals to Mika Stojsavljevic and Mingge Xu.[8]

In October 2024, she reached the final of the ITF World Tennis Tour Junior Finals, where she lost in two close sets 4–6, 4–6 to world number one Emerson Jones. She later said it was her last junior tournament with focus on Pro Tour since 2025. [9]

2024: WTA Tour debut and first win

Given a wildcard entry into the 2024 Prague Open, Samson became the first player born in 2008 or later to win a WTA Tour main-draw match when she defeated qualifier Tara Würth in straight sets in the first round.[10][11] In the second round she upset second seed Kateřina Siniaková in three sets to make it through to the quarterfinals,[12][13] where she defeated Oksana Selekhmeteva.[14][15] Her run came to an end in the semifinals when she retired injured while trailing in the third set against Magdalena Fręch.[16]

After reaching final at ITF Junior Finals, Samson received her second WTA main draw wildcard at 2024 Mérida Open, but she was unable to pass the first round, where she lost in two close sets to Antonia Ružić.

2025: First WTA final

Samson received wildcard to compete at 2025 Abu Dhabi Open, losing in the opening round of qualification to former top 10 player Veronika Kudermetova. She and Markéta Vondroušová scored two wins before losing in the semifinals.

Samson won her first W75 title in Česká Lípa at Macha Lake Open, beating Carolina Alves in three sets.

Samson competed at 2025 Prague Open but was unable to defend her last year semifinal run as she lost in the opening round to fellow Czech Dominika Šalková. She and Lucie Havlíčková scored two big wins on a way to their first WTA final where they lost to 2nd seeds Makoto Ninomiya and Nadiia Kichenok in three sets, despite winning opening set 6-1.

After two months hiatus Samson won two W50 titles in Pazardzhik and Heraklion. She reached her new career-high ranking at No. 218 as a result.

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WTA Tour finals

Doubles: 1 (1 runner-up)

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ITF Circuit finals

Singles: 7 (6 titles, 1 runner-up)

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Doubles: 1 (runner–up)

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Junior Grand Slam tournament finals

Singles: 1 (runner-up)

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Doubles: 1 (title)

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References

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