Biography of Tsvetana Pironkova nude
- Date of birth
- Sep 13, 1987 (35 Years)
- Birthplace
- Bulgaria
- Sign of the zodiac
- Virgo
- Profession
- Social media
Our naked updates.kpes-krasnogorsk.rus content about Tsvetana Pironkova
Tsvetana Pironkova (Bulgarian: Цветана Кирилова Пиронкова [tsvɛˈtana pirɔnˈkɔva]) (born 13 September 1987) is a Bulgarian tennis player and the current no. 1 Bulgarian in the WTA rankings. She is right-handed and plays with a two-handed backhand. Born in Plovdiv, Pironkova started playing tennis at the age of four on being introduced to the sport by her father, who later coached her. After playing at a junior level and winning Atlantic Cup, she made her senior international tournament debut in 2002 at the International Tennis Federation circuit. Early in her career, Pironkova won six international singles titles at the ITF circuit.
Pironkova made her WTA tour debut at the İstanbul Cup in 2005, and achieved moderate success earlier in her career. That changed in 2010, when she entered Wimbledon with a 1–4 career record at the event, and went on reach the semifinals of the tournament, becoming the second Bulgarian tennis player in history to reach the semifinal stage of a Grand Slam in singles. She garnered wide recognition for her performance, and after her semifinal finish reached her highest WTA Singles ranking at no. 31 in September 2010. Pironkova followed it up with a quarterfinal run at the event the following year, earning her the nickname "The Wimbledon Darkhorse". She is also known defeating Venus Williams three times at Grand Slam tournaments, twice at Wimbledon.
Pironkova won her first WTA title at the 2014 Apia International, defeating three top-10 ranked players in a row. In 2016, Pironkova reached the quarterfinals at the 2016 French Open defeating the world no. 2 Agnieszka Radwańska making her first Grand Slam quarterfinal, apart from Wimbledon. In addition to this, she has a total of twelve wins over other top-10 ranked players to her name. Pironkova has been recognized by The New York Times for her "cerebral" grass-court abilities and named one of the most beautiful women in sports by MSN.