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Yulia Beygelzimer : ウィキペディア英語版
Yuliya Beygelzimer

Yuliya Markovna Beygelzimer (, born 20 October 1983, in Donetsk, Ukrainian SSR) is a professional female tennis player from Ukraine.
She is perhaps best known for nearly defeating Jennifer Capriati at the 2004 French Open where she was down three games to love in the second set but then swept nine of ten games. She lost the match, having led 3 games to love in the final set after winning the second 6-4.
The winner of twelve singles and thirty five doubles ITF Circuit titles. On 25 September 2006, she reached her best singles ranking of world number 83. On 3 April 2006, she peaked at world number 56 in the doubles rankings.
She has won three doubles titles on the WTA Tour, Tashkent Open where she won with Tatiana Poutchek in 2003, She won the 2005 Internazionali di Modena with Mervana Jugić-Salkić and 2014 BNP Paribas Katowice Open with Olga Savchuk 2014.
She was also the runner-up in doubles final Orange Warsaw Open with Anastasia Rodionova 2001, Sunfeast Open with Yuliana Fedak 2006, Pattaya Women's Open with Vitalia Diatchenko 2009, BMW Malaysian Open with Olga Savchuk 2015.
Beygelzimer has competed for Ukraine both at the Olympics and the Fed Cup.
Playing for Ukraine at the Fed Cup, Beygelzimer has a win–loss 18–13.
== Personal life ==
Yuliya Beygelzimer currently resides in her hometown Donetsk. Coached by father, Emmanuil. Mother is Victoria (engineer). Introduced to tennis at age 7 when father took her to a local club. Most memorable experience was how patriotic she felt when Ukrainian national anthem was played after she won European Junior Championships in 2000; other great memories were playing Jennifer Capriati on Suzanne Lenglen at Roland Garros, representing Ukraine in Fed Cup and winning WTA doubles title in Katowice. While she was out injured wrote a book in Russian about travelling on the tour, aimed as a guide for young players; currently writes articles for Ukrainian Tennis Magazine.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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