Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova is a professional tennis player who competes for Russia on the WTA Tour, currently holding a world ranking of No. 47. She plays right-handed. Her best ranking to date is No. 11. Her professional career started in 2005.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova's 2025 season featured a semifinal at Eastbourne plus quarterfinals at Wimbledon and Australian Open. Competing on hard: 6-9. Pavlyuchenkova commanded 67% of points on first serve, maintained 57% winning rate of serve pressure points, and tracked 0.3 aces per game.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova advanced to semifinals at Doha and Linz plus quarterfinals at Adelaide, San Diego, and Cincinnati during 2024. Hard results: 21-12. She delivered when it mattered with 59% pressure points won serving, stayed solid at 47% on second serves, and contributed 0.3 aces per game.
Pavlyuchenkova reached a semifinal at Tokyo plus quarterfinals at Hong Kong, Strasbourg, and Roland Garros in 2023. On clay: a strong 8-4. On hard, results were modest at 6-8. She collected 3 wins against top-20 opponents. She dominated second serve returns at 58%, held firm saving 62% of breakpoints faced, and won a solid 65% points on first serve. At lower-tier events, she reached the final at 125 Contrexeville. At lower-tier events: 9-4. Competing on clay: 7-3. She won 56% on second serve return, converted 67% of break opportunities, and won 55% serve pressure points.
The Russian went 2-3 across the 2022 season. She reached a new career-high of No. 11.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova advanced to the Roland Garros final, advancing to a semifinal at Madrid and two quarterfinals during 2021. On clay: a strong 10-3. On hard: 15-13.
Pavlyuchenkova reached a quarterfinal at Australian Open in 2020. Hard results: 6-4. She punished rival's second serves winning 58%.
The Russian's 2019 season featured finals at Osaka and Moscow and three quarterfinals, including Australian Open. Competing on hard: 21-16. She collected 6 wins against top-20 opponents.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova won the title at Strasbourg in 2018. The season proved challenging overall. She dominated on clay with a 8-4 record. She went 12-14 on hard.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova captured three titles in 2017, winning Rabat, Hong Kong, and Monterrey. The Russian also reached the final at Tokyo. On clay: a strong 8-3. On hard: 30-16. She showed resilience saving 57% breakpoints when threatened, showed mental strength converting 47% of breakpoints, and commanded 65% of points on first serve.
Pavlyuchenkova's 2016 season featured a quarterfinal at Wimbledon and six quarterfinals including Linz, Moscow, Acapulco, and Brisbane. Hard results: 19-16. She put immediate pressure winning 40% against first serves, executed at 50% on break chances, and contributed 0.3 aces per game.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova won the title at Linz, finals at Moscow and Washington along with one semifinal in 2015. Competing on hard: 29-13.
In 2014, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova triumphed with two titles, winning Paris and Moscow. Hard results: 16-13. Pavlyuchenkova won a strong 69% behind the first serve, executed at 51% on break chances, and saved as much as 60% of breakpoints faced.
Pavlyuchenkova captured two titles in 2013, winning Oeiras and Monterrey. The Russian also reached the final at Seoul and four semifinals. Competing on clay: 7-4. On hard: 26-15. She dominated on first serve with 68% points won, saved 56% of breakpoints faced, and managed to score 45% of points when pushed to second serve.
The Russian advanced to the final at Washington and three quarterfinals, including Cincinnati during 2012. Clay results: 7-6. Hard proved challenging: 11-14. Pavlyuchenkova commanded 65% of points on first serve and converted 45% of break opportunities.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova won the title at Monterrey and one semifinal in 2011. This brought a new career-high of No. 13. On clay: a strong 10-4. On hard: 24-15. She excelled with 66% success on first serve, showed mental strength converting 48% of breakpoints, and challenged servers with 40% on first return.
In 2010, Pavlyuchenkova triumphed with two titles, winning Istanbul and Monterrey. The Russian also reached one semifinal at Cincinnati. She broke into the top 20. The campaign marked a return to form after struggles. Hard results: 30-14. She excelled with 65% success on first serve, held steady at 45% on second serves, and won 59% when opponents went to second serve.
The Russian faced difficulties in 2009. She reached the top 50 for the first time. Competing on hard: 17-12. She won a strong 64% behind the first serve, defended brilliantly at 56% break points saved, and managed 38% success during first serve return.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova reached quarterfinals at Palermo and Japan Open in 2008. She entered the top 100 for the first time. She won 41% on first serve return, won 56% on second serve return, and converted 47% of break chances. At lower-tier events, she won four titles at Minsk 25K, Moscow 25K, Poitiers 100K, and Bratislava 100K. At lower-tier events: 25-3. Results on hard: 17-2.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova developed through Futures tournaments in 2007. She reached the semifinal at Podolsk 25K. Record: 8-8. Competing on hard: 6-4.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova delivered an impressive 2006 campaign. She captured one title at Casale 10K. She also reached the final at Minsk 25K. Season record: 15-4.