Ranked world No. 10 on the WTA Tour, Ekaterina Alexandrova represents Russia as a professional tennis player. She is right-handed. She began her professional career in 2011.
The Russian won the title at Linz, finals at Seoul, Ningbo, and Monterrey and four semifinals in 2025. This marked her entry into the top 10. On grass: a strong 8-3. On clay: 13-5. Hard results: 26-17. She held firm saving 61% of breakpoints faced, stayed composed winning at 60% in pressure situations on serve, and neutralized opponents winning 39% on first serve return.
Ekaterina Alexandrova advanced to the final at Linz, advancing to semifinals at Miami, Adelaide, Monterrey, and s Hertogenbosch and one quarterfinal during 2024. A new career peak of No. 15 followed. Hard results: 20-14. She thrived in clutch moments at 61% on serve pressure points, won a strong 70% behind the first serve, and defended brilliantly at 58% break points saved.
Ekaterina Alexandrova won the title at s Hertogenbosch, also reaching the final at Cleveland plus one semifinal in 2023. This brought a new career-high of No. 17. On grass: a strong 10-2. On hard: 18-13. Clay results: 6-5. She held firm saving 61% of breakpoints faced, executed at 48% on break chances, and dominated on first serve with 70% points won.
In 2022, Alexandrova triumphed with two titles, winning Seoul and s Hertogenbosch. Ekaterina Alexandrova also reached three semifinals, including Madrid. She broke into the top 20. She dominated on clay with a 11-5 record. Alexandrova went 16-12 on hard. She won a strong 71% behind the first serve, powered through with 0.4 aces per game, and clutched under pressure converting 50% of break chances.
Ekaterina Alexandrova advanced to the final at Moscow, advancing to a semifinal at Gippsland Trophy and four quarterfinals during 2021. Competing on clay: 6-5. On hard: 16-14. She excelled with 70% success on first serve, delivered 0.5 free points per game through aces, and won 55% when opponents went to second serve.
Ekaterina Alexandrova won the title at Shenzhen and two semifinals in 2020. This brought a new career-high of No. 26. Hard results: 14-7. She used the ace as a weapon with 0.4 per game, won a strong 68% behind the first serve, and managed 38% success during first serve return.
Alexandrova won the title at Limoges and three semifinals in 2019. This brought her first top-50 ranking. Competing on hard: 27-16. She collected 3 wins against top-20 opponents. Alexandrova commanded 70% of points on first serve, fired 0.5 aces per service game, and broke down first serves at 38% clip.
The Russian advanced to the final at Linz and one quarterfinal during 2018. Hard results: 8-6. She recorded a win over a top-10 opponent. Alexandrova won a strong 68% behind the first serve, powered through with 0.6 aces per game, and saved as much as 58% of breakpoints faced. She captured one title at Limoges. She also reached the final at Budapest $100K. Additional semifinals at Ilkley $100K and Trnava $100K. Lower-tier record: 15-7. She saved 62% of break points, won 54% on second serve return, and averaged 0.94 aces per game.
2017 proved challenging for Ekaterina Alexandrova. She entered the top 100 for the first time. Competing on hard: 4-6. She used the ace as a weapon with 0.6 per game, showed mental strength converting 48% of breakpoints, and commanded 66% of points on first serve. At lower-tier events, she won two titles at Shenzhen $60K and Croissy Beaubourg $60K. Additional semifinals at Trnava $100K and Southsea $100K. At lower-tier events: 20-5. Competing on hard: 15-3. She converted 42% of break opportunities, saved 56% of break points, and won 56% on second serve return.
2016 proved to be a breakthrough season for Alexandrova. A maiden top-200 ranking followed. She won two titles at Limoges and Trnava $10K. She also reached finals at Gyor $25K and Olomouc $50K. Additional semifinals at Kreuzlingen $50K and Landisville PA $25K. Season record: 31-11. Across surfaces: clay 11-5, hard 17-5. She saved 53% of break points, won 61% on second serve return, and won 41% on first serve return.
The Russian gained ranking points at Futures level in 2015. She reached two finals at Prerov 15K and Braunschweig 15K. Record: 26-19. Competing on clay: 20-12.
Ekaterina Alexandrova competed at Futures/ITF level in 2014. She captured one title at Wiesbaden 25K. She also reached the final at Minsk 25K. Season record: 27-15. By surface: clay 17-8, hard 7-5.
2013 proved to be a breakthrough season for Ekaterina Alexandrova. She won three titles at Prague 10K, Vendryne 15K, and Kreuzlingen 10K. She also reached finals at Kaarst 10K and Prerov 15K. Record: 30-11. Across surfaces: clay 11-6, hard 10-3.
Ekaterina Alexandrova gained ranking points at Futures level in 2012. She reached the semifinal at Braunschweig 10K. Season record: 7-8. Results on clay: 6-6.