Petra Martić (Croatian pronunciation: [pêtramâːrtitɕ]; born 19 January 1991) is a Croatian professional tennis player. She has a career-high singles ranking of world No. 14, achieved in January 2020. Martić has won two singles titles on the WTA Tour, one singles and one doubles tournament on the WTA Challenger Tour, plus four singles and five doubles titles on the ITF Circuit.

Early and personal life

Petra Martić was born in Split, Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia to Nenad (father) and Sandra (mother). She grew up in the village of Duće, 30 km from Split, and moved to Split at the age of 10. Her father died in a car accident when Petra was five. Petra is quoted as saying that her mother is a hero to her for managing to go through all this and raising Petra by herself, and that this motivates her to excel in tennis and bring joy to her family.

Career

2006–2009: Early years

Martić at the 2009 French Open

The best result in her junior career was the quarterfinals in 2006 US Open. She played her first WTA Tour main draw match as a wildcard at Miami Open 2007, losing in the first round to Russian Alina Jidkova. In 2008, Martić won the Zagreb Ladies Open, defeating Yvonne Meusburger in the final, and then made it to the quarterfinals of the WTA Slovenia Open, losing to Julia Görges.

She qualified for the 2009 French Open and lost in the second round to 21-year-old Aleksandra Wozniak. She then made it to another Portorož Open quarterfinal, losing to Sara Errani. In September 2009, at the age of 18 years and 8 months, Martić entered top 100 for the first time (year-end ranking of 82).

2010: First top-20 victory

Martić began the season by falling in the qualifying stages of the Auckland Open (lost to Chanelle Scheepers) and the Sydney International (lost to Kimiko Date-Krumm). She lost in the first round of the Australian Open, falling to Sabine Lisicki.

In February, she beat Yanina Wickmayer in the first round of the Open GdF Suez in Paris, then lost in the next round to Ágnes Szávay. Martić qualified for the Indian Wells Open where she lost in the second round to Jelena Janković. She also scored another big win at the Miami Open as she defeated Aravane Rezaï in the second round in three sets. She then lost to Yanina Wickmayer.

She lost in the first round of her next three tournaments, Andalucia Tennis Experience (lost to Estrella Cabeza Candela), Morocco Open (to Alizé Cornet ) and Portugal Open (to Kimiko Date-Krumm).

She was forced to retire in her first-round match of the Madrid Open whilst 4–6, 2–1 down. Her next tournament was the Warsaw Open where she lost in three sets to Gréta Arn, in the first round.

Martić was drawn against Elena Dementieva in the first round of the French Open, losing 6–1, 6–1. She next participated in the ITF tournament in Marseilles where she reached the quarterfinals, losing to Johanna Larsson in three sets.

Martić only played one grass tournament in the 2010 season at Wimbledon. There, she beat Elena Baltacha in the first round. She was due to play against Marion Bartoli in the second round; but she retired before the match.

At the hardcourt tournaments, she lost in the first round of Slovenia Open to Katarina Srebotnik and in the first round of İstanbul Cup to Vera Dushevina. Martić lost to Caroline Wozniacki in the first edition of the Danish Open.

2011: First top-50 finish

Martić qualified for the Australian Open, where she lost to Agnieszka Radwańska in the second round. Martić also made it to the semifinals of Bogotá (lost to Domínguez Lino) and Copenhagen (lost to Hradecká) and beat Vesnina and Vickmayer to reach the third round of Cincinnati. She finished the year ranked inside the top 50 (at no. 49) for the first time in her career.

2012: First WTA Tour final

Martić started the 2012 season losing in the first rounds of several tournaments including the Australian Open, Doha, and Dubai.

She reached her first WTA final at the Malaysian Open where she upset Peng Shuai in the quarterfinals and Jelena Janković in the semifinals. However, she retired in the final against Hsieh Su-wei at 4–1 down in the third set due to fatigue and severe cramping, which she was suffering due to having defeated Janković just that morning in a marathon match that lasted over three hours.

After falling in the first rounds of Indian Wells and Miami, Martić made the semifinals of the Danish Open, losing to Caroline Wozniacki, and the quarterfinals of the Budapest Grand Prix, losing to Elena Vesnina.

Martić achieved a major breakthrough at the French Open. After defeating Michaëlla Krajicek in the first round, she recorded the biggest win of her career in the second round, upsetting Marion Bartoli in three sets. This was Martić's first win against a top 10 player and the first time she advanced beyond the second round at any Grand Slam tournament. She lost in the fourth round to Angelique Kerber. Her performance in Paris helped lift her to a career-high ranking of 42.

At both Wimbledon and the US Open, Martić struggled with being drawn against unfavorable first-round opponents. She drew grass court phenom Sabine Lisicki in the first round of Wimbledon, losing 6–4, 6–2, and at the US Open, she lost to defending champion Samantha Stosur. She bounced back at the Pan Pacific Open, upsetting Petra Kvitová in the second round. It was the first meeting between the two and the second top-10 victory of the year for Martić.

2013–2016: Struggling with injuries

Martić at the 2013 Wimbledon Championships

The next four years of her career were plagued by injuries and poor form. In 2013, Martić made it to the third round of a WTA tournament only twice (at Katowice and Wimbledon). She also won the 2013 Nottingham Trophy (def. Karolina Plíšková in the final), but fel from the top 100 by the end of the year. In 2014, she scored only one WTA Tour main-draw victory, against Sorana Cîrstea in Guangzhou in September. In 2015, Martić mostly played at ITF and WTA 125 tournaments, with moderate success. The only notable result was qualifying for the Australian Open (losing to Sharapova). She finished 2015 season in October, not scoring a single victory at a WTA Tour main draw and only two top-100 victories during the year. She was ranked no. 148 at the end of the year.

In February 2016, she made it to the semifinals of a WTA event for the first time in four years at Rio de Janeiro in February, defeating Teliana Pereira and then losing to Francesca Schiavone), and she did not play from February to May. The last match she played was at Wimbledon in June, where she lost to Ursula Radwańska in the first round of qualifying. In September, she dropped out of the top 200.

2017–2018: Comeback

Suffering from a major back injury (disc protrusion in her lower back), Martić was not sure if she would play competitive tennis again.

After a ten-month injury lay-off, she made a come-back at 25k event at Santa Margherita di Pula. Ranked no. 659, Martić went through qualifying, and she eventually won the tournament (def. von Deichmann in the final). She then went on a 17–3 run leading up to 2017 French Open, reaching the final of three more ITF tournaments. Martić then qualified to her first Grand Slam main draw in two years (despite being down a match point in the final round of qualifying against Maryna Zanevska). She recorded her first Grand Slam main-draw win since Wimbledon 2013 by defeating Kateryna Bondarenko in straight sets. She then upset Madison Keys in the second round (her first victory over any player inside the top 20 since September 2012) in a three-set comeback win, then defeated Anastasija Sevastova, then lost to Elina Svitolina in the fourth round after having a 5–2 lead in the third set. However, her resurgence at the French Open brought her back inside the top 150, cutting her ranking by more than half from 290th to 129th. Seeded 16th (and given another protected ranking) for the qualifying rounds at Wimbledon, Martić qualified for her second consecutive major main draw, defeating Aleksandra Krunić in her final match. She continued her resurgence by upsetting Daria Gavrilova in the first round, winning 10–8 in the third set. She then recorded straight-set wins over Denisa Allertová and Zarina Diyas to advance to her second consecutive major fourth-round appearance (third overall and first outside the French Open), where she was defeated by Magdaléna Rybáriková. This result brought her back inside the top 100 for the first time since April 2014. After Wimbledon, Martić played only four more tournaments, going 2–4, but finished the year inside the top 100 (at no. 89) for the first time since 2012.

Continuing her success from 2017, Martić made it to the fourth round of the 2018 Australian Open (her third consecutive major fourth round, and first on hardcourts), losing to Elise Mertens in straight sets, and reached her first quarterfinal at a Premier Mandatory event in Indian Wells (defeating Jeļena Ostapenko en route) and then losing to Simona Halep in three sets. She made it to the final of the Bucharest Open, her first WTA final in six years, but lost to Sevastova. Despite losing in the second round of the French Open, and the first round of Wimbledon and the US Open, Martić won the biggest title of her career in September by defeating Mona Barthel at the Chicago Challenger, her first WTA 125 title. She finished the year ranked no. 32 in the world, her best year-end ranking to date and the second top-50 finish of her career.

2019: First WTA Tour title, major quarterfinal and top 15 year-end ranking

Martić had a slow start to the year. Outside of a solid showing at the Australian Open (where she was seeded 31st, her first time being seeded at a major event, and advanced to the third round, losing to Sloane Stephens), Martić lost four of five matches in the first three months of the year. She regrouped and reached the semifinals of the Charleston Open in April, defeating former top-10 player Belinda Bencic. At her next event, the İstanbul Cup, she reached her third career final, coming back from a set down in her first two matches as well as defeating Kristina Mladenovic in the quarterfinals. She then recorded another come-from-behind victory, defeating Markéta Vondroušová in the final to win her first career WTA singles title. Martić then made it to the quarterfinals of the Madrid Open, defeating Garbiñe Muguruza and compatriot Donna Vekić along the way, and then losing to Sloane Stephens. In April, she was nominated for the WTA Player of the Month. On 13 May, she entered the top 30 for the first time in her career – seven years, seven months and 18 days after first entering the top 50.

Seeded 31st at the French Open, Martić defeated Ons Jabeur and Mladenovic to reach the third round where she upset Karolína Plíšková in straight sets. This win was her first over a top three-ranked player. She then defeated six-time Grand Slam quarterfinalist Kaia Kanepi in the fourth round to reach her first major quarterfinal, becoming the first Croatian female tennis player to do so since Iva Majoli in 1998. There, she was defeated by Vondroušová in a rematch of the Istanbul final. This result lifted her into the top 25 for the first time.

Following the French Open, Martić then reached her first grass-court semifinal at the Birmingham Classic, saving five match points against Ostapenko in her quarterfinal match, then losing to Julia Görges. Seeded 24th at Wimbledon, she matched her best result at this tournament by reaching the fourth round for the second time (recording three set wins over Jennifer Brady, Anastasia Potapova, and Australian Open semifinalist Danielle Collins) where she lost to Svitolina. Following Wimbledon, she broke into the top 20 for the first time.

However, Martić lost her opening-round matches in Toronto and Cincinnati, but rebounded at the US Open, where she was seeded 22nd. After beating Tamara Zidanšek and Ana Bogdan to advance to the third round for the first time, she then upset the Anastasija Sevastova (who was carrying a streak of three straight US Open quarterfinal appearances), to reach the second week of a major for the third consecutive time. She lost to Serena Williams in the fourth round in straight sets. Martić carried her momentum to the start of the Asian hardcourt swing. In Zhengzhou, she reached her first Premier-level final, after beating Aryna Sabalenka in the quarterfinals and Mladenovic in the semifinals to face Plíšková for the first time since upsetting her at the French Open. However, she was unable to repeat that result, as she was defeated in straight sets. She also reached quarterfinals at the Premier-5 level Wuhan Open losing to Ashleigh Barty. Following this, she climbed to a new career-high ranking of no. 17 in the world. Martić's strong performances all season helped qualify her to the WTA Elite Trophy for the first time in her career. Seeded fifth and drawn into the Orchid Group, she beat wildcard Zheng Saisai, but lost to Madison Keys in straight sets. Despite all three group members finishing with an identical win–loss record and identical set win–loss record, Zheng advanced to the semifinals on a second tiebreaker, ending Martić's season. Nonetheless, she finished the year with a career-high ranking of world no. 15.

2020: Two WTA Tour semifinals, US Open fourth round

Martić had another slow start to the year losing in the second round of the Auckland Open and the Australian Open (which ended her streak of reaching the second week of majors), as well as being upset in the opening round of Hua Hin. Still, on 13 January she reached her singles career-high ranking of no. 14 in the world. Then she made an impressive run into the semifinals of Dubai Championships without dropping, and then lost to Elena Rybakina in two tie-break sets. However, she was upset by Barbora Strýcová in the first round of the Qatar Ladies Open.

After the resumption of the WTA Tour in August, Martić reached her second semifinal of the year at the Palermo Ladies Open, losing to Anett Kontaveit in straight sets. She then participated in the Prague Open where she beat Varvara Gracheva in straight sets, then losing to Kristýna Plíšková. Seeded eighth at the 2020 US Open, she lost in the fourth round to Yulia Putintseva. She finished the year ranked No 18. in the world, her second year-end top 20 finish.

2021: WTA 1000 semifinal, French Open and Australian Open quarterfinals in doubles

2021 season was a year marred with injuries and inconsistencies for Martić. She lost to qualifier Olga Danilović, in the first round of the Australian Open. Martić did not make it past the first round in nine other tournaments. However, she reached her first semifinal of a WTA 1000 tournament in her career at the Italian Open defeating Jessica Pegula. By the end of the year, Martić dropped out of the top 50 for the first time since April 2019.

In doubles, she reached the quarterfinals of the French Open with partner Shelby Rogers. The pair also reached the quarterfinals at the Madrid Open.

2022: Return to top 50, second WTA Tour singles title

Partnering Shelby Rogers at the Australian Open, the duo was beaten again in the quarterfinals. After two consecutive first-round losses, Martić scored her first WTA Tour match win of the season against Kamilla Rakhimova at the St. Petersburg Ladies' Trophy in February.

She bounced back at the Indian Wells Open when she scored four consecutive victories (three against top-30 players) to reach the quarterfinals where she lost to Simona Halep. In Rome, she beat Anett Kontaveit in the second round for her first top-5 victory since 2019 French Open. She also reached her third Wimbledon fourth round, beating Jessica Pegula and losing to the eventual champion Elena Rybakina, 5–7, 3–6. In July, she won her second career singles title at the Ladies Open Lausanne, beating Belinda Bencic in the quarterfinal, Caroline Garcia in the semifinal, and qualifier Olga Danilović in the final. At the US Open, Martić reached the third round by defeating Paula Badosa in three sets, and then losing to Victoria Azarenka. At the Pan Pacific Open in September, she beat Karolina Plíšková, then lost to Zhang Shuai in the quarterfinals.

2023-24: Return to top 30, second Madrid quarterfinal

At the 2023 Madrid Open, she reached her second quarterfinal at this tournament defeating Barbora Krejčíková. As a result, she ranked as world no. 28 on 8 May 2023.

She fell out of the top 100 on 19 August 2024 but reached the round of 16 at the WTA 500 Monterrey Open and returned into the top 100 a week later before the US Open.

2025: Linz quarterfinal

Martić qualified for the main-draw at the Linz Open and defeated wildcard entrant Eva Lys and Elina Avanesyan to reach the quarterfinals, where she lost to Ekaterina Alexandrova.

Playing style

Martić employs an aggressive all-court game that exemplifies her variety. Her groundstrokes are powerful, and she is able to hit both her forehand and her backhand flat and with topspin. She is also proficient at hitting her backhand with slice and incorporates the drop shot effectively into points. As a result, she continually disrupts baseline rallies, creating opportunities to hit winners, or forcing opponents to commit errors. Her serve is powerful, being recorded as high as 120 mph (190 km/h) while having minimal double faults. Her return of serve is also a major weapon, ranking consistently within the top 100 of the WTA for return games won. She is a strong volleyer, due to her doubles experience. She is capable of extending rallies, acting more like a counterpuncher, to draw unforced errors out of highly aggressive players, possessing a complete defensive game. She is proficient at playing on all surfaces, and the majority of her success has come on clay courts.

Performance timelines

Key
WFSFQF#RRRQ#P#DNQAZ#POGSBNMSNTIPNH

Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Fed Cup/Billie Jean King Cup and Olympic Games are included in win–loss records.

Singles

Current through the 2025 WTA Tour.

Tournament2007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025SRW–LWin %
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenAAQ11R2R1R1R1R1RQ1A4R3R2R1R1R2R1R1R0 / 148–1436%
French OpenAA2R1RQ14R1R1R1RQ24R2RQF3R1R1R2R2RQ10 / 1416–1453%
WimbledonAAA2R2R1R3R1RQ1Q14R1R4RNH2R4R3R2R1R0 / 1317–1357%
US OpenAQ12R1R2R1RAQ1Q3A1R1R4R4R2R3R2R1RQ20 / 1312–1250%
Win–loss0–00–02–21–43–33–42–30–30–20–06–34–412–46–32–45–45–42–40–20 / 5353–5350%
Year-end championships
WTA Elite TrophyDNQRRNHDNQNH0 / 11–150%
Olympics
OlympicsNHANHANHANHANH1RNH0 / 10–10%
WTA 1000
Qatar OpenNMSANMS1RA1RNMSANMSANMS1RNMSANMS2RA0 / 41–420%
DubaiNMSAAANMSANMSANMS1RNMS1RNMS1R2RA0 / 41–420%
Indian Wells OpenAA1R2RQ21R1RQ1AAAQF1RNH2RQF2R1RQ10 / 1011–1052%
Miami Open1RAQ13R2R1R1RQ1AAA3R2RNH2RQ13R1RQ10 / 107–1041%
Madrid OpenNHAQ1A1RAAAAA2RQFNH1R2RQFAA0 / 67–654%
Italian OpenAAAAAQ1Q1AAAA2RA2RSF3R2R1RA0 / 66–650%
Canadian OpenAAAA2RA1RQ1AAAA1RNH1RA2RAA0 / 52–529%
Cincinnati OpenNMSAA3RA1RAAAQ22R1RA1R1R2RAA0 / 74–736%
Pan Pacific / Wuhan OpenAAAAA3RAAAAAAQFNHA0 / 25–271%
China OpenNMSAAQ1Q1Q1AAAA2R1RNH2RAA0 / 32–340%
Guadalajara OpenNHAANMS0 / 00–0
Career statistics
Tournaments11714141812882417181120189194Career total: 205
Titles0000000000001001000Career total: 2
Finals0000010000012001100Career total: 6
Hard win–loss0–12–13–44–811–913–131–61–50–40–10–218–1014–128–77–1211–912–125–113–30 / 125109–12746%
Clay win–loss0–00–03–30–54–35–44–50–20–43–13–17–515–36–46–512–54–44–70–02 / 6276–6056%
Grass win–loss0–00–00–01–01–10–12–10–10–00–03–11–26–20–02–33–32–11–20–10 / 2122–1954%
Overall win–loss0–12–16–75–1316–1318–187–121–80–83–26–426–1735–1714–1115–2026–1718–1710–203–42 / 208210–20950%
Win (%)0%67%46%28%55%50%37%11%0%60%60%60%67%56%43%60%51%33%43%Career total: 50%
Year-end ranking32521484144495911617914426689321518543940123211$7,250,018

Doubles

Tournament200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023SRW–LWin%
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenA1R1R3R1R3R1RAAA3RAAQFA0 / 89–853%
French OpenA2R1R2R1RA1RAA1R2RAQF1RA0 / 96–940%
WimbledonA2RA3R3RA1RAA2R3RNH2RAA0 / 79–756%
US OpenA3R1R1R1RAAA1R1RAA2RAA0 / 73–730%
Win–loss0–04–40–35–42–42–10–30–00–11–35–30–05–33–20–00 / 3127–3147%
WTA 1000
Dubai / Qatar OpenAAAAA1RAAAAAAAA0 / 10–10%
Indian Wells OpenAAAAA2RAAAAANHA1R0 / 21–233%
Miami Open2RA1R2R2R1RAAAAANH2RA0 / 64–640%
Madrid OpenAAAAAAAAAAANHQFA0 / 12–167%
Italian OpenAAA1RQFAAAAAAA1RA0 / 22–250%
Canadian OpenAAAA1RAAAAAANHAA0 / 10–10%
Cincinnati OpenAAAAAAAAAA1RA1R1R0 / 30–30%
Pan Pacific / Wuhan OpenAAAAAAAAAAANH0 / 00–0
China OpenAAA1RAAAAA2RANH0 / 21–233%
Mexican OpenNMS/NHA0 / 00–0
Career statistics
Tournaments21013141310122145094Career total: 99
Overall win–loss0 / 99

WTA Tour finals

Singles: 6 (2 titles, 4 runner-ups)

Legend
Grand Slam
WTA 1000
WTA 500 (0–1)
WTA 250 (2–3)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss0–1Mar 2012Malaysian Open, MalaysiaInternationalHardChinese Taipei Hsieh Su-wei6–2, 5–7, 1–4 ret.
Loss0–2Jul 2018Bucharest Open, RomaniaInternationalClayLatvia Anastasija Sevastova6–7(4–7), 2–6
Win1–2Apr 2019İstanbul Cup, TurkeyInternationalClayCzech Republic Markéta Vondroušová1–6, 6–4, 6–1
Loss1–3Sep 2019Zhengzhou Open, ChinaPremierHardCzech Republic Karolína Plíšková3–6, 2–6
Win2–3Jul 2022Ladies Open Lausanne, SwitzerlandWTA 250ClaySerbia Olga Danilović6–4, 6–2
Loss2–4Feb 2023Linz Open, AustriaWTA 250Hard (i)Anastasia Potapova3–6, 1–6

Doubles: 4 (4 runner–ups)

Legend
Grand Slam
WTA 1000
WTA 500 (0–1)
WTA 250 (0–3)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Loss0–1Feb 2012Open GDF Suez, FrancePremierHard (i)Germany Anna-Lena GrönefeldUnited States Liezel Huber United States Lisa Raymond6–7(3–7), 1–6
Loss0–2Jun 2012Austrian Open, AustriaInternationalClayGermany Anna-Lena GrönefeldUnited States Jill Craybas Germany Julia Görges7–6(7–4), 4–6, [9–11]
Loss0–3Apr 2013Marrakesh Grand Prix, MoroccoInternationalClayFrance Kristina MladenovicHungary Tímea Babos Luxembourg Mandy Minella3–6, 1–6
Loss0–4Mar 2016Monterrey Open, MexicoInternationalHardUnited States Maria SanchezSpain Anabel Medina Garrigues Spain Arantxa Parra Santonja6–4, 5–7, [7–10]

WTA Challenger finals

Singles: 1 (title)

ResultW–LDateTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
Win1–0Sep 2018Chicago Challenger, United StatesHardGermany Mona Barthel6–4, 6–1

Doubles: 1 (title)

ResultW–LDateTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Win1–0May 2016Bol Ladies Open, CroatiaClaySwitzerland Xenia KnollRomania Raluca Olaru Turkey İpek Soylu6–3, 6–2

ITF Circuit finals

Legend
$100,000 tournaments
$75,000 tournaments
$50,000 tournaments
$25,000 tournaments

Singles: 7 (4 titles, 3 runner–ups)

ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss0–1Oct 2007ITF Jersey, United Kingdom25,000HardGermany Sabine Lisicki3–6, 4–6
Win1–1Jul 2008Zagreb Ladies Open, Croatia75,000ClayAustria Yvonne Meusburger6–2, 2–6, 6–2
Win2–1Sep 2009ITF Biella, Italy100,000ClayCanada Sharon Fichman7–5, 6–4
Win3–1Jun 2013Nottingham Trophy, UK75,000GrassCzech Republic Karolína Plíšková6–3, 6–3
Loss3–2Nov 2014South Seas Island Classic, US50,000HardRomania Edina Gallovits-Hall2–6, 2–6
Win4–2Apr 2017ITF Pula, Italy25,000ClayLiechtenstein Kathinka von Deichmann6–4, 7–5
Loss4–3May 2017Wiesbaden Open, Germany25,000ClayLiechtenstein Kathinka von Deichmann4–6, 6–4, 6–7(7)

Doubles: 8 (5 titles, 3 runner–ups)

ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Win1–0May 2009Zagreb Ladies Open, Croatia50,000ClayCroatia Ajla TomljanovićBelarus Ksenia Milevskaya Russia Anastasia Pivovarova6–3, 6–7(4), [10–5]
Loss1–1Sep 2009Sofia Cup, Bulgaria100,000ClaySlovenia Polona HercogSwitzerland Timea Bacsinszky Italy Tathiana Garbin2–6, 6–7(4)
Loss1–2Oct 2010ITF Athens, Greece50,000HardGreece Eleni DaniilidouRussia Vitalia Diatchenko Turkey İpek Şenoğluw/o
Win2–2Dec 2010Dubai Tennis Challenge, UAE75,000HardGermany Julia GörgesIndia Sania Mirza Czech Republic Vladimíra Uhlířová6–4, 7–6(7)
Win3–2May 2011Open de Cagnes-sur-Mer, France100,000ClayGermany Anna-Lena GrönefeldCroatia Darija Jurak Czech Republic Renata Voráčová1–6, 6–2, [11–9]
Win4–2Oct 2014Abierto Tampico, Mexico50,000HardUnited States Maria SanchezRussia Valeria Savinykh Ukraine Kateryna Bondarenko3–6, 6–3, [10–2]
Win5–2Feb 2015Burnie International, Australia50,000HardUnited States Irina FalconiChina Han Xinyun Japan Junri Namigata6–2, 6–4
Loss5–3May 2015Empire Slovak Open, Slovakia100,000ClaySerbia Aleksandra KrunićUkraine Yuliya Beygelzimer Russia Margarita Gasparyan3–6, 2–6

WTA Tour career earnings

Current through the 2023 Wimbledon Championships.

YearGrand Slam titlesWTA titlesTotal titlesEarnings ($)Money list rank
201000098
201100094
201200060
201300093
2014000130
2015000154
2016000275
201700076
201800044
201901121
202000021
202100050
202201138
202300034
Career02290

Career Grand Slam statistics

Seedings

The tournaments won by Martić are in boldface, and advanced into finals by Martić are in italics.

YearAustralian OpenFrench OpenWimbledonUS Open
2008absentabsentabsentdid not qualify
2009did not qualifyqualifierabsentqualifier
2010not seedednot seedednot seedednot seeded
2011qualifierdid not qualifynot seedednot seeded
2012not seedednot seedednot seedednot seeded
2013not seedednot seedednot seededabsent
2014not seedednot seedednot seededdid not qualify
2015qualifierqualifierdid not qualifydid not qualify
2016did not qualifydid not qualifydid not qualifyabsent
2017absentqualifierqualifiernot seeded
2018not seedednot seedednot seedednot seeded
201931st31st24th22nd
202013th13thcancelled8th
202116th22nd26th30th
2022not seedednot seedednot seedednot seeded
2023not seedednot seeded30thnot seeded
2024not seedednot seedednot seedednot seeded

Top-10 wins

  • Martić has a 8–30 record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10.
Season2012...20182019...20222023Total
Wins211318
#PlayerRankEventSurfaceRdScorePMR
2012
1.France Marion BartoliNo. 8French OpenClay2R6–2, 3–6, 6–3No. 50
2.Czech Republic Petra KvitováNo. 5Pan Pacific Open, JapanHard2R6–4, 6–4No. 73
2018
3.Latvia Jeļena OstapenkoNo. 6Indian Wells Open, U.S.Hard3R6–3, 6–3No. 51
2019
4.Czech Republic Karolína PlíškováNo. 2French OpenClay3R6–3, 6–3No. 31
2022
5.Estonia Anett KontaveitNo. 5Italian OpenClay2R6–2, 6–3No. 47
6.United States Jessica PegulaNo. 9Wimbledon, UKGrass3R6–2, 7–6(7–5)No. 80
7.Spain Paula BadosaNo. 4US OpenHard2R6–7(5–7), 6–1, 6–2No. 54
2023
8.Greece Maria SakkariNo. 7Linz Open, AustriaHard (i)SF3–6, 6–3, 6–4No. 34

Notes

External links