
Women's High-Performance Accelerator - A Case for support
Tennis Canada has a history of excellence. Through the commitment and achievement of Canadian women competing on the...
Pro Athlete
Birthdate |
August 26, 2006 |
---|---|
Birth place |
Charlotte, North Carolina, USA |
Residence |
Toronto, ON |
Height |
5’10’’ (1.78 m) |
Plays |
Right-handed, two-handed backhand |
WTA ranking |
No. 24 |
Bllie Jean King Cup record |
1/1 |
Victoria started the 2025 season ranked no. 333 on the WTA rankings. Her National Bank Open title propelled her to a career-high mark of no. 24, a jump of more than 300 places.
Her run in Montreal improved Victoria's 2025 win-loss record to 53-9 which includes a 22-match win streak to start the year.
After her NBO win, Victoria saw her Instagram profile surpass 100,000 followers.
Victoria's NBO crown was the first WTA title of her young career.
Victoria is the fifth-youngest champion at the NBO since the introduction of the Tier I format in 1990, older only than Jennifer Capriati (1991), Belinda Bencic (2015), Ana Ivanovic (2006) and Martina Hingis (1999).
Victoria is the third Canadian champion at the NBO in the Open Era after Faye Urban in 1969 and Bianca Andreescu in 2019. The 2025 National Bank Open was also just Victoria's third WTA 1000 event.
The number of Grand Slam singles champions defeated by Victoria on her way to the Montreal title: Sofia Kenin, Coco Gauff, Elena Rybakina, and Naomi Osaka. She is the youngest to accomplish the feat since the great Serena Williams in 1999.
Victoria is the fifth wildcard to win a WTA 1000 title since 1990 and the first since her compatriot Bianca Andreescu did so at Indian Wells in 2019. The other four all won Grand Slam titles during their careers: Monica Seles, Steffi Graf, Maria Sharapova, and Andreescu.