Victoria Jimenez Kasintseva

Player Information

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva is an Andorran professional tennis player born on 9 August 2005 in Andorra la Vella, Andorra. She began playing tennis at the age of three and was the youngest player in the draw when she won the 2020 Australian Open girls' singles title. Representing Andorra, she has made significant strides in her career, reaching her best singles ranking of world No. 107 by the WTA in October 2025.
Birthdate:
9 August 2005
Full Name:
Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva
Birthplace:
Andorra la Vella, Andorra
Nationality:
Andorran
Residence:
Barcelona, Spain
Gender:
Female
Height (cm):
180
Parents:
Joan Jiménez Guerra (Father), Yulia Kasintseva (Mother)
Career Started:
2020
Notable Achievements:
Australian Open Girls' Singles Champion (2020), First Andorran to win a junior major title (2020)
Player Active:
From - 2021, To - Present

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva Bio

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva is an Andorran professional tennis player born on 9 August 2005 in Andorra la Vella, Andorra. She is a left-handed player with a two-handed backhand and is coached by her father, former tennis professional Joan Jiménez Guerra. Representing the small Pyrenean nation of Andorra, she has become the country’s most recognizable tennis figure, reaching a career-high WTA singles ranking of world No. 89 on 16 March 2026 and earning a place in the global top 100.

Jiménez Kasintseva first attracted international attention as a junior, capturing the 2020 Australian Open girls’ singles title at the age of 14. As a senior professional, she has steadily climbed the rankings on the ITF Circuit and the WTA Tour, collecting titles, qualifying for Grand Slam main draws, and scoring her first WTA 1000 victory. She trains in Barcelona, Spain, where she lives while traveling the global tennis circuit.

Early Life and Background

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva was born in Andorra la Vella, the capital of Andorra, to an Andorran father, Joan Jiménez Guerra, and a Russian mother, Yulia Kasintseva. Her father is a former tennis professional who reached a career-high ATP Tour ranking of No. 505, which gave her an early and intimate exposure to the sport. She has a brother named Joan, who also plays tennis, making tennis a true family pursuit.

From the age of four to eight, Jiménez Kasintseva lived in Kentucky in the United States, an experience that helped shape her young years and likely contributed to her later fluency in multiple languages. She began playing tennis at the age of three, guided by her father, and now trains with him in Barcelona. In addition to her native Catalan, she speaks Spanish, English, French, and Russian fluently, a multilingual skill set that serves her well on the international tour.

Path to Tennis

Jiménez Kasintseva’s path into competitive tennis accelerated through the ITF Junior Circuit, where she collected eight singles titles and one doubles title. She reached a career-high junior ranking of No. 1 on 9 March 2020, establishing herself as one of the best teenage players in the world. Her junior run included strong showings across the junior Grand Slams, building a foundation for the senior tour.

The breakthrough came at the 2020 Australian Open, where she won the girls’ singles title as the youngest player in the draw, defeating Wronika Baszak in the final. The victory made her the first Andorran to win a junior major title and the youngest player to win a junior major final since Coco Gauff at the 2018 French Open. That triumph confirmed her readiness to step onto the senior stage.

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva Career

Early Career (2021)

Jiménez Kasintseva turned professional in 2020 and made her WTA Tour main-draw debut in 2021 at the Madrid Open, where she received a wildcard. At 15 years old, she was the youngest player and the first from Andorra to compete in a WTA tournament main draw, losing in the first round to Kiki Bertens. That same year she won her first ITF singles title at Aparecida de Goiânia and reached the final in Maspalomas, where she fell to Arantxa Rus.

2022-2024: First WTA Tour Quarterfinal and First WTA 1000 Win

In 2022, Jiménez Kasintseva made her first major WTA Tour splash at the Korea Open. Entering as a lucky loser, she defeated Chloé Paquet and Rebecca Marino to become the first Andorran to reach a WTA Tour quarterfinal, where she lost to Jeļena Ostapenko. She also won her second ITF singles title in Loulé and her first ITF doubles title at the Solgironès Open alongside Renata Zarazúa.

In 2023, she received wildcards into the main draw at the WTA 1000 events in Miami and Madrid, losing first round at both, and won two W25 titles at Boca Raton and Austin. The 2024 season brought her most significant senior breakthrough to date, a wildcard run at the Madrid Open where she defeated Zhu Lin in the first round for her first WTA 1000 win before falling to Jasmine Paolini.

2025-2026: Historic Major, Top 100, WTA 1000 Debuts

Jiménez Kasintseva opened 2025 by reaching the final of the Antalya Challenger 2, where she lost to Olga Danilović, and the final of the WTA 125 Makarska Open in Croatia, where she was defeated by Sára Bejlek. In August 2025, she qualified for the main draw of the US Open, becoming the first Andorran player, male or female, to compete in the main draw of a Grand Slam tournament. She lost to Maya Joint in the first round.

Her rise accelerated in 2026. At the Mérida Open, she qualified for the main draw and defeated Yulia Putintseva and eighth seed Magda Linette before falling in the quarterfinals to Zhang Shuai. That run lifted her to No. 97 in the WTA rankings on 2 March 2026, making her the first Andorran, female or male, to break into the world’s top 100. Later in March she qualified for Indian Wells, defeated Caty McNally in the first round, and lost to 16th seed Naomi Osaka in the second round. By 16 March 2026, she had climbed to a career-high No. 89.

Notable Events and Milestones

Jiménez Kasintseva’s career has produced a string of firsts for Andorra. She is the first Andorran to win a junior Grand Slam title, the first to reach a WTA Tour quarterfinal, and the first Andorran player, male or female, to break into the WTA top 100. Her senior Grand Slam debut at the 2025 US Open added another historic line to her résumé and cemented her place as a trailblazer for tennis in her home country.

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva Career Wins

Jiménez Kasintseva has built a steady collection of titles across the ITF Circuit while collecting breakthrough victories at the WTA level. Although she has yet to capture a WTA Tour singles or doubles title, she has reached two WTA Challenger finals as runner-up and advanced deep into multiple WTA events, including a quarterfinal at the 2026 Mérida Open and a second round at Indian Wells. Her professional career record stands at 182-140 in singles and 26-35 in doubles.

ITF and Tour Highlights

On the ITF Circuit, Jiménez Kasintseva has won five ITF singles titles and one ITF doubles title across her career, with additional runner-up finishes. She won her first ITF singles title in 2021 at Aparecida de Goiânia, added a second title in Loulé in 2022, and captured two W25 titles in 2023 at Boca Raton and Austin. Her most recent WTA-level milestone came with her first WTA 1000 victory over Zhu Lin at the 2024 Madrid Open.

Victoria Jiménez Kasintseva Family

Family Background and Tennis Lineage

Tennis runs deep in the Jiménez Kasintseva family. Her father, Joan Jiménez Guerra, is a former ATP Tour professional who reached a career-high ranking of No. 505 and now serves as her coach. Her mother, Yulia Kasintseva, is Russian, giving Victoria a mixed Andorran and Russian heritage. She also has a brother, Joan, who plays tennis, ensuring that the sport remains a central feature of family life.

Personal Life

Jiménez Kasintseva lives and trains in Barcelona, Spain, where she works closely with her father as coach. She speaks Catalan, Spanish, English, French, and Russian fluently, a skill set she developed in part during three childhood years spent in Kentucky between the ages of four and eight. Off the court, she is recognized as a humble and grounded ambassador for Andorran sport and a role model for young players from small nations.