Jana Novotná: Information From Answers.com jana Novotná Novotná at the 1998 US Open jana Novotná (b. Novotná was inductedinto the International tennis Hall of Fame in 2005. http://www.answers.com/topic/jana-novotn
Extractions: showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Jana Novotn¡ Wikipedia Jana Novotn¡ Novotn¡ at the 1998 US Open Jana Novotn¡ (b. October 2 in Brno Czechoslovakia ) is a former professional tennis player from the Czech Republic . She is best remembered for winning the women's singles title at Wimbledon in , and for crying on the shoulder of the Duchess of Kent after losing the Wimbledon singles final in . Novotn¡ was also an outstanding doubles player who won 16 Grand Slam doubles titles. Novotn¡ turned professional in . In the early years of her career she was known primarily for her success as a doubles player. In the early-1990s, she took on four-time former Grand Slam singles champion Hana Mandlkov¡ as her coach, and began to distinguish herself as a singles player. Novotn¡ reached her first Grand Slam singles final in at the Australian Open , where she lost in three sets to Monica Seles Two years later, Novotn¡ reached her first singles final at Wimbledon where she faced
Courier And Novotna Headline Special Doubles Exhibition At With Jim and jana already in the lineup, we should have another great event . Gullikson and Bassett-Segusa Join Courier and novotna for ATP Foundation http://www.newengland.usta.com/news/fullstory.sps?iNewsid=195838&itype=1068
Female Tennis As At 07/08/2005 Female tennis as at 22/06/2005 Esna Australia 1 6 7 14.29 85.71 1922 1928Novotna, jana Czech Republic 1 3 4 25.00 75.00 1991 - 1998 Adamson-Landry, http://www.geocities.com/PaulKilfoil/T2.htm
HickokSports.com - History - Olympic Tennis Medalists This document lists all Olympic tennis medalists. It is a page in the Historysection of Mary Joe Fernandez, USA, 76 (8-6), 6-4, jana Novotná http://www.hickoksports.com/history/oltennis.shtml
Extractions: Alpha Index Index by Sport History Bits Forum ... Search Other Resources Lawn tennis, as it was then known, was an Olympic sport from 1896 to 1924, although the women's singles and mixed doubles events were first played in 1900 and women's doubles wasn't added until 1920. In 1908 and 1912, there was competition both indoors and outdoors. The sport was dropped from the Olympics after 1924. It returned as a demonstration sport in 1968 and 1984 and became a medal sport again in 1988. A single-elimination tournament determines medal placings. The top 16 players are seeded in singles, the top eight teams in doubles. In 1896, 1900, 1904, 1988, and 1992, semfinal losers shared bronze medals. In all other years, they've had a playoff match for the medal. Top of page Year Gold Final Silver Bronze John Pius Boland, GBR/IRL Dionysios Kasdaglis, EGY Konstantinos Paspatis, GRE
Extractions: Family Consumer Dating Weddings ... About NBC11 Tennis National Sports NFL MLB NBA NHL NCAA Football NCAA Basketball NASCAR Golf WNBA Soccer Horse Racing Minor Baseball Boxing Tennis Email This Story Print This Story POSTED: 12:11 pm PDT July 9, 2005 Newport, RI The International Tennis Hall of Fame enshrined four new members on Saturday, including former world No. 1 and four-time Grand Slam champion Jim Courier. Joining Courier in the Hall were fellow major champions Yannick Noah and Jana Novotna, as well as tour administrator Butch Buchholz. The athletic Courier claimed back-to-back French Opens in 1991-92 and back-to- back Australian Opens in 1992-93. He also spent a total of 58 weeks at No. 1 and played on American Davis Cup championship teams in 1992 and '95. Courier, in his trademark white cap, pounded the ball from the baseline in his heyday and joined Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi and Michael Chang for the Americans' dominating decade of the 1990s. Courier was the first one of the group to win two majors and the first one to reach the top of the men's rankings. A now 34-year-old Courier retired from the ATP in 2000 after compiling 23 singles titles and six doubles championships.
Extractions: var section = new Array('champcar','cyclisme','football','formule_un','hockey','jeux_olympiques','soccer','tennis','autres_sports'); var champcarOn = "Champ Car/IRL"; var champcarOff = "Champ Car/IRL"; var cyclismeOn = "Cyclisme"; var cyclismeOff = "Cyclisme"; var footballOn = "Football"; var footballOff = "Football"; var jeux_olympiquesOn = "JO"; var jeux_olympiquesOff = "JO"; var formule_unOn = "Formule 1"; var formule_unOff = "Formule 1"; var hockeyOn = "Hockey"; var hockeyOff = "Hockey"; var soccerOn = "Soccer"; var soccerOff = "Soccer"; var tennisOn = "Tennis"; var tennisOff = "Tennis"; var autres_sportsOn = "+ de sports"; var autres_sportsOff = "+ de sports"; Accueil Jim Courier De son côté, Noah (45 ans) est devenu en 1983 le premier Français en 37 ans à remporter un tournoi du Grand Chelem. Il a réussi l'exploit devant son public, à Roland-Garros. Son palmarès compte 23 titres en simple et 16 en double, et son meilleur classement mondial a été 3e, en 1986. Comme entraîneur, il a mené la France à la victoire à la Coupe Davis (1991 et 1996) et à la Coupe de la Fédération (1997).