María-Alejandra Quezada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
María-Alejandra Quezada
Country (sports) Chile
Born (1974-03-07) 7 March 1974 (age 50)
Prize money$13,941
Singles
Career record39–65
Highest rankingNo. 514 (12 June 1995)
Doubles
Career record55–63
Career titles1 ITF
Highest rankingNo. 319 (5 February 1996)
Team competitions
Fed Cup10–8

María-Alejandra Quezada Carrasco (born 7 March 1974) is a Chilean former professional tennis player.

Quezada was a Fed Cup player for Chile during the 1990s, appearing in a total of 17 ties.[1] Her Fed Cup career included a World Group fixture against Spain in 1994, where she played a singles rubber against Conchita Martínez, two-weeks after the Spaniard had won Wimbledon.[2] She lost to Martínez in straight sets, but it would be the only one of her eight singles rubbers that she failed to win in her career. In doubles, she had a 3–7 win–loss record.[1]

At the 1994 South American Games tennis tournament, Quezada was a gold medalist in the women's doubles, partnering Bárbara Castro, as well as a bronze medalist in the singles event.

ITF Circuit finals[edit]

Doubles: 8 (1 title, 7 runner-ups)[edit]

Result No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 1. 2 May 1993 ITF Santiago, Chile Clay Chile Bárbara Castro Argentina Maria Inés Araiz
Argentina Pamela Zingman
1–6, 4–6
Loss 2. 16 October 1994 ITF Santiago, Chile Clay Chile Bárbara Castro Argentina Mariana Eberle
Argentina María Fernanda Landa
3–6, 6–4, 5–7
Loss 3. 6 November 1994 ITF Freeport, Bahamas Clay Chile Bárbara Castro United States Ingrid Kurta
Netherlands Martine Vosseberg
6–4, 4–6, 6–7(2)
Loss 4. 13 November 1994 ITF Santo Domingo,
Dominican Republic
Clay Chile Bárbara Castro Dominican Republic Joelle Schad
Spain Noelia Serra
1–5 ret.
Win 1. 1 October 1995 ITF Guayaquil, Ecuador Clay Chile Bárbara Castro Argentina Mariana Díaz Oliva
Brazil Eugenia Maia
7–6(5), 6–1
Loss 5. 8 October 1995 ITF Lima, Peru Hard Chile Bárbara Castro Sweden Maria-Farnes Capistrano
Finland Linda Jansson
2–6, 6–2, 3–6
Loss 6. 5 November 1995 ITF Santiago, Chile Clay Chile Bárbara Castro Brazil Miriam D'Agostini
Brazil Katalin Marosi
0–6, 3–6
Loss 7. 21 September 1998 ITF Santiago, Chile Clay Argentina Mariana Lopez Palacios Switzerland Aliénor Tricerri
Chile Paula Cabezas
4–6, 1–6

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Key Statistics". fedcup.com.
  2. ^ "Tennis: Spain too hot for Chile". The Independent. 20 July 1994.

External links[edit]