Anastasia Potapova spent years as the most heralded junior of her cohort before fully translating that promise to the senior tour. Born in Saratov in 2001 and developed through the Russian junior system, she won the 2016 Wimbledon girls' singles title and rose to junior world No. 1. She turned pro as a teenager and made her Grand Slam main-draw debut as a 16-year-old qualifier at Wimbledon, the youngest player to come through Slam qualifying in years. Since Russian players were barred from national representation, she has competed under the Austrian flag.
The game is built on flat, early-struck pace off both wings. Potapova stands close to the baseline, takes the ball on the rise, and tries to shrink the court — dictating with first-strike tennis rather than grinding. At her best she overwhelms opponents with redirected pace and a heavy first serve; the cost is a higher error count and dips in consistency when the timing slips. It's a high-ceiling, occasionally volatile style that rewards aggression and punishes passivity.
The career arc has been a steady climb rather than a single leap. She broke into the top 20 in 2023 and has held a place inside the top 30, with notable wins over the tour's elite and deep runs at Premier-level events. Her record reads like a player comfortable trading blows with the best — competitive ledgers against the likes of Aryna Sabalenka, Jelena Ostapenko and Jasmine Paolini, the kind of flat-power baseliners who play to her preferred tempo.
Now ranked No. 27, Potapova heads through the 2026 calendar as an established top-30 seed rather than a prospect. The firepower that once carried the "what if" tag is now a known quantity on hardcourts and grass alike — events such as the Berlin Open and Wimbledon remain her best stages to convert pace into results.