Anhelina Kalinina is a right-handed Ukrainian counterpuncher who built her ranking from the bottom of the sport upward. Born 7 February 1997 in Nova Kakhovka and raised in Kyiv after her family relocated in 2008, she was coached early by her mother, Halina, and spent the better part of a decade grinding through the ITF and Challenger tiers — a haul of titles weighted heavily toward clay. Her first piece of real silverware came as a junior: the 2014 Australian Open girls' doubles title alongside Elizaveta Kulichkova.
She is a percentage player, not a shotmaker. The serve is a liability rather than a weapon — she generates almost no free points off it — so her game is built on depth, court coverage and the patience to extend rallies until the error comes from the other side. On clay, where the extra split-second rewards her movement and margin, that template scales: the dirt is where she has always done her best work, and where a top-25 ceiling once looked sustainable.
The defining run came at the 2022 Italian Open in Rome, where she reached the final from qualifying — the breakthrough that pushed her toward a career-high ranking inside the top 30. She has banked main-draw wins over higher-seeded names across the tour and remains a dangerous floater at any clay event; the spring swing through Madrid, Rome and Roland-Garros is annually her most productive stretch, and she carries the Ukrainian flag alongside peers like Marta Kostyuk, Elina Svitolina and Dayana Yastremska.
Now ranked 69, Kalinina sits outside the seeding cutoff she once cleared comfortably, the project this season a climb back toward the top 50. The serve still caps her ceiling, but on a slow court she remains a player no seed wants to draw early.