Cristina Bucsa is, by the numbers, the best Spanish woman in the game — and she got there on a route almost nobody charts anymore. Born in Chișinău, Moldova, the daughter of former Olympic biathlete Ion Bucșa, she moved to Cantabria in northern Spain at age three, the family eventually settling in Torrelavega. She came up through the ITF grind rather than any junior pipeline, and reached the top 100 only on 16 January 2023, having first entered a Grand Slam main draw as a qualifier at the 2021 US Open.
The game is built on variety, not velocity. A right-hander who redirects pace, mixes spins and leans on touch, Bucsa's instincts were forged in doubles — and the resume there is the headline. Her most notable result is a doubles bronze at the 2024 Paris Olympics with Sara Sorribes Tormo, and she owns eight WTA Tour doubles titles to go with one in singles. That same year she and Sorribes Tormo became the first all-Spanish doubles team to win the Madrid Open, beating Barbora Krejčíková and Laura Siegemund in the final.
The singles ranking trailed the reputation for years, then caught up fast. Her first deep major run came at the 2023 Australian Open, where she qualified and reached the third round before losing to world No. 1 Iga Świątek. The real breakthrough was 2025: a maiden Wimbledon third round, then a run to the US Open fourth round — her best Grand Slam singles result. At Flushing Meadows she came from a set down to beat No. 19 seed Elise Mertens 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 to make the second week.
The 2026 season finally delivered the missing piece. In March she beat Fletcher 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 at the Merida Open for her first career WTA singles title. That run carried her to a career-high No. 30 in singles and No. 16 in doubles, both reached on 16 March 2026 — confirmation that the slow build is now a top-tier career on both ledgers.