Jessica Bouzas Maneiro is the rare Spanish talent forged outside the country's clay-court machine — a product of Galicia who was born in Vilagarcía de Arousa, began playing tennis at age five at the Club de Tenis O Rial in her hometown, and at 13 moved to Alicante to train at the Ferrero Tennis Academy. In 2022 she moved to Madrid to train under Javier Martí, the former coach of Paula Badosa, and in September 2023 hired Roberto Ortega Olmedo as her coach. The climb was a grind rather than a leap: before the tour took notice she won one singles title on the WTA Challenger Tour as well as eleven singles titles and four doubles titles on the ITF Circuit.
She's a right-handed baseliner who wins on weight of repetition and return pressure rather than overpowering serve. The numbers tell the story of where she does her damage — in 2025 she went 8-5 on clay and 14-16 on hard, but her best major results have come on grass, the surface that rewards her flat, early ball-striking.
The career-defining moment came at Wimbledon 2024, where she ousted defending champion Markéta Vondroušová in straight sets, ranked No. 83, taking just over an hour to win 6-4, 6-2. It was only the second time in 30 years a defending women's Wimbledon champion fell in the first round — Steffi Graf, beaten by Lori McNeil in 1994, was the other. She backed it up in 2025, reaching her first Grand Slam round of 16 at Wimbledon (losing to Samsonova) and first WTA 1000 quarterfinal at Montreal, losing to eventual champion Victoria Mboko. At the Canadian Open that run lifted her to a career-high No. 40, achieved on 18 August 2025.
Now 23 and the No. 2 Spanish WTA player, Bouzas Maneiro carries her roots openly — a triskel symbol on her neck honoring Galicia and a "SHH" on her finger as a message to doubters. The task this season is converting big-stage upsets into the consistency that holds a top-40 perch.