Linda Noskova came up the way Czech players tend to — early and decorated. From the small town of Vsetín in the Zlín Region, she grew up in a sports-centric family and first picked up tennis at six, introduced to the sport by her father, before the family relocated to Přerov for stronger coaching. She won the 2021 French Open girls' singles title and peaked at junior world No. 5, achieved on 14 June 2021. The senior climb was nearly vertical: in August 2022 she became the youngest player in the world's top 100, and in February 2023 the youngest in the top 50.
The game is power-baseline, built around a heavy first strike off both wings and a serve she leans on under pressure — last season she won 70% of first-serve points and rarely gave away free points on the second at 49%. The flat, early-taken ball travels best on quick courts, which is why hard remains her bread and butter, though her grass numbers have crept up. Composure is the underrated trait: she's a streaky front-runner who can lift through the biggest names without the scoreboard rattling her.
The defining moment came in Melbourne. On debut she beat compatriot Marie Bouzkova and McCartney Kessler, then stunned world No. 1 Iga Swiatek to reach a major fourth round — the first teenager to beat a No. 1 at the event since Mauresmo over Davenport in 1999. Her lone title came at Monterrey in 2024, but 2025 was the breakout: she beat Jessica Pegula to reach her first WTA 1000 final at Beijing — losing to Amanda Anisimova — and hit a new career high of No. 17.
The current beat is consolidation. An Indian Wells semifinal (l. Aryna Sabalenka), a Stuttgart quarterfinal, and a Madrid run that toppled Coco Gauff before Marta Kostyuk ended it have made the top 15 home rather than a peak.