Oksana Selekhmeteva — Player Bio

The junior doubles prodigy who became a Spanish lefty grinder

Oksana Selekhmeteva was born in Kamenka, Russia, in January 2003 and came up as one of the most decorated juniors of her generation — Tennis Europe's 14-and-under Player of the Year in 2017, a combined junior world No. 7 by January 2021, and the owner of a tidy 78–44 singles / 83–31 doubles junior ledger. The hardware came in doubles: two junior Grand Slam titles on different surfaces with different partners — the 2019 US Open alongside Kamilla Bartone and the 2021 French Open alongside Alexandra Eala, now a tour peer. She later switched her sporting nationality away from Russia, building her base in Spain.

She's a left-hander whose game is built around the dirt. The lefty forehand and heavy topspin give her natural angles on clay, and her best tennis comes from grinding rallies and absorbing pace rather than dictating with first-strike power — a profile that has made the European clay swing, from the smaller events into Madrid and Roland-Garros, her most productive stretch of the calendar.

Translating the junior résumé into senior singles took far longer than the credentials suggested. The bulk of her early pro years played out on the ITF and WTA 125 circuits, the slow climb that finally pushed her toward the top 100 on the back of her clay results. Her ceiling on a hot week is real: against the Ostapenkos and Ostapenko-style ball-strikers of the tour, her counterpunching can drag bigger hitters into uncomfortable, extended exchanges.

As of mid-2026 she sits at world No. 91 — a career-best neighborhood after breaking into the top 100 during the clay swing. The current beat is consolidation: holding the ranking she fought years to reach and proving the clay form travels onto faster surfaces, where her margins are thinner.