Sorana Cirstea — Player Bio

Sorana Cirstea: Bucharest's first-strike lifer, top 20 at 36

Sorana Cirstea came up as Romania's brightest junior, born in Bucharest on April 7, 1990, picking up a racket at four and turning pro in the mid-2000s on the strength of raw baseline power. She announced herself at 17 with a 2007 WTA final run in Budapest, then claimed her maiden title in Tashkent in 2008 and pushed inside the top 50 before she was 20.

The game has never wavered from first-strike tennis. Cirstea takes the ball early and looks to end points from her forehand wing, hitting through the court rather than grinding from behind the baseline. The reward-and-risk profile is exactly what makes her watchable: when the timing lands she overpowers nearly anyone, and on the days the unforced errors pile up she can lose to opponents ranked well below her. The serve is a genuine weapon that lets her steal cheap holds and dictate the next ball.

Her career arc has been about longevity as much as peaks. The 2009 Roland-Garros quarterfinal — built on a win over a then-top-five Jelena Jankovic — remains the early high-water mark, and she has since stacked deep runs at the majors and Masters-level events across two decades. The defining late-career surge came at the WTA 1000 stops, where wins over the sport's top names rebuilt her ranking and set up a run at events like the Dubai Championships and Miami Open that keep her relevant against a generation that includes Aryna Sabalenka, Iga Swiatek, and Coco Gauff.

The current beat is the headline itself: at 36, Cirstea is ranked No. 18, making her the oldest player ever to sit inside the WTA top 20. She is playing the 2026 season on her own terms — still hunting big scalps, still backing the same aggressive blueprint that carried her here.