Victoria Mboko was born in Charlotte to parents who left the Democratic Republic of the Congo amid political turmoil, and the family settled in Toronto when she was two months old. The youngest of four tennis-playing siblings — her sister Gracia and brother Kevin played at the college level — she began around the age of three or four. She came up through Tennis Canada's program, winning her first pro title at the ITF W25 in Saskatoon in 2022. The breakout was 2025: she won 22 successive matches without dropping a set to claim four ITF titles, setting a Canadian record for consecutive ITF main-draw wins.
At 5-foot-11 and right-handed, Mboko is a flat, first-strike ball-striker built around a heavy serve and free-swinging groundstrokes — an athlete who escalates rather than grinds. The signature trait across her 2025 run was her capacity to absorb a bad opening set and reset: in her Canadian Open title week, she rallied from a 6-1 first set against Elena Rybakina in the semis, then recovered from another rough opener to beat Naomi Osaka 2-6, 6-4, 6-1 in the final.
That fortnight defines her arc. As a wild card she ousted four Grand Slam champions — Osaka, Sofia Kenin, Rybakina and Coco Gauff — becoming only the third wild-card entrant ever to win a WTA 1000. She was the youngest woman to topple four major champions at one event since a 17-year-old Serena Williams at the 1999 US Open. She added a second title in Hong Kong in November, then was voted WTA Newcomer of the Year.
The current beat is the ceiling getting real. She opened 2026 reaching the Adelaide final, beating reigning Australian Open champion Madison Keys en route before losing to Mirra Andreeva. Back-to-back top-10 wins over Andreeva and Rybakina carried her to a second WTA 1000 final in Qatar, and on February 16, 2026, she became the fastest player to the top 10 — 350 days after her top-200 debut. She is only the fourth Canadian woman, after Carling Bassett-Seguso, Eugenie Bouchard and Bianca Andreescu, to crack the top 10.