Viktorija Golubic — Player Bio

The one-handed Zurich grinder who saved her best for SW19 grass

Born in Zurich on October 16, 1992 to a Serbian mother and Croatian father, Viktorija Golubic is Switzerland's archetypal slow-burn pro. She started on the ITF Women's Circuit at a $10k event in Budapest in June 2008, and made her WTA main-draw debut at the 2013 Gastein Ladies, where she recorded her first Tour win over Kiki Bertens. The breakthrough proper came in 2016: at the inaugural Ladies Championship Gstaad she beat third seed Kiki Bertens in the final to win her first WTA title, entering the top 100 for the first time.

The game is craft over power — and it starts with the backhand. She plays right-handed with a one-handed backhand and is recognized for her technical proficiency, strategic approach and a solid baseline game. Her tennis idol growing up was Monica Seles, and she played with two hands off both wings until age 11. It's a low-error, redirection-heavy style — across her last full hard-court return seasons she's hovered around 0.19 double faults per game — that punishes pace better than it generates it, which is why grass became her best canvas.

The defining fortnight came at Wimbledon 2021. Ranked No. 66, Golubic reached her first major quarterfinal, defeating 23rd seed Madison Keys in the fourth round before losing to eighth seed Karolína Plíšková in straight sets. Months earlier she'd taken Olympic silver: in Tokyo she reached the doubles final with Belinda Bencic, taking silver after losing to Barbora Krejcikova and Katerina Siniakova. She peaked at a career-high No. 35 on February 28, 2022. Her second Tour title arrived eight years after the first: at Jiujiang in October 2024 she claimed her second career title, eight years after her maiden Gstaad trophy.

Now 33 and the No. 2 Swiss, Golubic keeps rebuilding through the 125 circuit. Her WTA 125 ledger now runs to six titles, the latest at Oeiras in 2026. A spring climb pushed her back inside the top 70 — proof the craft still travels, even if the ceiling has lowered since the Wimbledon heyday.