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・ Elena Angione
・ Elena Antoci
・ Elena Antonova (skier)
・ Elena Aprile
・ Elena Arellano Chamorro
・ Elena Arenas
・ Elena Arizmendi Mejia
・ Elena Arnedo
・ Elena Arzak
・ Elena Asachi
・ Elena Asenina of Bulgaria
・ Elena Avdekova
・ Elena Azarova
・ Elena Bacaloglu
・ Elena Balmori
Elena Baltacha
・ Elena Baramova
・ Elena Barmakova
・ Elena Barolo
・ Elena Bashkirova
・ Elena Batanova
・ Elena Bechke
・ Elena Beckman-Scherbina
・ Elena Beloff
・ Elena Belova
・ Elena Belova (biathlete)
・ Elena Benarroch
・ Elena Berezhnaya
・ Elena Berezovich
・ Elena Berkova


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Elena Baltacha : ウィキペディア英語版
Elena Baltacha


Elena Sergeevna Baltacha (14 August 1983 – 4 May 2014) was a Ukrainian-born British professional tennis player. Being a four-time winner of the AEGON Awards, she was also a long-term British No. 1, a position she held intermittently from 2002 to 2012. However, due to her absence from competition due to knee surgery, she dropped down the world rankings and at the time of her retirement on 18 November 2013, she was ranked as the world No. 221 and British No. 6. Her career high ranking of World No. 49 was achieved in September 2010.
Over the course of her career she won eleven ITF singles titles (five $25,000, two $50,000, two $75,000, and two $100,000) and four ITF doubles titles (all $25,000). She was also a runner-up in three ITF events in singles and four in doubles. In 2010, Baltacha had victories over top 10 players, including two victories over Li Na (the second of which came via retirement) and one against Francesca Schiavone, who at the time was the reigning French Open champion. In 2011 Baltacha won her highest ranked tournament on the ITF tour, the 2011 Aegon Nottingham Challenge.
Baltacha was diagnosed with liver cancer in January 2014, just a few weeks after her marriage to tennis coach Nino Severino. She died on 4 May 2014, aged 30, in her Ipswich home,〔(Elena Baltacha, Former British Number One Tennis Star, Dies At 30 Of Liver Cancer )〕 surrounded by friends and family.
==Biography==
Born in Kiev, Ukraine, Baltacha moved with her family following a transfer of football clubs by her professional footballer father, Sergei. He represented the Soviet Union and played in the United Kingdom for Ipswich Town, St. Johnstone and Inverness Caledonian Thistle. Her mother Olga represented the Soviet Union in both the pentathlon and heptathlon at the Olympic Games.〔 Her brother Sergei played football for St. Mirren and Millwall.〔(LTA player profile )〕
After arriving at Heathrow Airport on 13 January 1989, Baltacha moved to Ipswich where her father was to play football for the next year before moving to Perth, Scotland, where she grew up and spent some of her teenage years, before moving to Paisley, Scotland and attending Castlehead High School.〔(George Burley admits Scotland blunders - but vows he won't let Tartan Army down next time - Daily Record )〕
Resident in Ipswich, on 8 December 2013, a month after her retirement from tennis, she married her coach Nino Severino, a retired professional tennis player turned multi-sports specialist in mental and movement training coach, who also works with Ipswich Town F.C. and in coaching martial arts athletes.〔http://www.lta.org.uk/Articles/Coach-Nino/Coach-Nino/ 〕 In 2010 the couple had formed the Elena Baltacha Academy of Tennis, which is based around the facilities at both Culford School near Bury St Edmunds, and Ipswich Sports Club where she trained during her career.
At the age of 19 she was diagnosed with the liver condition primary sclerosing cholangitis and in June 2010 she became patron of the Children's Liver Disease Foundation. Baltacha was diagnosed with liver cancer in January 2014. She died from the disease on 4 May 2014 at the age of 30.〔 Several players paid tribute to Baltacha on Twitter including Grand Slam champions Martina Navratilova, Serena Williams, Billie Jean King, Maria Sharapova, Victoria Azarenka, Kim Clijsters, Petra Kvitova, Marion Bartoli, Chris Evert, Sam Stosur and Svetlana Kuznetsova.〔〔(Tennis world pays tribute following tragic death of former British No1 Elena Baltacha - Telegraph )〕 A host of ATP and WTA tennis players past and present came together on the centre court at the Madrid Open as a mark of respect for Baltacha.〔(News | WTA Tennis English )〕 Baltacha's funeral took place on 19 May and was attended by Tim Henman, Annabel Croft, Laura Robson, Jo Durie and Judy Murray among others. Mourners were asked to wear bright colours instead of black and to donate to Rally for Bally rather than buying flowers.〔http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-suffolk-27463510〕〔http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/tennis/elena-baltacha-funeral-mourners-asked-to-wear-bright-colours-as-requested-by-former-british-number-one-ahead-of-private-funeral-9395177.html〕 The money will be split equally between the Royal Marsden Cancer Charity and the Elena Baltacha Academy of Tennis, which she set up to help disadvantaged children take up the sport.〔
In May 2015 it was announced that the trophy at the Aegon Open has been named the "Elena Baltacha trophy" in her honour.〔http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/tennis/32582905〕

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