ò Strong 1999 clay court season: saved a match point to defeat No. 15-ranked Kournikova 67, 64, 76 in the first round of the German Open; reached her first SF in nearly two years at Strasbourg with wins over No. 4 seed Dechy and No. 8-seed Sidot
ò Culminated 1999 clay court season by upsetting No. 10 seed S. Williams to reach the 4r at Roland Garros, but then was forced to withdraw from her next match due to a strained right abductor
ò At the 1999 US Open, upset No. 13 seed Van Roost to reach the 4r, where she won the first set from No. 3 seed V. Williams before slipping and suffering a minor leg injury; the fall came the same time as a rain delay, and she won just one more game when play resumed
ò Had a solid 1999 season in doubles, reaching finals in Sydney, Indian Wells and Miami with three different partners; with partner Seles at Miami, reached the final with wins over the No. 2-, No. 4- and No. 8-seeded teams; in the final, held two championship points before falling to top seeds Hingis and Novotna
ò Underwent arthroscopic surgery on her right wrist in late 1997 and missed the first half of the 1998 season; wrist continued to bother her throughout the 1999 season
ò Won the seventh singles title of career (second on clay) at 1997 German Open, including wins over Novotna, Pierce and Kournikova
ò Seeded No. 14, reached SF at 1997 Australian Open, her best Grand Slam finish in nearly four years
ò In 1997, qualified for the season-ending Championships for the seventh time in nine years as one of the best 16 players of the year; at the 1997 Championships, saved three match points and defeated world No. 2 Davenport in the 1r; has also qualified three times in doubles, winning in 1996 with Davenport
ò Was a late addition to the 1996 United States Olympic tennis team as a doubles player, but entered the singles competition due to a withdrawal and reached the SF, defeating second seed Conchita Martinez en route; lost Bronze Medal playoff in singles but defended her 1992 Gold Medal in doubles with G. Fernandez; also won 1992 singles Bronze Medal
ò Member of winning USA Fed Cup team in 1996
ò Won second Grand Slam doubles title at 1996 Roland Garros, d. top two seeds with partner Davenport; first title came at 1991 Australian Open with Fendick
ò Became the 23rd woman in the Open Era to win 400 matches
ò Won 1993 and 1995 Indian Wells
ò As a WC, earned sixth career Tour title at 1995 Brighton; became first American to win the title since 1985 (Evert); d. Coetzer in final
ò In 1993 Roland Garros QF, had biggest comeback of career, after trailing 16, 1-5, to d. Sabatini 16, 76(4) 10-8 (down match point five times) in a three-hour, 36-minute match; went on to upset Sanchez Vicario in SF before falling to Graf in a three-set final
ò Briefly surpassed Navratilova in rankings (August 19-25, 1991) to No. 4, becoming first highest-ranked American other than Evert or Navratilova since 1980
ò Youngest player (14 years, 8 days) to win a US Open match when she defeated Gomer in 1985; Capriati is second-youngest at 14 years, five months in 1990
ò Won first major title at 1990 Tokyo Indoors; included wins over Sukova, Maleeva-Fragniere and Frazier; less than a month later, swept singles and doubles titles at Filderstadt











