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Dorothy Round Little

Dorothy Round
Round Little photo.jpg
Full name Dorothy Edith Round
Country (sports)  United Kingdom
Born (1908-07-13)13 July 1908
Dudley, Worcestershire, England
Died 12 November 1982(1982-11-12) (aged 74)
Kidderminster, Hereford and Worcester, England
Int. Tennis HoF 1986 (member page)
Singles
Highest ranking No. 1 (1934)
Grand Slam Singles results
Australian Open W (1935)
Wimbledon W (1934, 1937)
US Open SF (1933)
Doubles
Grand Slam Doubles results
US Open F (1931)
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles results
French Open 3R (1930)
Wimbledon W (1934, 1935, 1936)

Dorothy Edith Round Little (née Round; 13 July 1908 – 12 November 1982) was a British tennis player who was active in the 1930s. She won the singles title at Wimbledon in 1934 and 1937, and the Australian Championships in 1935.

Dorothy Round was born on 13 July 1908 in Dudley, Worcestershire, England, the youngest of four children. She attended the Dudley Girls High School and entered her first junior tournament when she was 16. At the follwing tournament, the Worcestershire championships, she won her first junior title.

Round entered her first Wimbledon Championships in 1928, after coming through the qualifying event, and was knocked out in the first round. The following year she suffered from nerves as she was defeated by Betty Nuthall in the second round. In 1930 she made her first tennis trip abroad, to the French Championships where she entered the mixed doubles event. At the 1931 Wimbledon Championships she reached the quarterfinal stage for the first time after defeating fifth-seeded Lili Álvarez in the third round and was rewarded with a spot on the British team for the Wightman Cup, the annual women's team tennis competition between Great Britain and the United States. She lost her singles match against Anna Harper in three sets after failing to convert any of her seven matchpoints. In 1932 she again reached the Wimbledon singles quarterfinal in which she was decisively beaten by first-seeded and three-time Wimbledon champion Helen Wills Moody.

At the 1933 Wimbledon Championships she was seeded no. 2 and after a first career win against Helen Jacobs in the semifinal she reached her first Grand Slam final. Wills Moody, now five-time Wimbledon singles title-holder, proved too strong but Round managed to take a set from her, which was the first set Wills Moody lost in a Grand Slam final since 1925. She proceeded with a tour to the United States where she competed in the 1933 Wightman Cup and won the singles title at the Eastern Grass Court Championships in Rye, beating compatriot Mary Heeley in the final. Round competed in the 1933 Pacific Coast Championships, held in San Francisco, and was a runner-up to Alice Marble in the singles event but won the doubles event partnering Mary Heeley. Round won the British Hard Court Championships in Bournemouth in 1933 and 1934 defeating Helen Jacobs and Peggy Scriven in the respective finals. She won the Victorian Championships, held in Melbourne, in December 1934 after a two-sets win in the final against Joan Hartigan.


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