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Marguerite Broquedis

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Country (sports)
  
France

French Open
  
SF (1925)

Highest ranking
  
No.

Olympic Games
  
Gold (1912)

Grand slams won (singles)
  
2

Wimbledon
  
SF (1925)

Role
  
Tennis player

French Open
  
QF (1925, 1927)

Name
  
Marguerite Broquedis



Full name
  
Marguerite Marie Broquedis-Billout-Bordes

Born
  
17 April 1893 Pau, Pyrenees-Atlantiques (
1893-04-17
)

Died
  
April 23, 1983, Orleans, France

Olympic medals
  
Tennis at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Mixed outdoor doubles

Similar People
  
Jean Borotra, Molla Mallory, Sigrid Fick

Marguerite Marie Broquedis ([maʁ.ɡə.ʁit bʁɔkədi]; 17 April 1893 – 23 April 1983; married names Billout, Bordes) was a French female tennis player.

Biography

Broquedis was born on 17 April 1893 in Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques. She moved with her family to Paris around the turn of the century and started playing tennis on two dusty courts that were part of the Galerie des machines. Later she joined the Racing Club de France.

Broquedis competed at the 1912 Olympics at Stockholm where she won the gold medal in outdoor singles by beating German Dora Köring 4–6, 6–3, 6–4 in the final. In mixed doubles, she won the bronze medal partnering Albert Canet. In 1913 and 1914, she won the French championships, beating 15-year-old Suzanne Lenglen in the 1914 final. Broquedis, nicknamed "the goddess", is also known for being the only player to ever beat Lenglen in a fully played singles final. She also took part in the 1924 Olympics at Paris but couldn't win any medal there.

She won the singles title at the French Covered Court Championships on six occasions (1910, 1912–13, 1922, 1925, and 1927).

From 1925 to 1927, Broquedis had another successful time in her tennis career, reaching the singles semifinals at Wimbledon in 1925, and the quarterfinals twice at the (now fully international) French championships in 1925 and 1927. Moreover, she won the mixed doubles title partnering Jean Borotra at Paris in 1927. She was ranked world No. 9 by A. Wallis Myers in 1925.

Broquedis died in Orléans in 1983, aged 90.

References

Marguerite Broquedis Wikipedia