May 25, 1983: The day Steffi Graf became the youngest player to win a Grand Slam match

Every day, Tennis Majors takes you back in time to relive a tennis event which happened on this specific day. On May 25, 1983, 13-year-old Steffi Graf created a record that stands to date and is unlikely to ever be broken

Steffi Graff - Roland-Garros Steffi Graff – Roland-Garros

What exactly happened on that day?

On May 25, 1983, 13-year-old Steffi Graf became the youngest player in tennis history to win a match in a Grand Slam tournament. The young German, aged 13 years, 11 months and 10 days, defeated Carina Karlsson (6-4, 6-1) in the first round of Roland-Garros, a tournament which she would go on to win six times during her Hall-of-Fame career.

The players involved: Steffi Graf and Carina Karlsson

  • Steffi Graf: The young German prodigy

In May 1983, Steffi Graf, from Germany, had not even turned 14, but she was already a professional tennis player. Coached by her father, she started playing tennis when she was just three, and in 1982, at the age of 12, she won the European Championships in the u-18 category. At the end of that season, having turned 13, she became the youngest girl to ever get a WTA ranking, and she turned pro in October that year.

In the first professional event she entered, she faced former world No 1 Tracy Austin, who defeated her (6-4, 6-0) and claimed that she didn’t understand the hype around the young German as there were “hundreds” of players like her in the United States.

However, this comment didn’t prevent Graf from improving, winning several matches in the first months of 1983, and climbing as high as world No 195, a ranking which enabled her to enter the Roland-Garros qualifying draw.

  • Karina Carlsson: The Swede who was also making her Grand Slam debut

Karina Carlsson was a Swedish player born in 1963. A young player on the rise, she had not achieved any significant results at the time, and before the 1983 French Open, she had never qualified for the main draw of a Grand Slam tournament.

The place: Roland-Garros

Roland-Garros, located in the west of Paris at the edge of the Bois de Boulogne forest, had been hosting the French Grand Slam since 1928. However, the French Championships on clay courts had been held since 1871 at the Racing Club de France, and it was only when France was to host the Davis Cup Challenge Round that the Roland-Garros venue was built.

It was the first and now the only Grand Slam to be played on clay, the slowest surface, which made it the hardest tournament to win from a physical perspective.

Court Philippe Chatrier Roland Garros
Court Philippe Chatrier

The story: Graf comes through qualifying and wins first round in straight sets

In 1983, during the first days of the French Open, one of the main attractions of the tournament was a young German teenager named Steffi Graf. She was not 14 yet, and she looked so young that, during the qualifying event, she was mistaken for a ball girl by more than one spectator.

However, she had entered the draw thanks to her ranking (she was already world No 195 at the time), and she did more than just picking up the balls. Showing her great tennis skills, but also her fighting spirit, she made her way out of the qualifying draw, winning two out of her three matches in three sets, including the last one, where she defeated Australia’s Amanda Tobin-Evans (6-2, 3-6, 6-1).

It was Graf’s first appearance in the main draw of a Grand Slam, and she had a bit of luck, as she faced another qualifier, Carina Karlsson, from Sweden. Relying on what would become her greatest strengths, her great footwork and a massive forehand, she was anything but overwhelmed by the occasion, and she prevailed in straight sets (6-4, 6-1). Never in tennis history had such a young player managed to score a win at a Grand Slam tournament.

What next? The first and last of Graf’s 22 Grand Slams would come in Paris

Steffi Graf would be defeated in the second round of the 1983 French Open by Beverly Mould, from South Africa (6-0, 7-6). After winning her first title in Hilton Head in 1986, she claimed the first of her six Roland-Garros titles in 1987, defeating Martina Navratilova in the final (6-4, 4-6, 8-6).

In 1988, the year of her Golden Grand Slam, she would also leave a special mark in the tournament’s history by winning the final 6-0, 6-0, against Natasha Zvereva. Her last title in Paris, also her 22nd and final Grand Slam title, would come in 1999, after she won a dramatic final against Martina Hingis (4-6, 7-5, 6-2).

The record Graf set in 1983 would remain unbeaten, and it will probably remain untouchable, as the rules set in the late 1990s to protect young players prevent girls under the age of 14 from competing on the professional tour.

Although she would never climb higher than world No 83 ( in 1987), Carina Karlsson reached the Wimbledon quarter-finals in 1984 as a qualifier, only to be defeated by another tennis legend Chris Evert (6-2, 6-2).

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