Eleonora Alvisi| Country (sports) | Italy |
|---|
| Born | (2003-03-13) 13 March 2003 |
|---|
| Plays | Right-handed |
|---|
| Prize money | $33,091 |
|---|
|
| Career record | 78–69 |
|---|
| Career titles | 1 ITF |
|---|
| Highest ranking | No. 663 (29 July 2024) |
|---|
| Current ranking | No. 736 (3 March 2025) |
|---|
|
| French Open Junior | 1R (2021) |
|---|
| Wimbledon Junior | 1R (2021) |
|---|
|
| Career record | 27–39 |
|---|
| Career titles | 1 ITF |
|---|
| Highest ranking | No. 428 (27 May 2024) |
|---|
| Current ranking | No. 670 (3 March 2025) |
|---|
|
| French Open Junior | W (2020) |
|---|
| Wimbledon Junior | 2R (2021) |
|---|
| Last updated on: 3 March 2025. |
Eleonora Alvisi (born 13 March 2003[1]) is an Italian tennis player.
She has a career-high ITF juniors ranking of 36, achieved on 4 January 2021.
Alvisi won the 2020 French Open girls' doubles event, partnering Lisa Pigato. They defeated the Russian pairing of Maria Bondarenko and Diana Shnaider in the final.[2]
In 2023, she made her WTA Tour debut in Parma as a wildcard, losing in the first round to fourth seed Viktoriya Tomova in three sets.[3]
ITF Circuit finals
Singles: 1 (title)
|
|
| Finals by surface
|
| Clay (1–0)
|
|
| Result
|
W–L
|
Date
|
Tournament
|
Tier
|
Surface
|
Opponent
|
Score
|
| Win
|
1–0
|
Mar 2022
|
ITF Marrakech, Morocco
|
W15
|
Clay
|
Clervie Ngounoue
|
6–3, 6–1
|
Doubles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up)
| Legend
|
| W25/35 tournaments
|
|
| Finals by surface
|
| Clay (1–1)
|
|
Junior Grand Slam tournament finals
Girls' doubles
References
External links