. "Elena Baltacha"@en . . "Ipswich, United Kingdom"@en . . "Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union"@en . . . . "0"^^ . "1983-08-14"^^ . . "1.75 m"@en . "0"^^ . "Elena Sergeevna Baltacha (14 August 1983 \u2013 4 May 2014) was a British professional tennis player. Being a four-time winner of the Aegon Award, she was also a long-term British No. 1, a position she held intermittently from 2002 to 2012. However, due to her absence from competition due to knee surgery, she dropped down the world rankings and at the time of her retirement on 18 November 2013, she was ranked as the world No. 221 and British No. 6. Her career high ranking of World No. 49 was achieved in September 2010. Baltacha died from liver cancer on 4 May 2014, aged 30."@en . . "Elena Sergeevna Baltacha (14 August 1983 \u2013 4 May 2014) was a British professional tennis player. Being a four-time winner of the Aegon Award, she was also a long-term British No. 1, a position she held intermittently from 2002 to 2012. However, due to her absence from competition due to knee surgery, she dropped down the world rankings and at the time of her retirement on 18 November 2013, she was ranked as the world No. 221 and British No. 6. Her career high ranking of World No. 49 was achieved in September 2010. Over the course of her career she won eleven ITF singles titles (five $25,000, two $50,000, two $75,000, and two $100,000) and four ITF doubles titles (all $25,000). She was also a runner-up in three ITF events in singles and four in doubles. In 2010, Baltacha had victories over top 10 players, including two victories over Li Na (the second of which came via retirement) and one against Francesca Schiavone, who at the time was the reigning French Open champion. In 2011 Baltacha won her highest ranked tournament on the ITF tour, the 2011 Aegon Nottingham Challenge. Baltacha died from liver cancer on 4 May 2014, aged 30."@en . "2012"^^ . . "0"^^ . "Elena Baltacha"@en . "Elena Sergeevna Baltacha (14 August 1983 \u2013 4 May 2014) was a Ukrainian-born British professional tennis player. Being a four-time winner of the Aegon Award, she was also a long-term British No. 1, a position she held intermittently from 2002 to 2012. She retired from tennis aged 30 in November 2013, but was diagnosed with liver cancer in March 2014, less than four months after the announcement. Baltacha died on May 4, 2014."@en . . "Elena Sergeevna Baltacha (14 August 1983 \u2013 4 May 2014) was a Ukrainian-born British professional tennis player. Being a four-time winner of the Aegon Award, she was also a long-term British No. 1, a position she held intermittently from 2002 to 2012. She retired from tennis aged 30 in November 2013, but was diagnosed with liver cancer in March 2014, less than four months after the announcement. Baltacha died on May 4, 2014."@en .