Patricia Maria ÃÂig (born 27 July 1994) is a Romanian tennis player. ÃÂig has a career-high WTA singles ranking of world No. 56, achieved on 26 October 2020. Her best doubles ranking of No. 155 was achieved on 14 November 2016. ÃÂig has won one singles title on the WTA Tour and one WTA 125 title, as well as twenty one singles titles and eleven doubles titles on the ITF Circuit.
ÃÂig made her WTA Tour debut at the Bucharest Open where she received a wildcard into the singles main draw, and she won to SÃÂlvia Soler Espinosa (retired at 6âÂÂ4, 3âÂÂ1) in the first round, before losing 0âÂÂ6, 2âÂÂ6 to Polona Hercog. In the doubles competition, paired to co-national Andreea Mitu, ÃÂig reached her first WTA final, but they lost.
She then did much better in Baku by defeating Oksana Kalashnikova 6âÂÂ1, 6âÂÂ3 to qualify, then in the main draw, qualifiers Olga Ianchuk (6âÂÂ4, 6âÂÂ2) and Olga Savchuk (7âÂÂ5, 6âÂÂ4), and then Donna Vekià(6âÂÂ3, 6âÂÂ2), and in the semifinals she defeated top seed and world No. 42, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, 6âÂÂ3, 6âÂÂ2, thus reaching her first WTA singles final (without losing one set) and entering top 120 in the WTA rankings. She lost the final in three sets to Margarita Gasparyan.
After a period of struggling with her performances in the second half of 2017 season, she decided to focus on her health, citing back pain as the main source of discomfort. Her last played tournament was the (Guangzhou Open) in September 2017. ÃÂig became an inactive player on 24 September 2018, after not playing for 52 consecutive weeks.
ÃÂig returned to action in April 2019, after healing her injuries and giving birth to daughter Sofia in November 2018. She played a series of nine $15k tournaments over ten weeks in Cancún, Mexico. She retired or gave her opponent a walkover in three of the first four, as the inactivity led to injuries â including a recurrence of the knee issue. By the fifth tournament, she made the final. She did the same in the seventh, and won the last two.
The Romanian would have preferred to start at the $25k level. But the new pro circuit rules instituted for 2019 made it impossible for her to gain entry with no ranking. She earned no ranking points for those results. "So we went there for nothing. I got, like, 30 points (actually, 37), which means I'm going to be around 500 (in the WTA rankings). So that doesn't get me anywhere", she said in an interview. ÃÂig will find them reinstated in August as the ITF partly rolls back the new circuit rules.
ÃÂig returned to the WTA Tour at the Bucharest Open as a wildcard into qualifying. She won her three rounds of qualifying to make it to the main draw where she defeated Anna Bondár in the first round to advance to the last 16. In the second round, she defeated the top seed and defending champion Anastasija Sevastova, 6âÂÂ2, 7âÂÂ5. She went on to defeat Kristýna PlÃÂà ¡ková and Laura Siegemund. In the final, she lost to Elena Rybakina. This was the second singles final in her career. She returned to rankings on July 22, at No. 264.
At the Baltic Open, where she used her protected ranking, she defeated Ankita Raina and Anhelina Kalinina, before losing to Anastasia Potapova.
ÃÂig won the Karlsruhe Open, a WTA 125 tournament, defeating Alison Van Uytvanck and advancing back in the top 150, to No. 148. She finished the season in the top 125 at world No. 111 on 4 November 2019.
After reaching semifinals at the Thailand Open, where she lost to Magda Linette, ÃÂig reentered top 100, reaching world No. 84 on 17 February 2020.
In September 2020, she won her first WTA Tour title at Istanbul. On 26 October 2020, she reached her career-high ranking of world No. 56.
ÃÂig came back at the 2023 Hobart International and at the 2023 Australian Open using protected ranking after a year and a half of inactivity on the WTA tour (since Wimbledon 2021). In June 2023 ÃÂig reached the quarterfinals in Bucharest in an ITF event, then also the quarterfinals in BacÃÂu a month later. Also in July, Tig entered two WTA 250 tournaments, in Lausanne and Prague, but lost each time in the first round. She also entered the 2023 Transylvania Open with protected ranking. ÃÂig received a wildcard for the doubles competition at the 2025 Transylvania Open partnering Briana Szabó.
Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Fed Cup/Billie Jean King Cup and Olympic Games are included in winâÂÂloss records.
Current through the 2025 Wimbledon.
ÃÂig met her future husband RÃÂzvan SabÃÂu when she began coming to his academy for training around 2015. However, as time passed, the two began liking each other and eventually started dating. Born in 1994, Tig is 17 years younger than SabÃÂu. Under his guidance, Tig made tremendous progress despite recurring injuries, which forced her out of the court once for nearly two years in the late 2010s. Tig achieved a career-high WTA singles ranking of No. 56 on 26 October 2020.
They had a daughter named Sofia in November 2018. Tig and SabÃÂu were not married at the time of their daughterâÂÂs birth, but they eventually did. The couple ended their relationship in 2021. Although SabÃÂu had initially taken Sofia with him, Tig later won custody of her daughter. SabÃÂu left coaching tennis following this separation from Tig and began living in Cyprus, where he began to play professional poker.