Sanda Mamić Explained

Sanda Mamić
Birth Date:1985 3, df=yes
Turnedpro:2004
Retired:2014
Plays:Left-handed (two-handed backhand)
Careerprizemoney:$237,432
Singlesrecord:145–104
Singlestitles:3 ITF
Highestsinglesranking:No. 83 (18 July 2005)
Australianopenresult:1R (2005)
Frenchopenresult:2R (2005, 2008)
Wimbledonresult:1R (2005)
Usopenresult:1R (2005)
Doublesrecord:21–24
Doublestitles:1 ITF
Highestdoublesranking:No. 298 (16 February 2004)
Wimbledondoublesresult:1R (2005)
Usopendoublesresult:1R (2005)
Team:yes
Fedcupresult:2–5

Sanda Mamić (born 22 March 1985) is a retired female tennis player and current full-time gaming streamer on Twitch from Croatia.

Early career

In Seoul, she qualified and lost again, in the quarterfinals to Anne Kremer.

After qualifying at Moscow, Mamić notched her best win versus world No. 28, Mary Pierce, winning 6–0, 6–4 before losing to Elena Dementieva.

In May 2004, Mamić had her Grand Slam debut, reaching the main draw at the French Open through qualifying. She would lose in the first round.

Later in the year, she had her top-100 debut on 18 October at world No. 96, reaching career-high at the time to world No. 95 a week later.

In 2005, Mamić reached third singles quarterfinal at Modena, losing in a third-set tiebreaker to eventual finalist Garbin.

She managed to reach the second round four times, including Rome, where she defeated world No. 23, Daniela Hantuchová, and later losing to Pierce, and the French Open, where she eventually lost in the second round to Dementieva.

During the rest of the year, she lost in the first round six times, including the other three Grand Slam tournaments.

In September, she was invited to Croatian Fed Cup team for their match against Thailand. Although she lost both singles rubbers to Tamarine Tanasugarn and Suchanan Viratprasert, Croatia prevailed 3–2.

Late career

Later in her career, Mamić had problems with her wrist, which at first was thought to be a regular sport injury requiring only a short term break. Her ranking was protected for the next ten months. But further complications with her injury, talk about a mysterious bacteria that infected her wrist wound, and liver complications took her off the courts for more than two years. Her tennis career seemed almost over, and she moved on and started to work for a web design company.

But in 2008, she came back to the courts. Her comeback began at the Bangalore Open in March where she won her first-round match against Chan Yung-jan (6–2, 6–2), but lost in the second round to then-No. 1 in the world, Jelena Janković (2–6, 2–6).Mamić reached the second round in her Grand Slam comeback at the French Open, beating Michaëlla Krajicek (6–4, 6–3) before falling to Francesca Schiavone.

ITF Circuit finals

$100,000 tournaments
$75,000 tournaments
$50,000 tournaments
$25,000 tournaments
$10,000 tournaments

Singles: 6 (3 titles, 3 runner-ups)

OutcomeNo.DateTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
Runner-up1.16 April 2001ITF Hvar, CroatiaClay Petra Cetkovská3–6, 1–6
Winner2.2 September 2002ITF Chieti, ItalyClay Emily Stellato6–3, 6–0
Runner-up3.23 September 2002ITF Sopron, HungaryClay Tina Schiechtl6–7, 5–7
Runner-up4.10 March 2003ITF Makarska, CroatiaClay Delia Sescioreanu4–6, 2–6
Winner5.14 April 2003ITF Yamaguchi, JapanClay Ryoko Takemura6–2, 6–2
Winner6.12 July 2004ITF Garching, GermanyClay Maria Kondratieva6–3, 1–6, 6–2

Doubles: 3 (1 title, 2 runner-ups)

OutcomeNo.DateTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Runner-up1.6 May 2002ITF Zaton, CroatiaClay Tina Hergold Daniela Klemenschits
Sandra Klemenschits
4–6, 4–6
Winner2.7 July 2003ITF Darmstadt, GermanyClay Ana Vrljić Daniela Berček
Maria Goloviznina
7–6(9–7), 6–1
Runner-up3.25 January 2004ITF Bergamo, ItalyCarpet (i) Iva Majoli Alberta Brianti
Kildine Chevalier
4–6, 4–6

Grand Slam singles performance timeline

Tournament Career SR Career W–L
Australian OpenA1R0 / 10–1
French Open1R2R0 / 21–2
WimbledonA1R0 / 10–1
US OpenA1R0 / 10–1

Current career

Sanda is currently a content creator and full-time gaming streamer on Twitch under the name Sansen (sansensworld) playing PUBG, League of Legends, Dead by Daylight, World of Warcraft, etc.

She had a lot of notable gaming results:PUBG Broadcaster Royale S2 (Q1 – #10, Q2 – #4, LAN finals San Jose – #21 duo); qualified as the only female player from Europe1st LAN female PUBG tournament, Shanghai CHINA (#4 duo)PUBG challengermode (#1 solo)PUBG Girl Gamer Royale S1 (#5 duo)PUBG Twitch Rivals (charity & regular)

She promotes PLUR (Peace Love Unity Respect) ideology and is known for providing the FEEL GOOD content across media platforms.