Loïs Boisson: Career-High Ranking of World No. 38

After her first WTA 1000 in Beijing, the Frenchwoman wins three places and reached her best ranking.

Loïs Boisson, who played the WTA 1000 in Beijing for the first time where she abandoned in the third round, won three places in the WTA ranking published Monday to reach 38th, her new best ranking.

The 22 -year -old Frenchwoman had to resolve to throw in the towel against Emma Navarro while the huge bandage enclosing her left thigh was no longer enough to preserve her from the pain. In the process, she announced her package for WTA 1000 from Wuhan which has just started.

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The global hierarchy is still dominated by Aryna Sabalenka, absent in Beijing and who has still not resumed competition since its title at the US Open, ahead of Iga Swiatek, beaten in the round of 16, and Coco Gauff, eliminated in half.

Amanda Anisimoa remains 4th in the world but got closer to the podium after having removed in the Chinese capital its second title in Masters 1000 this season (after Doha in February). The finalist Linda Noskova leaps a 10 -place to reach 17th in the world, her best ranking at 20 years old.

WTA ranking on October 6, 2025:

1. Arya Sabalka (BLR) 11.010 PTS
2. Iga Swit (POL) 8.53
3. Coco Gauff (USA) 7.263
4. Amandaishovovova (USA) 5.989
5th Mirror Andreeva (Rus) 4,698
6. Jessica Pegula (USA) 4.653 (+1)
7. Madison Keys (USA) 4.459 (-1)
8. Jasmine Paolini (ITA) 4.156
9. Elena rybakina (Kaz) 3.898 (+1)
10. Zheng Qinwen (CHN) 3.678 (-1)
11. Ekaterina Alexandrova (RUS) 3.253
12. CLARA TAUSON (DEN) 2,723
13.
14. Emma Navarro (USA) 2,515 (+3)
15. Belinda Bencic (SUI) 2,453 (+1)
16. Naomi Osaka (JPN) 2,379 (-2)
17. Linda Noskova (Jun) 2.310 (+10)
18. Diana Lynder (RUS) 2.056 (+1)
19. Daria Kasatkina (AUS) 2.051 (+1)
20. Ludmila Samsonova (RUS) 2.049 (+1)

(…)

38. Loiis boisson (fra) 1.354 (+3)
65. Elsa Jacquemot (from) 1.059
82. Varvara Gracheva (FRA) 862 (-3)
94. Leolia Jeanjean (FRA) 791 (-1)

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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