Peng Shuai (Chinese:彭帅;pinyin:Péng Shuài;Mandarin pronunciation:[pʰə̌ŋ ʂwâɪ]ⓘ; born 8 January 1986) is a Chinese former professionaltennis player. In February 2014, she was ranked as theworld No. 1 doubles player by theWomen's Tennis Association (WTA), becoming the first Chinese tennis player to achieve that ranking in any discipline.[1] She peaked at No. 14 of the singles rankings in August 2011, and won two singles and 23 doubles titles on theWTA Tour.
In November 2021, in what was suspected to be aforced disappearance,Peng disappeared after making a post onWeibo. It detailed a long-term affair involvingZhang Gaoli, a retired ChineseVice Premier, who was reportedly accused of raping her. The news became widely censored in China. International concerns for Peng grew, and the WTA suspended all its events in the country. Peng has made limited public appearances since the incident and announced her retirement from professional tennis. Although unsatisfied with the case, the WTA announced that it would return to China in 2023.
Peng Shuai was born inXiangtan.[2] She began playing at age eight when an uncle, a famous tennis coach in China and the only other family member who played tennis, introduced her to the game.[3] She favorshardcourts and two-handed forehand (though her backhand is the better side). At age 13, Peng was admitted to a hospital for heart surgery to repair a defect,[4] a situation which she explained in the 2008 "Impossible is Nothing" campaign from Adidas.[2] Following surgery, in 1999 she joined the state training program inTianjin aimed at producing internationally competitive athletes, especially Olympians.[2]
In June 2001, the 15-year-old Peng won her first singles title at Baotou, a $10k tournament, defeating countrywomanSun Tiantian in the semifinal. In October, she debuted on theWTA Tour at Shanghai as a wildcard.[5]
In February 2002, Peng won her third $10k singles title. The following week, she extended her winning streak to twelve and reached the final of a $25k tournament at New Delhi before losing the championship match toEva Birnerová. Further success proved elusive, and she took nearly seven months off from competition at singles events, ending the year with a world ranking of 358.[5]
In 2003, she won her first $25k title atJackson, Mississippi and her first $50k event at Changsha, improving her year-end ranking to 226.[5]
In 2004, she won her first $75k tournament atDothan, Alabama. She rose up to No. 107 in the rankings and gained her direct entry into her firstGrand Slam main draw atWimbledon. She was defeated there by 14th seedSilvia Farina Elia. Peng reached her first WTA Tour quarterfinal atCincinnati in August, where she lost to second seedVera Zvonareva. By the end of 2004, Peng had won her eighthITF singles title at Shenzhen-2. She ended the year ranking 73 in the world and was able to focus solely on WTA events thereafter.[5]
In the mid-2000s, Peng decided to "fly solo" and no longer give over half of her earnings to the state training program. She and three other Chinese players broke out of the state's control by effectively threatening to stop playing.[2]
At theAustralian Open, Peng won her first major singles match, defeatingMaria Elena Camerin before being overcome byVenus Williams in the second round. In September 2005, she reached two further WTA quarterfinals at Beijing and Guangzhou, ultimately finishing the year ranking 37th.[5]
In 2006, Peng lost her first-round ties at the Australian Open, withdrew from subsequent tournaments, and dropped out of the top 60, after losing at Indian Wells and Miami. At Wimbledon, however, she reached the third round of a major for the first time, defeating 20th seedShahar Pe'er before losing to 16th seedFlavia Pennetta. She reached the semifinals of the China Open and represented her country for the first time in her Fed Cup career, winning both her ties against Indonesia.[5]
Peng Shuai at the 2007 Australian Open
In 2007, Peng failed to get past the second round of theAustralian Open and the first round of theUS Open but reached the semifinals of the Tier-III Pattaya Open, losing toSybille Bammer. At theChina Open, Peng beat former world No. 1 and five-time Grand Slam championMartina Hingis in the final match of Hingis's professional career. She finished the year with a 26–21 record in singles, a doubles title in Guangzhou withYan Zi, and one top-ten win againstAmélie Mauresmo.[5]
2008–2010: New coach, doubles with Hsieh, injuries
After a string of losses in 2008, Peng recorded her first win of the year at the Tier-IIBangalore Open againstAnne Kremer before losing to Venus Williams;[5] she also won the doubles title with Sun Tiantian. At Strasbourg, she recorded a top-ten win when top seed Marion Bartoli was forced to retire in round one while trailing.[5] Peng reached the second round of theUS Open for the first time in her career, defeatingEleni Daniilidou before losing to Flavia Pennetta.[5]
At the Summer Olympics, Peng competed in the women's singles, and the women's doubles with Sun Tiantian. The doubles pair were knocked out in the first round, and Peng lost to Alizé Cornet in the second round of the singles.[6]
In early 2009, Peng announced that she will be coached full-time for the 2009 season byTarik Benhabiles.[7] She won theSydney International doubles title with Hsieh Su-wei, defeatingNathalie Dechy andCasey Dellacqua in the final. At theItalian Open in May, Peng partnered with Hsieh again and won the doubles title by defeatingDaniela Hantuchová andAi Sugiyama. At theFrench Open, Peng was knocked out of the singles event but partnered with Hsieh to reach the semifinals in doubles, defeating Hantuchová & Sugiyama in the third round and the Radwańska sisters in the quarterfinals before losing to Victoria Azarenka andElena Vesnina.
At the2009 Wimbledon Championships, Peng fell to No. 11Agnieszka Radwańska in the second round, after a mammoth battle of three and a half hours. Despite saving five match points, she eventually lost in three sets. Her 'never say die' attitude won her the admiration of many English fans. During the China Open, Peng defeated the 2008 champion and former world No. 1 Jelena Janković, who picked up a wrist injury in the latter stages of the match. In the third round, Peng won against former world No. 1 Maria Sharapova. In the quarterfinals, she lost to Nadia Petrova. In doubles, Peng partnered with Hsieh and won the title, bringing her ranking to a career high of 13.
Peng at the 2010 US Open
At both the2010 Hobart International and theAustralian Open, Peng was stopped by Zheng Jie. Peng reached the second round of theIndian Wells Open and the semifinals at theEstoril Open. Afterwards, she suffered a series of injuries. In the first round of the Premier MandatoryMadrid Open, she had to retire due to a rightadductor muscle strain. In the second round, she was defeated byArantxa Parra Santonja. Peng then withdrew from theFrench Open and missed the whole of the grass-court season due to illness. In theUS Open, Peng advanced to the third round before withdrawing from the tournament with injury. She then suffered two first-round exits at thePan Pacific Open and theChina Open, lowering her ranking to No. 95.
In the ITF Circuit, Peng won a trophy at the $100k event in Taipei and ended the season representing China in the2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou. She won gold in the team event alongside Li Na,Yan Zi andZhang Shuai. In the doubles event, she gained a bronze with partner Yan Zi, and in the singles event, she won another gold, defeatingAkgul Amanmuradova of Uzbekistan.
At the2011 Auckland Open, Peng caused a big upset by defeating No. 3 seed Kuznetsova in the second round. At theAustralian Open, she defeatedKateryna Bondarenko, Jelena Janković, andAyumi Morita to reach the fourth round of a major for the first time in her career, before losing to Agnieszka Radwańska. Her ranking rose to No. 40. In the third round of theIndian Wells Open, she defeated No. 7 seed Li Na for the first time in her career. Peng reached the semifinals at theFamily Circle Cup in Charleston, rising to a new career high of 29 in the world rankings. Peng also won the doubles title alongside Zheng Jie at theItalian Open.
Peng reached the finals at theBrussels Open but fell to world No. 1, Caroline Wozniacki. At theFrench Open, Peng retired due to illness in the third round. AtWimbledon, she reached the round of 16 before losing to the fifth seed and eventual runner-up Maria Sharapova. Posting good results atCincinnati, Peng reached her career-high ranking of world No. 14. After withdrawing due to an injury from theUS Open Series, she reached the round of 16 at theUS Open before losing to Flavia Pennetta.[8]
On the other hand, Peng began her huge success as a doubles player in 2013. Paired with long-time childhood friend Hsieh Su-wei, Peng clinched five double's titles in 2013, including two Premier-5 events (Rome andCincinnati),Wimbledon,[11] andWTA Championships. Peng became the first Chinese player to win the WTA Tour Championships, and the fifth to win a Grand Slam title, after Zheng Jie, Yan Zi, Sun Tiantian and Li Na.
In 2014 Peng reached the final in theShenzhen Open and lost to Li Na. At theAustralian Open, she lost toKurumi Nara in the opening round. She also lost in the second round in the doubles event with Hsieh against Shahar Pe'er andSílvia Soler Espinosa. Peng then won two consecutive doubles titles, winning thePattaya Open with Zhang Shuai defeating Alla Kudryavtseva and Anastasia Rodionova in the final, and winning theQatar Open with Hsieh Su-wei defeatingKvěta Peschke andKatarina Srebotnik in the final. On 17 February, Peng became the world No. 1 in doubles, making her the first Chinese tennis player (man or woman, in singles or doubles) to reach world No. 1. Peng and Hsieh continued their success by winning three more titles in the season, including two Premiere Mandatory events (Indian Wells andBeijing) andFrench Open.[11] In theWimbledon Championships, they failed in defending their title and also lost their No. 1 ranking.
However, since Wimbledon, Peng found her pace in the singles events. She reached the last 16 at theWimbledon Championships. She also clinched title in the125k event in Nanchang. At the US Open, Peng made her first Grand Slam singles quarterfinal and semifinal appearances, defeating compatriot Zheng Jie, fourth-seeded Agnieszka Radwańska, 28th-seeded Roberta Vinci, 14th-seeded Lucie Šafářová, and rising starBelinda Bencic en route, all in straight sets.[12] In the semifinal, she had to retire against tenth-seeded Caroline Wozniacki in the semifinal at 6–7, 3–4 down, when she suffered severe cramps due to heat illness and had to be taken off court in a wheelchair.[13] She skipped playing the followingHong Kong Open to recover, but made promotional appearances there. She came back to the game in theWuhan Open,China Open, andTianjin Open.
Peng and Hsieh entered theWTA Finals as the second seed. They beatGarbiñe Muguruza/Carla Suárez Navarro and Alla Kudryavtseva/Anastasia Rodionova in straight sets to reach the final. However, they lost disastrously toCara Black/Sania Mirza. They pairing then came to conclusion as Peng had previously announced during the US Open.
Peng had a difficult 2015 season. Due to injuries, she had a lot of first round or second round losses. Her best performance of the season was fourth round of theAustralian Open, which tied her best performance, although she lost it to second seed and the eventual runner-up Maria Sharapova.
Peng failed to win even one doubles match in 2015. She started the season with her Tianjin teammateXu Yifan in preparation for the2016 Olympics,[14] but ended up losing in the first round matches in theShenzhen Open andAustralian Open. In their first-round match in theAustralian Open againstKimiko Date-Krumm andCasey Dellacqua, they wasted a 6–4, 5–0 lead, two match points in the second set and three more in the twelfth game of the final set and eventually lost to their opponents.[15][16] Peng was particularly frustrated by Xu, who was constantly attacked by their opponents and making a lot of unforced errors, and decided to split the partnership.[17] She played two more tournaments, withKvěta Peschke atDubai andZarina Diyas atMadrid, but was not able to win a set.
After the first round retirement toPolona Hercog in the first round ofFrench Open, Peng announced the end of her 2015 season due to injuries in her back and waist.[18]
2016–2017: Comeback with singles titles, Australian doubles final
Peng returned to the tour in 2016 inIndian Wells. She suffered from a number of early exits in several events, including a first-round loss in theRio Olympics. In theChina Open, Peng defeated Venus Williams in the first round but lost toCaroline Garcia in the second round. In theTianjin Open, she clinched her first ever WTA singles title. As a resident in Tianjin, she received a withdraw from seventh seed and compatriot Zhang Shuai in the beginning round. In the second round, she defeated qualifierChang Kai-chen. She benefited from the withdraw from Agnieszka Radwańska in the quarterfinal and beatDanka Kovinić in the semifinal, which lasted for two days due to rain delays. Peng had to play the final several hours after the semifinal against the2014 championAlison Riske and won in two sets. She also won the doubles final match with Christina McHale.
Peng started the season in theShenzhen Open, where she lost to the eventual champion,Kateřina Siniaková, in the opening round. In the doubles event, she clinched her 21st title with Andrea Hlaváčková without losing a set. In the singles event of theAustralian Open, she lost toEugenie Bouchard in the second round. Inthe doubles event, Peng and Hlaváčková reached the final without dropping a set, defeating third seed andOlympic champions Makarova/Vesnina and top-seed Garcia/Mladenovic. In the final, they lost a tight match against the2015 champions Mattek-Sands/Šafářová in three sets.
Peng then competed in theTaiwan Open, where she reached her eighth career final without losing a set. In the final, she lost to the top seed and world No. 13, Elina Svitolina. She also reached the final in the doubles event with Hlaváčková and lost to Vesnina/Makarova with a match tie-break. She reached the fourth round inIndian Wells but fell in the first round in theMadrid Open againstCarla Suárez Navarro.
In August 2018, Peng was banned for six months and fined $10,000 by theTennis Integrity Unit (TIU) for coercion and offering possible financial reward so that her main partner would agree to withdraw from the ladies doubles, even after the sign-in deadline at the2017 Wimbledon Championships.[19] Her partner, Alison Van Uytvanck, refused and Peng withdrew from the tournament instead.[20] Three months of her ban and $5,000 of the fine were suspended.[19] Her former coach Bertrand Perret of France was also banned for three months.[21]
In February 2022, Peng announced her retirement during an interview with the French magazineL'Équipe, where she also mentioned her 2021 social media post and subsequent events.[39][40]
In November 2021, Peng reportedly accusedZhang Gaoli, a retiredVice Premier of the State Council and member of theStanding Committee of the Politburo, of sexually assaulting her in 2018.[41][42] The revelation came from herWeibo post, which disclosed that the two had gotten together before Zhang rose through the ranks in thePolitburo.[43][44] He retired in 2018, and after inviting Peng to his home with his wife, Zhang wanted to have sex with the tennis star again.[42][45] Peng refused at first, but Zhang continued to try to persuade her. Scared and panicking, she ultimately agreed due to previous feelings for him.[42] They renewed their semi-private relationship until a dispute on 30 October 2021.[46][47] Peng's post drew attention to theMeToo movement in China, where activistZhou Xiaoxuan expressed her sympathies,[48][42] but it was removed within 20 minutes of being uploaded, and related discussions became widelycensored in China.[49][50]
Peng did not communicate on social media afterwards and was not reachable by the WTA.[51][52][53] Chinese officials gave vague responses to inquiries, while theChinese Tennis Association said she was safe.[54][55][56] WTA chief executiveSteve Simon called on Chinese authorities to investigate her allegations and stop censoring the subject, and multiple tennis personalities expressed their concerns.[57][58] Depictions of Peng emerged viaChinese state media, but various China watchers and human rights advocates worried that they might be government propaganda and she might not be free.[59][60][61] TheInternational Tennis Federation,Amnesty International, theEU, and theUNHCHR called for proof of her safety, while the WTA decided to suspend all tournaments in China.[62][63][64][65][66] TheIOC said it held two video calls with her.[67][68] In a later video fromLianhe Zaobao and an interview with the French magazineL'Équipe, Peng said she had not accused anyone of sexual assault, but some skepticism persists, as well as debates over the meaning and legal implications of her original post.[69][70][71][72][73][74]
Peng attended a meeting with IOC officials and several events at the2022 Winter Olympics.[75][76][77] Her revelations and subsequent events remain censored within China.[77] She was included inTime magazine's100 Most Influential People of 2022, where feminist activistLü Pin highlighted Peng's Weibo post, disappearance, and impact on the defense of women's rights against authoritarianism.[78]
In August 2022, ITF presidentDavid Haggerty said he had spoken to Peng and she appeared to be safe.[79] The WTA demanded that the Chinese government investigate Peng's report, although some tennis officials considered that request to be excessive.[80] In April 2023, the WTA ended its suspension of events in China. It stated that although unsatisfied with the status of Peng's case, it has received reassurances from Chinese athletics bodies of Peng's and other athletes' safety, and continuing the suspension would be unfair to everyone else.[81]New York Times andGuardian writers criticized the decision, which they believe was motivated by money.[82] They also considered WTA's suspension to be more symbolic than substantial, because China was already experiencing lockdowns due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[80][82]
^控訴全文/女網名將彭帥自爆與中國前副總理張高麗上床 老婆還把風 [Allegation's full text/Famous women's tennis champion Peng Shuai discloses sleeping with former PRC vice premier Zhang Gaoli while wife watched the door].udn.com (in Traditional Chinese). 聯合新聞網 [United Daily News Network]. 3 November 2021.Archived from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved25 November 2021.
^Amy Woodyatt; Ben Morse; Nectar Gan (2 December 2021)."Peng Shuai 'reconfirms' she is safe and well in second call with IOC".CNN.The International Olympic Committee (IOC) held a second call with Peng Shuai on Wednesday and said that the Chinese tennis star "reconfirmed" that she was safe and well given the "difficult situation" she is in, the sporting organization said on Thursday.
^"Peng Shuai assure dans une interview à " L'Équipe " n'avoir jamais disparu".Le Monde. 7 February 2022. Retrieved7 February 2022.Le directeur de cabinet du comité olympique chinois, Wang Kan, avait demandé en amont de l'entretien que les questions soient soumises avant l'interview et que l'entretien soit publié sans commentaires – présentant ces exigences comme étant celles de la joueuse.