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Yvonne Prévost

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French tennis player

Yvonne Prévost
Yvonne Prévost (1900)
Full namePaule Marie Yvonne Prévost Boppe
Country (sports)France
Born(1878-06-08)8 June 1878
Dinard, France
Died3 March 1942(1942-03-03) (aged 63)

Paule Marie Yvonne[a] Prévost Boppe (8 June 1878 – 3 March 1942) was a Frenchtennis player at the end of the 19th century. She won theFrench Women's Singles Championship in 1900.[1]

At the1900 Summer Olympics in Paris, she won two silver medals. In thewomen's singles final she lost toCharlotte Cooper and in themixed doubles' event she andHarold Mahony were runners-up to Charlotte Cooper andReginald Doherty.[2][3]

Biography

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Yvonne Prévost was the daughter of Ernest Prévost, son of Hippolyte Prévost, and Jeanne Koenigswarter, daughter of the lawyer Louis-Jean Koenigswarter, a member of an important banking family from Austria. She was the sister ofAndré Prévost, vice-champion of France in tennis in 1900.[4]

Ranked "-40" in 1897 and 1902, Yvonne Prévost was a member of the sports society of the island of Puteaux and the Tennis Club of Paris.[5]

In 1900, she became the French champion with no competitor to challenge for the title, which was quite common at that time. However, she is mainly known for having participated a few weeks later in the international tennis tournament organized by the S.S.I.P. during theUniversal Exhibition, a tournament that would be considered an Olympic event. She won the silver medal in women's singles, losing in the final to three-time English champion Charlotte Cooper-Sterry. She was also a finalist in the mixed doubles' tournament, partnered withHarold Mahony of Ireland.[6]

Olympic finals

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Singles (1 silver medal)

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ResultYearOlympicsSurfaceOpponentScore
Silver1900Paris, FranceClayUnited KingdomCharlotte Cooper1–6, 4–6

Mixed Doubles (1 silver medal)

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ResultYearOlympicsSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Silver1900Paris, FranceClayUnited KingdomHarold MahonyUnited KingdomCharlotte Cooper
United KingdomReginald Doherty
2–6, 4–6

Notes

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  1. ^In some sources also known as Hélène Prévost.

References

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  1. ^French Open winnersArchived 7 July 2011 at theWayback Machine. Retrieved on 13 September 2009.
  2. ^"Hélène Prévost Olympic Results".sports-reference.com. Archived fromthe original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved26 January 2014.
  3. ^"Yvonne Prévost".Olympedia. Retrieved31 December 2020.
  4. ^Prévost, Monique (2016).Retour à Koenigswart. Paris.ISBN 979-10-92733-09-9.OCLC 968157943.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^Grange, Cyril (2016).Une élite parisienne : les familles de la grande bourgeoisie juive (1870-1939). Paris.ISBN 978-2-271-08794-2.OCLC 936427455.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^"Liste des illustrations",Organiser des résidences artistiques et littéraires en bibliothèque, Presses de l’enssib, p. 141, 2019,doi:10.4000/books.pressesenssib.7260,ISBN 9791091281867,S2CID 199301368, retrieved24 October 2022

External links

[edit]
Amateur Era
(national)
Amateur Era
(international)
Open Era
Amateur Era
(national)
Amateur Era
(international)
Open Era


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