Paige Hourigan


Paige Mary Hourigan is a New Zealand tennis player. She has won two singles and eight doubles titles on the ITF tour in her career. She reached her best rankings in both singles and doubles after winning ITF doubles titles in Singapore and Surprise, Arizona early in 2019, and those rankings continued to climb as her run of success extended through Mexico and Asia, peaking for both on 5 August. Hourigan, who was born in Turakina, is of part Māori descent and affiliates to the Ngāti Tūwharetoa iwi.

Junior career

Hourigan won five singles and five doubles titles as a junior, the best of which was the doubles at the Grade 2 Biesterbos Open in the Netherlands, partnering Lizette Cabrera. She twice competed in the Australian Open junior singles, her better result being a loss in the first round proper to Beatriz Haddad Maia in 2013. Her highest junior ranking was 175, in October 2012.

Senior career

She made her WTA tour debut at the 2013 ASB Classic. Her first main draw win was in an ITF doubles match in Glen Iris, Australia, in April 2014, and her first ITF final resulted in a doubles win in Antalya, Turkey, in June 2016. She first represented New Zealand in the Fed Cup in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in 2017, winning two of her three singles matches.

2018

Hourigan won her first singles title as a qualifier at Corroios, Portugal, in July, just a few hours after being beaten in a qualifying match for her next tournament in neighbouring Setubal. Returning to North America, she then went all the way to the semi-finals as a qualifier in an ITF tournament in Fort Worth, Texas. In December she was runner-up to Valentina Ivanov in the singles at the New Zealand Tennis Championships, and won the doubles title with Erin Routliffe.

2019

Given a wild card into the singles qualifying draw at the ASB Classic, Hourigan was again beaten by Valentina Ivanov, this time in the first round. She did much better in the doubles where, with partner Taylor Townsend, she got all the way to her first WTA final, having defeated second seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the semi-final. Against the scratch pair of Eugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin, Hourigan and Townsend raced through the first set to lead 6–1, but lost the second set by the same score. The match tie-break was a scrappy affair, with Bouchard and Kenin eventually winning 10–7 to take the title.
Hourigan made no mistakes in her run to her second ITF doubles title, in Singapore three weeks later, this time with Indonesia's Aldila Sutjiadi as her partner. Beating the top seeds in their semi-final, they comfortably defeated the Hong Kong pair of Eudice Chong and Zhang Ling in the final, winning nine games in a row from 1–2 down in the first set on the way to a final score of 6–2, 6–3. Hourigan's third ITF doubles title came just three weeks later, in Surprise, Arizona, with star American youngster Coco Gauff on her side of the net. They started by beating the third seeds, Jovana Jakšić and Giuliana Olmos, and defeated the second seeds, Jacqueline Cako and Ingrid Neel, in an amazing semi-final, coming back from two set points down at 2–5, 30–40, to win five games in a row and take the first set. The second set was more straightforward, as they went on to win 7–5, 6–3. Less than an hour later they were back on court for the final, where they won the first set against Usue Maitane Arconada and Emina Bektas, but lost the second. The match tie-break saw the all-American pair work their way to a 9–5 lead, holding four match points. Hourigan and Gauff managed to save all four points to change ends again at 9-9, but then faced another match point, which they saved as well. They dropped their own first point again for match point number six, but recovered to level up at 11–11. They then lost a match point of their own before finally prevailing 14–12 after an epic 18 minute struggle.
On the Mexican swing of the ITF tour in March, she won the doubles title in Irapuato, and followed that with a runner-up finish in doubles and a win in the singles at the second tournament in Cancun, before taking the doubles title at the same venue a week later after retiring during her singles semi-final earlier that day. That was followed by another title in Asia, as she reunited with Aldila Sutjiadi to make it two titles from two tournaments together by winning in Hong Kong.
Staying together for the next few tournaments, Hourigan and Sutjiadi lost to Rutuja Bhosale and Abigail Tere-Apisah in the semi-finals of the first tournament in Singapore, beaten 14–12 in a match tie-break after holding two match points at 9–7. They made amends by winning the corresponding tournament the following week, beating Emily Appleton and Catherine Harrison in the final after Sutjiadi had thrashed Hourigan in their singles semi-final. Their last tournament together was the following week in Hong Kong, where they were beaten in the semi-finals by Tere-Apisah and Junri Namigata, in a match where several crucial line calls were disputed by one team or the other.
The next stop for Hourigan was the Fed Cup in Malaysia, where she had two double-bagel wins in singles before losing in three sets to Eudice Chong from Hong Kong. She played just one doubles match, teaming up with Erin Routliffe to beat the pair from Bangladesh. Moving on to Europe, Hourigan was injured in her first match in Spain before travelling to Portugal to try to defend her singles crown in Corroios. Well-beaten in the quarter-finals by Pemra Özgen, she and Alison Bai won the doubles title, beating Francisca Jorge and Olga Parres Azcoitia in a tight match tie-break in the final, winning 14–12 on their third match point, having saved two earlier in the tie-break. It was Hourigan's third doubles final of the season to feature the same score in the decider.
A family bereavement cut short Hourigan's European tour, and she didn't play again for nearly two months, resuming at Redding, California, in September. She and Catherine Harrison reached the doubles final, but they were well-beaten by Emina Bektas and Tara Moore. Four tournaments in Australia followed, the best resulting in another doubles final, where she and Bai lost to Destanee Aiava and Naiktha Bains in Brisbane. Two tournaments in Texas ended Hourigan's year, she and Katherine Sebov reaching the doubles semi-finals in Dallas, but they had to default through injury.

2020

Hourigan began the new season in Auckland, where she received a wild card into both singles and doubles, the latter with Sara Errani. She suffered a heavy defeat to Caroline Wozniacki in the first round of singles, and also lost in the first round of doubles. The next stop was an ITF tournament in Burnie, Tasmania, where she again lost in the first round of singles, this time after having to qualify, but made the semi-finals of the doubles with Destanee Aiava.
Back in New Zealand, Hourigan won all three singles matches she played in the Fed Cup tournament in Wellington, ensuring New Zealand's place in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I for 2021. Back in Australia, Hourigan lost in the first round of singles in both tournaments in Perth. She and Abigail Tere-Apisah lost in the quarter-finals of the first week's doubles event, but got through to the final in the second week, losing to Kanako Morisaki and Erika Sema.
From Perth, Hourigan flew to South Africa for two tournaments in Potchefstroom. In the first tournament she lost again in the first round of singles, but she and Berfu Cengiz were beaten in the doubles final by Samantha Murray Sharan and Fanny Stollár. Hourigan had reached the singles quarter-final and doubles semi-final in the second week when the ITF tours were suspended because of the Covid-19 coronavirus. The only matches allowed to continue were those actually being played when the order to abandon was given.

WTA finals

Doubles: 1 (1 runner-up)

ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Loss0–12019 ASB Classic – Women's Doubles|Auckland Open, New ZealandInternationalHard Taylor Townsend Eugenie Bouchard
Sofia Kenin
6–1, 1–6,

ITF finals

Singles: 2 (2 titles)

ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Win1–0Jul 2018ITF Corroios, Portugal$15,000Hard Valeria Bhunu6–4, 6–3
Win2–0Mar 2019ITF Cancún, Mexico$15,000Hard María Camila Osorio Serrano6–4, 6–3

Doubles: 13 (8 titles, 5 runners-up)

ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Win1–0Jun 2016ITF Antalya, Turkey$10,000Hard Arianne Hartono Raluca Șerban
Miriana Tona
6–3, ret.
Win2–0Jan 2019ITF SingaporeW25Hard Aldila Sutjiadi Eudice Chong
Zhang Ling
6–2, 6–3
Win3–0Feb 2019ITF Surprise, United StatesW25Hard Coco Gauff Usue Maitane Arconada
Emina Bektas
6–3, 4–6,
Win4–0Mar 2019ITF Irapuato, MexicoW25Hard Astra Sharma Verónica Cepede Royg
Renata Voráčová
6–1, 4–6,
Loss4–1Mar 2019ITF Cancun, MexicoW15Hard Rasheeda McAdoo Lou Brouleau
Tess Sugnaux
4–6, 3–6
Win5–1Mar 2019ITF Cancun, MexicoW15Hard Vladica Babić Karolína Beránková
Lara Escauriza
6–4, 6–3
Win6–1Apr 2019ITF Hong KongW25Hard * Aldila Sutjiadi Maddison Inglis
Kayla McPhee
6–3, 6–1
Win7–1May 2019ITF SingaporeW25Hard Aldila Sutjiadi Emily Appleton
Catherine Harrison
6–1, 7–6
Win8–1Jul 2019ITF Corroios, PortugalW25Hard Alison Bai Francisca Jorge
Olga Parres Azcoitia
3–6, 6–2,
Loss8–2Sep 2019ITF Redding, United StatesW25Hard Catherine Harrison Emina Bektas
Tara Moore
3–6, 1–6
Loss8–3Oct 2019ITF Brisbane, AustraliaW25Hard Alison Bai Destanee Aiava
Naiktha Bains
3–6, 3–6
Loss8–4Feb 2020ITF Perth, AustraliaW25Hard Abigail Tere-Apisah Kanako Morisaki
Erika Sema
1–6, 6–4,
Loss8–5Mar 2020ITF Potchefstroom, South AfricaW25Hard Berfu Cengiz Samantha Murray Sharan
Fanny Stollár
1–6, 1–6

Singles

Doubles