Anne de Borman
Alias: Anne Catherine Jeanne Ghislain de Selliers de Moranville
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Bio | His father was Antonin Maurice Léonard Ghislain de Selliers de Moranville, his mother was Octavie Henriette Joséphine Hector. She represented Belgium at the Olympic Games and she played all three events at both the 1920 and 1924 Olympics, making the quarter-finals of women's doubles in 1920. In singles, in 1920 she had a bye in the first round and was defeated by Kitty McKane in the second round while in 1924 she lost in the first round to Sigrid Fick. With compatriot Lucienne Tschaggeny she had a bye in the first round of the 1920 women's doubles event and lost in the quarterfinal to Winifred Beamish and Edith Holman. At the next Olympics in 1924, she teamed up with Marie Storms and lost in the second round to Phyllis Covell and Kitty McKane after a bye in the first. In the mixed she partnered Jean Washer in 1920 but lost in the second round after a bye in the first and in 1924 she won her first round match with Joseph Halot and were defeated in the second. She competed in all three events (singles, doubles, mixed) at the 1921 Wimbledon Championships. In the singles event she lost in straight sets in the first round to E. F. Rose. In the doubles she reached the quarterfinal round with H.B. Weston. With her husband Paul de Borman she lost in the first round of the mixed doubles event. In 1912, she won the mixed doubles title at the World Hard Court Championships, played at the Stade Français in Paris. With her partner Max Decugis she defeated the German pair Mieken Rieck and Heinrich Kleinschroth in the final in straight sets. She won 5 singles, 4 doubles and 3 mixed doubles national titles. |
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