-
Cristina Bucșa (born 1
January 1998) is a Moldovan-born
Spanish professional tennis player. She has career-high
rankings of
world No. 56 in singles, achieved...
-
Bucșa (older font
Bucşa) or
Bucsa may
refer to
several villages:
Romania Bucşa, in Răchitoasa Commune, Bacău
County Bucşa, in
Valea Ciorii Commune, Ialomiţa...
-
Bucșă (older font
Bucşă),
pronounced with a
short final ă [ə], also
frequently spelled as
Bucșa and
pronounced with a long
final -a [a], is a Romanian...
- Ion
Bucșa (born 28
February 1968), also
known as Ivan
Bucșa, is a
Moldovan biathlete who
competed at the 1998 and 2002
Winter Olympics. He is the father...
- (qualifying competition)
Cristina Bucșa (qualified)
Daria Saville (qualifying competition)
Erika Andreeva (qualified)
Cristina Bucșa Yulia Putintseva Magdalena...
-
Cristina Bucșa and Sara
Sorribes Tormo defeated Barbora Krejčíková and
Laura Siegemund in the final, 6–0, 6–2 to win the women's
doubles tennis title...
- Dan
Mihai Bucșa (born 23 June 1988) is a
Romanian footballer who
plays for Liga IV side
Victoria Cluj as a midfielder.
Bucșa started his
career in his...
-
players received entry from the
qualifying draw:
Erika Andreeva Cristina Bucșa Magdalena Fręch
Yulia Putintseva Elise Mertens →
replaced by Wang Xinyu...
- round)
Diana Shnaider (champion) Ana
Bogdan (first round, retired)
Cristina Bucșa (second round) Q =
Qualifier WC = Wild card LL =
Lucky loser Alt = Alternate...
-
Jordan Thompson def.
Ariel Behar / Adam Pavlásek, 6–3, 7–6(9–7)
Cristina Bucșa / Sara
Sorribes Tormo def.
Barbora Krejčíková /
Laura Siegemund 6–0, 6–2...