Results

Billie Jean King Cup 07/29 03:25 2 Sarah Ibrahim Khan v Bahar Toymyradova 6-4,6-1
Billie Jean King Cup 07/28 03:05 2 Sarah Ibrahim Khan v Carol Young Suh Lee 1-6,1-6
Billie Jean King Cup 07/27 03:00 2 Pei-Chi Lee v Sarah Ibrahim Khan 6-1,6-2
Billie Jean King Cup 07/26 03:05 2 Ho Ching Wu v Sarah Ibrahim Khan 6-0,6-1
Billie Jean King Cup 07/24 03:15 2 Sarah Ibrahim Khan v Fremont Gibson 3-6,4-6
Billie Jean King Cup 08/26 06:50 2 Rukshika Wijesooriya v Sarah Ibrahim Khan 6-0,6-1
Billie Jean King Cup 08/25 06:10 2 Sarah Ibrahim Khan v Anastasiya Azimbayeva 3-6,4-6
Billie Jean King Cup 08/23 05:00 2 Sarah Ibrahim Khan v Anastasiya Tursunova 6-4,6-4
Billie Jean King Cup 02/06 00:25 2 Paige Mary Hourigan v Sarah Ibrahim Khan 6-2,6-0
2020 Fed Cup 02/05 00:20 1 Izabella Tan Hui Xin v Sarah Mahboob Khan 6-2,6-1
2019 Fed Cup 06/22 03:50 - Sarah Mahboob Khan v Guljan Muhammet'yeva 2-6,1-6
2019 Fed Cup 06/21 02:30 - Sarah Mahboob Khan v Eshita Afrose 6-1,6-2

Wikipedia - Sarah Mahboob Khan

Sarah Mahboob Khan (born 9 February 1991) is a Pakistani tennis player.

Playing for Pakistan at the Fed Cup, Mahboob Khan has a win–loss of 2–8.

History

Sarah Mahboob Khan was born in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Her father Mahboob is a tennis coach. In 2004, Sarah Mahboob Khan became the youngest ever Pakistan National Champion, aged 14.

She has been Pakistan's leading tennis player since 2005. She is the only player to have won Pakistan national titles on clay, hard, and grass, and has won a record number of National Rankings Ladies' Singles Titles.

In October 2010, Sarah Mahboob Khan became the first Pakistani female tennis player to qualify for the main draw of an ITF tournament outside Pakistan, and the first to reach the quarter-final of an ITF tournament, achieving this in the doubles at Ain Sukhna, Egypt, partnering Irina Constantinide.

In May 2011, she signed to play for the tennis team of the University of New Mexico.

After her sophomore year, Khan transferred to play for James Madison University in Virginia, where she played for four years and graduated in May 2015. She then returned to Pakistan.