TENNIS PLAYER

Jill Hetherington

1964 - Today

Photo of Jill Hetherington

Icon of person Jill Hetherington

Jill Hetherington-Hultquist (born October 27, 1964) is a Canadian former professional tennis player. She played college tennis for the University of Florida, and was women's tennis head coach at the University of Washington until May 2014. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jill Hetherington is the 869th most popular tennis player (up from 912th in 2019), the 978th most popular biography from Canada (up from 1,024th in 2019) and the 7th most popular Canadian Tennis Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Jill Hetherington by language

Loading...

Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Jill Hetherington ranks 869 out of 1,569Before her are Mate Pavić, Nicolas Escudé, Agustín Calleri, Danielle Collins, Barbara Paulus, and Dudi Sela. After her are Rennae Stubbs, Inés Gorrochategui, Jérémy Chardy, Rossana de los Ríos, Emmanuelle Gagliardi, and Eva Pfaff.

Most Popular Tennis Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1964, Jill Hetherington ranks 803Before her are Nils Muižnieks, Miguel España, Tom Hall, Dieter Eckstein, Chelsea Noble, and Anthony Weiner. After her are Uxue Barkos, Christer Majbäck, Markus Zimmermann, Hussain Shah, Craig Fairbrass, and Petar Hubchev.

Others Born in 1964

Go to all Rankings

In Canada

Among people born in Canada, Jill Hetherington ranks 979 out of 1,622Before her are La Zarra (1987), Tahmoh Penikett (1975), Nik Stauskas (1993), Eugenie Bouchard (1994), Anne Helm (1938), and Tanya Tagaq (1975). After her are Mark Leduc (1962), Stan Rogers (1949), Kathleen Heddle (1965), Lance Storm (1969), Geoff Ryman (1951), and Emily Perkins (1977).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Canada

Among tennis players born in Canada, Jill Hetherington ranks 7Before her are Mary Pierce (1975), Emma Raducanu (2002), Félix Auger-Aliassime (2000), Leylah Fernandez (2002), Sébastien Lareau (1973), and Eugenie Bouchard (1994). After her are Greg Rusedski (1973), Bianca Andreescu (2000), Grant Connell (1965), Alejandro Tabilo (1997), Helen Kelesi (1969), and Robert Farah (1987).