A native of San Antonio, Texas, Crawley took up tennis from age six to nine while living in Okinawa, Japan, where her father, Peter, was stationed as a member of the US Air Force.[2][3] She comes from an athletic family: her father played soccer at Michigan State, and she used to train with her older siblings, Liam and Solène, who went on to play tennis at Trinity and Colorado State respectively.[2][3][4]
Crawley was the No. 1–ranked tennis player in Texas in her age group from the age of ten.[5][6] She competed at national junior events while attending Alamo Heights High School in San Antonio.[2][7] In 2017, she won the United States Tennis Association (USTA) Girls' 16s National Clay Court Championships and the USTA 18s National Winter Championships,[7][8] and finished runner-up in the Orange Bowl's under-16 event.[6][9] In 2018, after winning the Texas Slam's under-18 event and the USTA Billie Jean King Girls' 16s National Championships,[10][11] she earned a wildcard into the US Open junior tournament, but lost in the first round.[12][13] Crawley played at a handful of ITF World Tennis Tour events beginning in 2017.[12] She was considered the No. 1 recruit of the class of 2020.[2][14]
As a sophomore in 2021–22, Crawley led Division I in singles wins with a 47–7 record, mostly playing in the No. 4 spot for North Carolina, and finished the season ranked No. 32 nationally. In doubles, she and teammate Elizabeth Scotty won the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Carolina Regionals and the ITA Fall National Championships in San Diego.[15] At the 2022 NCAA Championships, where top-seeded North Carolina again got to the team semifinals, an unseeded Crawley made a run to the semifinals of the individual competition.[2][16][17]
Crawley started her junior season winning all 17 matches at ITA tournaments in the fall of 2022, including the ITA National Fall Championships,[16][18] attaining the No. 1 in singles for the first time on November 16, 2022.[19] North Carolina went undefeated as a team in the 2023 regular season.[20] Crawley had only three losses in forty-nine singles matches as a junior, to Georgia's Lea Ma, and North Carolina State's Diana Shnaider (in the ACC final), and NC State's Amelia Rajecki (in the NCAA singles event's round of 16).[21] After playing mostly in the team's No. 1 spot, she swapped with No. 2 Reese Brantmeier for the 2023 NCAA Championships, where they avenged their only loss of the year—to rival NC State in the ACC Championship—to win their first national team title.[22][23] In doubles, Crawley and sophomore Carson Tanguilig were runners-up at the ITA National Fall Championships.[24] At the end of the season they won the NCAA Doubles Championship, beating teammates Scotty and Brantmeier in the final.[25][26] Crawley was named the ITA National Player of the Year and won the Honda Sports Award for the top college player.[27][28]
Crawley went 18–5 in singles in her senior year, finishing her career ranked No. 15 nationally, and 20–4 in doubles, ranking No. 6 with Tanguilig.[2] She helped North Carolina win the ACC championship but lost in the round of 16 of the NCAA tournament to eventual champions Texas A&M.[2][29]
Professional career
2023
Crawley was selected to the USTA Collegiate Summer Team in 2023.[30] She previously made her WTA Tour debut in April 2023 at the Charleston Open, where she received a wildcard into the main draw.[31][32] In June 2023, playing in her first ITF competition since July 2021, she reached the final of the W25 event in Wichita as a qualifier.[12] Though she lost there to two seed Stacey Fung, the result led to her debut in the WTA rankings at No. 786 in the week of July 3, 2023.[33][34] The next month, she split two back-to-back W15 doubles finals in Lakewood, California, partnering college players Mary Stoiana of Texas A&M and North Carolina teammate Brantmeier.[12]
In August 2023, Crawley made her Grand Slam debut at the US Open. As a wildcard, she progressed through the singles qualifying tournament by saving two match points in the first round (against Réka Luca Jani) and prevailing in third-set tiebreaks in two of her three qualifying wins.[35][36][37] NCAA champions Crawley and Tanguilig were also awarded a wildcard into the doubles event.[38] Crawley did not collect her US$81,000 in prize money because of NCAA restrictions on college athletes, something she considered unfair in light of name, image, and likeness (NIL) rules.[39][40] She won her first ITF singles title in October 2023 at the W25 event in Florence, South Carolina, beating former Duke player Chloe Beck in the final.[41][42]
2024
Crawley was again selected to the USTA Collegiate Summer Team in 2024.[43]