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Nikolay Davydenko
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Nickname |
Kolya |
Country |
Russia |
Residence |
Monte Carlo, Monaco |
Date of birth |
June 2, 1981 |
Place of birth |
Severodonezk, Ukraine |
Height |
5 ft 10 in (177 cm) |
Weight |
154 lb (70 kg) |
Turned Pro |
1999 |
Plays |
Right; Two-handed backhand |
Career Prize Money |
$5,500,311 |
Singles |
Career record: |
223-168 |
Career titles: |
10 |
Highest ranking: |
No. 3 (November 6, 2006) |
Grand Slam results |
Australian Open |
QF (2005, 2006, 2007) |
French Open |
SF (2005) |
Wimbledon |
2nd (2005) |
U.S. Open |
SF (2006) |
Doubles |
Career record: |
39-44 |
Career titles: |
1 |
Highest ranking: |
No. 31 (June 13, 2005) |
Infobox last updated on: April 2, 2007.
|
Nikolay Davydenko (Russian: Николай Давыденко) (born June 2, 1981 in Sieverodonetsk, Ukraine) is currently the number one ranked Russian male tennis player, third in the world, and the winner of ten Association of Tennis Professionals singles titles. He currently lives in Monte Carlo, Monaco. In December of 2006 Davydenko married his longtime girlfriend Irina. As of March 8, 2007, his singles ranking is number four.
Davydenko's best result in a Grand Slam tournament has been reaching the semi-finals; he lost to Mariano Puerta in a semifinal at the 2005 Roland Garros and to Roger Federer at the 2006 US Open.
[edit] Early life
Davydenko was born on June 2, 1981, in Sieverodonetsk, Ukraine. At the age of 11, Nikolay left his parents Vladimir and Tatjana to live with his elder brother Edouard in Volgograd, in the belief that Russia would afford more opportunities for his development as a tennis player.
Much later, Davydenko explained his peripatetic youth: "I stayed 4 years in Russia. Edouard worked as a tennis coach for kids and we practiced together. He pushed me pretty hard. At 15 we left for Germany. A Russian who lived there convinced Edouard it would be better for me. In Europe I could play more tournaments than in Russia."[1]
Davydenko was granted Russian citizenship in 1999, at the age of 18.
[edit] Tennis career
A pro since 1999, Davydenko first caught the public eye when he took a set off Pat Rafter in his second round match during his Grand Slam debut at the 2001 Australian Open. He won his first ATP title at Adelaide, Australia in 2003. In the last three years he has climbed from 85th to 3rd in the world rankings, a feat which has made him the highest-ranked male Russian tennis player as of November, 2006. During this meteoric rise, Davydenko has asserted himself as a threat on a variety of surfaces, except on grass, where he has generally had his weakest results.
[edit] Yearly Highlights
- Captured first Futures title at Germany #3 and reached final following week at Germany #4
- In June, reached back-to-back Futures finals at Germany #6 and #7 and made ATP debut in Amsterdam, reaching SF (l. to Sluiter)
- Two weeks later, reached back-to-back Challenger SF at Wrexham and Togliatti
- In August, won first Challenger title at Monchengladbach (d. Kempes
- Made Grand Slam debut at Australian Open, defeating Fukarek in 1st RD before losing to Rafter in four sets in 2nd RD
- Missed six weeks after injuring lower back and hip in 1st RD at Dallas Challenger in February
- Did not win a match again until May in Antwerp Challenger (l. in QF)
- Advanced to 2nd RD on Roland Garros debut (d. Bjorkman, l. to Hewitt)
- Captured Challenger titles in Ulm (d. Labadze) and Istanbul (d. Saulnier)
- Finished season with QF in Basel
- Won 12 ATP level matches and went 16-9 in Challenger play
- On clay in Bastad, defeated C. Rochus and Gonzalez before losing to eventual champion Moya
- Captured fourth career Challenger title in Szczecin (d. D. Sanchez)
- Finished season with second ATP QF in Vienna
- The No. 2 Russian (behind No. 41 Kafelnikov) captured two ATP titles and finished in Top 50 for first time in his career
- Opened season with his first career title in Adelaide (d. Vliegen) and three months later began clay court circuit with title in Estoril (d. Kafelnikov in QF, Mirnyi in SF, Calleri in F)
- Followed with QF in Barcelona (d. Nalbandian, l. to Moya) and in May advanced to final in St. Poelten (d. Verkerk, l. to Roddick)
- Compiled records of 19-15 on clay and 11-13 on hard
- The No. 3 Russian (behind Safin, Youzhny) compiled his best pro season by finishing in Top 30 for first time and capturing two ATP titles for second straight year
- After a 3-9 start through mid-April, turned things around at ATP Masters Series Monte Carlo where he reached QF (l. to Moya) and began a 10-2 run
- Followed with title in Munich (d. No. 5 Schuettler in QF, Verkerk in F) and 3rd RD at AMS Rome (d. Gonzalez, l. to Spadea)
- In July, reached SF in Stuttgart (l. to Canas) and one month later advanced to QF in Long Island
- In October, captured first career title on Russian soil in Moscow by winning singles and doubles titles (w/Andreev)
- Saved one match point in SF win over Youzhny, then saved three match points in final against Rusedski
- Compiled records of 19-12 on clay, 7-10 on hard, 7-4 on carpet, 0-3 on grass
- Earned a career-high $651,372.
- Davydenko began the year with a run to the quarterfinals at the Australian Open
- During the claycourt season, Davydenko followed his success at the Australian with semifinal appearances at the Hamburg Masters and the French Open.
- He closed out the year by reaching the quarterfinals at the Cincinnati Masters and the Paris Masters, and the semifinals at the Tennis Masters Cup in Shanghai.
- He finished the year as the No. 1 Russian and the No. 5 player in the world.
- He repeated his run to the Australian Open quarterfinals, losing to eventual champion Roger Federer in four sets.
- Davydenko won Pörtschach (clay), Sopot (clay) and New Haven (hard) beginning his hard court winning streak.
- He reached the semis outlasting Tommy Haas in the US Open quarterfinals, rebounding from a two-set deficit to win the 3 hour-45 minute epic 4-6, 6-7(3), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, but lost to Roger Federer 1-6, 5-7, 4-6.
- Finished the regular season by winning his second Moscow crown and his first ATP Masters Series tournament in Paris.
- Helped Russia win the Davis Cup against Argentina, 3-2.
- Davydenko finished the year as the No.1 Russian and ranked No.3 in the world.
- He started out strong at Doha, taking out Asian #1 Hyung-Taik Lee 7-5 6-4 in the first round, 2006 Wimbledon semifinalist Jonas Bjorkman 6-4 6-3 in the 2nd round, and Belgian Olivier Rochus in the quarterfinals 6-4 6-3, before losing in the semifinals to 4th seed Andy Murray in straight sets 5-7 2-6.
- At the Australian Open, he took out Argentine Sergio Roitman in round 1, Gilles Muller of Luxembourg in round 2, Frenchman Fabrice Santoro in round 3, 13th seeded Czech Tomas Berdych in 4 sets, before losing, once again, in the quarterfinals, to 12th seeded former world #2 Tommy Haas of Germany in 5 sets.
- At Rotterdam, as the #1 seed, he made it to the semifinals and had chances multiple times to take out Ivan Ljubicic, but failed to convert on those chances. Ljubicic eventually won the match in a third set tiebreaker.
[edit] Masters Series singles finals
[edit] Wins (1)
[edit] Titles (11)
[edit] Singles wins (10)
Legend (Singles) |
Grand Slam (0) |
Tennis Masters Cup (0) |
ATP Masters Series (1) |
ATP Tour (9) |
No. |
Date |
Tournament |
Surface |
Opponent in the Final |
Score |
1. |
January 5, 2003 |
Adelaide, Australia |
Hard |
Kristof Vliegen |
6-2, 7-6 |
2. |
April 13, 2003 |
Estoril, Portugal |
Clay |
Agustin Calleri |
6-4, 6-3 |
3. |
May 2, 2004 |
Munich, Germany |
Clay |
Martin Verkerk |
6-4, 7-5 |
4. |
October 17, 2004 |
Moscow, Russia |
Carpet (I) |
Greg Rusedski |
3-6, 6-3, 7-5 |
5. |
May 21, 2005 |
St. Pölten, Austria |
Clay |
Jürgen Melzer |
6-3, 2-6, 6-4 |
6. |
May 27, 2006 |
Pörtschach, Austria |
Clay |
Andrei Pavel |
6-0, 6-3 |
7. |
August 6, 2006 |
Sopot, Poland |
Clay |
Florian Mayer |
7-6, 5-7, 6-4 |
8. |
August 26, 2006 |
New Haven, USA |
Hard |
Agustin Calleri |
6-4, 6-3 |
9. |
October 15, 2006 |
Moscow, Russia |
Carpet (I) |
Marat Safin |
6-4, 5-7, 6-4 |
10. |
November 5, 2006 |
Paris, France |
Carpet (I) |
Dominik Hrbaty |
6-1, 6-2, 6-2 |
[edit] Singles runners-up (3)
[edit] Doubles wins (1)
[edit] Performance timeline
[edit] External links