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Victor Hănescu
Hanescu bcr open romania 3.jpg
Country Romania
Residence Bucharest, Romania
Date of birth July 21, 1981 (1981-07-21) (age 28)
Place of birth Bucharest, Romania
Height 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in)
Weight 85 kg (190 lb)
Turned pro 2000
Plays Right-handed, one-handed backhand
Career prize money US$2,238,223
Singles
Career record 123–136
Career titles 1
Highest ranking No. 26 (6 July, 2009)
Current ranking No. 48 (16 November, 2009)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open 2R (2005, 2008, 2009)
French Open QF (2005)
Wimbledon 3R (2003, 2009)
US Open 2R (2008)
Major tournaments
Olympic Games 2R (2008)
Doubles
Career record 23–35
Career titles 1
Highest ranking No. 117 (21 July, 2008)
Last updated on: 2 November, 2009.

Victor Hănescu (born July 21, 1981 in Bucharest) is a Romanian tennis player. He achieved his career high rank of #26 on July 06, 2009. His ranking as of 17 August 2009 is World No. 28.

Contents

[edit] Professional career

The 6'6" Hanescu attained a career high ranking of #35 on December 25, 2005. Six weeks later, in a Davis Cup match against the United States, he suffered a severe rib injury[1], and a subsequent injury sidelined him further in May, 2006. By January, 2007, his ranking had plummeted to #759, before he finally began making progress on a comeback.

[edit] 1999: His Pro Career Begins

Hanescu earned his first ATP singles ranking points in August, 1999, with first round wins 2 weeks in a row at the Romania F1 and F2 Futures tournaments. Although he played 4 more tournaments from September through December, he did not earn any additional points and finished the year ranked #1231.

[edit] 2000: Success In Satellites

In 2000, Hanescu played Satellites and Futures tournaments. His 4th place finish at a Satellite in Croatia in April/May and 3rd place at a Satellite in Portugal in October/November provided him with 36 of the 45 ATP singles ranking points he earned in 2000. He finished the year ranked #477.

[edit] 2001: Futures Wins and Challenger Successes

Hanescu won his first pro tournaments in May, 2001, taking the singles titles in consecutive weeks at the Slovakia F1 and F2 Futures events. A quarterfinal finish at a Challenger in Budapest 2 weeks later put him in the top-400 for the first time. In July, as the #1 seed in consecutive weeks in Bucharest, he reached the final at Romania F1 and won the F2 Futures event to improve his ranking to #319. In August in Challengers in 3 consecutive weeks, he reached the semifinals in Poland and Germany and then the final in Germany to improve to #209. He broke into the top-200 for the first time in October, but went just 4–7 in Challengers after August and finished the year ranked #212.

[edit] 2002: First ATP Quarter-final, First Challenger Win

Hanescu did not make much career progress in 2002. His highlights were reaching his first career ATP-level quarterfinal at Umag, Croatia in July, and then winning his first Challenger in Portugal in September. He finished the year ranked #172.

[edit] 2003: Top-100, 3rd Round French Open and Wimbledon

Moderate success in Challengers improved Hanescu's ranking to #150 by April, 2003. He then qualified into the ATP tournament in Estoril and reached the 2nd round in April, and into the Rome Masters in May and beat #31 Mikhail Youzhny, his highest ranked win to that point. At the end of May, he qualified into the French Open and reached the 3rd round, losing to Jarkko Nieminen, to break into the top-100 for the first time. He was a Lucky Loser entry into Wimbledon, but reached the 3rd round there also, beating #34 Juan Ignacio Chela before losing to #12 Sjeng Schalken, improving his ranking to #85. He had limited success the rest of the year, losing first round at the US Open to #6 Lleyton Hewitt before reaching the quarterfinal at the ATP event in Bucharest in September. In October, he qualified into his second Masters event of the year in Paris, upsetting #49 Rafael Nadal and #69 Anthony Dupuis, and then upsetting #27 Wayne Ferreira in the first round before losing to #2 Andy Roddick. He finished the year ranked #70.

[edit] 2004: Grand Slam Failures, First ATP Semi-final, First Top-10 Win

Hanescu played almost exclusively at the ATP level in 2004, but with very limited success. He was ranked high enough for direct entry into all 4 Grand Slams and the Olympics, but won only one match total in those 5 events. His successes were his first career ATP semifinal in Scottsdale in March, and several more ATP quarterfinals, including Bucharest again in September and Estoril in April, where he recorded his first-ever win over a top-10 player, #6 Rainer Schüttler. In October, he went back down to the Challenger level and won in Rome, his second career Challenger title. But he finished the year ranked #92, down 22 spots from 2003.

[edit] 2005: His best year, French Open Quarter-finals, ATP Semi-finals

2005 is Hanescu's best year to date. At the French Open, he beat #32 Juan Ignacio Chela in the 2nd round, and then came back to beat #11 David Nalbandian in five sets 6–3 4–6 5–7 6–1 6–2 in the 4th round before losing to #1 Roger Federer in the quarterfinals. He reached ATP semifinals in New Haven (beating #58 Nicolás Massú and #20 Tommy Robredo before losing to #67 James Blake) and in Bucharest to reach the top-40 for the first time, in September. He also had his 2nd career win over a top-10 player, beating #10 Mariano Puerta in July, and finished the year with a career high ranking of #35.

[edit] 2006: Lost to injuries

The rib injury in the Davis Cup match and a subsequent back injury in May sidelined him for most of the year, and after starting the year out at #35, he finished up at #646. His lone success was winning the ATP-level exhibition tournament in Houston in April, beating Vince Spadea and Juan Mónaco.

[edit] 2007: A comeback year, first ATP final

His ranking continued to plummet due mainly to inactivity, as well as poor results when he did play, until March, when he qualified into a Challenger event in Italy and beat #126 Bjorn Phau to reach the 2nd round. His protected ranking status gave him direct entry into a couple ATP events in April, with little success. So he continued to play Challengers, reaching a semifinal and quarterfinal in May, and then a final in June to get back into the top-300. Finally in August, he won two consecutive Challengers in Romania and Austria to improve to #151 by the start of his home ATP stop in Bucharest in September, where he was a semi-finalist in 2005; he went one step farther this time by making the finals, losing in three sets to Gilles Simon. It was his first career final.

In December, the ATP entered Hănescu into the 2007 Centuries Club for advancing hundreds of spaces to regain a spot in the top 100 rankings. Hănescu climbed more ranking positions than any other player in the top 100. He finished the year at number 77.[2]

[edit] 2009

Victor started off the year by reaching the quarter-finals of Doha, where he lost to Andy Roddick. In Auckland Victor lost in the first round to Juan Monaco. He reached the second round of the Australian Open, after defeating Jan Hernych, but then fell to Dudi Sela. Victor reached the second round in Zagreb. In Dubai, he lost his first round match. In Miami he lost to Michael Russell in the first round. Victor reached the quarter-finals in Casablanca. He competed at the 2009 French Open. In the first round he eliminated Steve Darcis 7-6(8) 7-6(5) 7-6(3), in the second round Mikhail Youzhny 7-5 7-5 7-5, and in the third round he upset #7seed Gilles Simon 6-4 6-4 6-2. He played next Fernando Gonzalez and he lost 2-6 4-6 2-6.

At the 2009 Wimbledon he was seeded #31. In the first round he won a grueling match against Ivan Navarro 6-3 6-7 6-4 6-7 12-10. Then he played Nicolas Devilder and won 6-2 6-3 6-1 to advance in the third round where he lost to the #8 seeded Gilles Simon 2-6 5-7 2-6. At the 2009 MercedesCup he reached the final beating in the process D.Meffert, Rainer Schüttler, Alexandre Sidorenko and Fabio Fognini in the semi-final.He lost in the final to Jérémy Chardy 6-1 3-6 4-6.

[edit] Career finals

[edit] Singles: 3 (1–2)

Wins (1)
Legend (pre/post 2009)
Grand Slam tournaments (0)
Tennis Masters Cup /
ATP World Tour Finals (0)
ATP Masters Series /
ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (0)
ATP International Series Gold /
ATP World Tour 500 Series (0)
ATP International Series /
ATP World Tour 250 Series (1)
Titles by Surface
Hard (0)
Clay (1)
Grass (0)
Carpet (0)
No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score in the final
1. July 13, 2008 Switzerland Gstaad, Switzerland Clay Russia Igor Andreev 6–3, 6–4
Runner-ups (2)
No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score in the final
1. September 16, 2007 Romania Bucharest, Romania Clay France Gilles Simon 4–6, 6–3, 6–2
2. July 12, 2009 Germany Stuttgart, Germany Clay France Jérémy Chardy 1–6, 6–3, 6–4

[edit] Doubles: 3 (1–2)

Wins (1)
Legend (pre/post 2009)
Grand Slam tournaments (0)
Tennis Masters Cup /
ATP World Tour Finals (0)
ATP Masters Series /
ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (0)
ATP International Series Gold /
ATP World Tour 500 Series (1)
ATP International Series /
ATP World Tour 250 Series (0)
Titles by Surface
Hard (0)
Clay (1)
Grass (0)
Carpet (0)
No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponent in the final Score in the final
1. July 14, 2008 Austria Kitzbühel, Austria Clay United States James Cerretani Argentina Lucas Arnold Ker
Belgium Olivier Rochus
6–3, 7–5
Runner-ups (2)
No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponent in the final Score in the final
1. September 18, 2005 Romania Bucharest, Romania Clay Romania Andrei Pavel Argentina José Acasuso
Argentina Sebastián Prieto
6–3, 4–6, 6–3
2. July 13, 2009 Germany Stuttgart, Germany Clay Romania Horia Tecău Czech Republic František Čermák
Slovakia Michal Mertiňák
7–5, 6–4

[edit] Singles Performance timeline

To help interpret the performance table, the legend below explains what each abbreviation and color coded box represents in the performance timeline.

Terms to know
SR the ratio of the number of singles tournaments
won to the number of those tournaments played
W-L player's Win-Loss record
Performance Table Legend
NH tournament not held in that calendar year A did not participate in the tournament
LQ lost in qualifying draw #R lost in the early rounds of the tournament
(RR = round robin)
QF advanced to but not past the quarterfinals SF advanced to but not past the semifinals
F advanced to the final, tournament runner-up W won the tournament
NMS means an event that was not an ATP Masters Series tournament.
NM1 means an event that was not an ATP Masters 1000 tournament.

To prevent confusion and double counting, information in this table is updated only once a tournament or the player's participation in the tournament has concluded.

Tournament 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Career W–L
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian Open A A 1R 2R 1R 1R 1R 2R 2–6
French Open A 3R 2R QF A 1R 2R 4R 11–6
Wimbledon A 3R 1R 2R A A 2R 3R 6–5
U.S. Open A 1R 1R 1R A A 2R 1R 1–5
Grand Slam W–L 0–0 4–3 1–4 6–4 0–1 0–2 3–4 6–4 20–22

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