LIST OF MALE TENNIS PLAYERS

This is a list of top international male tennis players.
To keep the list at a reasonable length, it includes only players who have been officially ranked among the top 25 singles players in the "Open Era"; been ranked in the top few prior to the Open Era; have been a singles quarter-finalist or better at a Grand Slam tournament; have been finalists at the Masters/ATP Tour World Championships/Tennis Masters Cup; have been singles medalists at the Olympic Games; have won a Grand Slam or Olympic doubles title; or have been ranked World No. 1 in singles or doubles.
Players who have won more than one Grand Slam singles title or have been ranked World No.1 in singles have been put in 'bold font' so as to stand out. Information on each player includes year of birth and death, country of origin or citizenship, and accolades which refer to singles play unless otherwise stated.
__NOTOC__
A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X-Z

Contents
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I & J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y
Z
See also

A



José Acasuso (1982-) ( ) - ranked World No. 20 in 2006

David Adams (1970-) - ( ) - 1999 Australian Open mixed doubles champion • 2000 French Open mixed doubles champion partnering Mariaan de Swardt

★ 'Andre Agassi' (1970-) - ( ) - winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles • 1992 'Wimbledon champion', 1999 finalist, 1995/2001 semi-finalist, 1991/1993 quarter-finalist • 1994/1999 'U.S. Open champion', 1990/1995/2002/2005 finalist, 1988/1989 semi-finalist, 1992/2001/2004 quarter-finalist • 1995/2000/2001/2003 'Australian Open champion' • 1999 'French Open champion', 1990/1991 finalist, 1988/1992 semi-finalist, 1995/2001/2002/2003 quarter-finalist • 1996 'Olympic gold medalist' • 1990 'ATP Tour Championships champion' • winner of 17 Masters Series titles (record) • ranked 'World No. 1' for 101 weeks

Ronald Agenor (1964-) - ( ) - 1989 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1989

Juan Aguilera (1962-) - ( ) - winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 7 in 1984

Pieter Aldrich (1965) - (/ South Africa) - 1990 Australian Open doubles champion • 1990 U.S. Open doubles champion • ranked World doubles No. 1 in 1990

Fred Alexander (1880-1969) ( USA) - 1908 'Australian Championships champion'

John Alexander (1951-) - ( ) - ranked World No. 8 in 1975

Wilmer Allison, Jr. (1904-1977) ( USA) - 1935 'U.S. Championships champion' • ranked World No. 4 in 1932/1935

Manuel Alonso (1895-1984) ( Spain) - 1921 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1922/1923/1925/1927 U.S. Championships quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1927

Victor Amaya (1954-) - ( USA) - World No. 15 in 1980

Mal Anderson (1935-) ( Australia) - 1957 'U.S. championships champion' • 1957 French Championships doubles champion • ranked World No. 2 in 1957/1958

Igor Andreev (1983-) ( ) - 2007 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 24 in 2006

John Andrews (1952-) ( USA) - 1975 French Open quarter-finalist

Vijay Amritraj (1953-) - ( ) - 1973/1981 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1973/1974 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 16 in 1980

Mario Ancic (1984-) - ( ) - 2004 Olympic Games doubles bronze medalist • 2004 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2006 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 7 in 2006

Matt Anger (1963-) ( USA) - World No. 23 in 1986

Paul Annacone (1963-) - ( USA) - 1985 Australian Open doubles champion • 1984 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • World No. 12 in 1986

Hicham Arazi (1973) - ( ) - 1997/1998 French Open quarter-finalist • 2000/2004 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 2001

Jimmy Arias (1964-) - ( USA) - 1983 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 1984

Jordi Arrese (1964-) - ( Spain) - 1992 Olympic silver medalist • ranked World No. 23 in 1991

★ 'Arthur Ashe' (1943-1993) - ( USA) - 1968 'U.S. Open champion', 1972 finalist • 1970 'Australian Open champion', 1971 finalist • 1975 'Wimbledon champion', 1968/1969 semi-finalist; 1970/1971 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 2 in 1975

Bunny Austin (1906-2000) - ( ) - 1928-1929 U.S. Championships finalist • 1932-1938 Wimbledon finalist • 1937 French Championships finalist

Luis Ayala (1932-) - ( ) - 1958/1960 French Championships finalist

B



Marcos Baghdatis (1985-) - ( ) - 2006 Australian Open finalist • 2006 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2007 quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 2006

Mansour Bahrami (1956-) - ( )

Galo Blanco - (1976-) ( Spain) - 1997 French Open quarter-finalist

Corrado Barazzutti (1953-) - ( ) - 1977 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1978 French Open semi-finalist; 1980 French Open quarter-finalist • World No. 7 in 1978

Pierre Barthes (1941-) ( ) - 1970 French Open doubles champion partnering Nikki Pilic

Jeremy Bates (1962-) - ( Great Britain) - 1987 Wimbledon and 1991 Australian Open mixed doubles champion partnering Jo Durie

★ 'Boris Becker' (1967-) - ( West Germany/) - winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles • 1985/1986/1989 'Wimbledon champion', 1988/1990/1991/1995 finalist; 1989 'U.S. Open champion' • 1991/1996 'Australian Open champion', 1984 quarter-finalist (first appearance) • 1987/1989/1991 French Open semi-finalist • 1988 'Masters champion', 1992/1995 'ATP Tour Championships champion' • ranked 'World No. 1' for 12 weeks

Mike Belkin (1945-) - ( ) - 1968 Australian Championships quarter-finalist

Julien Benneteau (1981-) - ( France) - 2006 French Open quarter-finalist

Alberto Berasategui (1973-) - ( Spain) - 1994 French Open finalist • 1998 Australian Open quarter-finalist; World No. 7 in 1994

Tomáš Berdych - ( ) 2007 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • World No. 10 in 2006;

Jay Berger (1966-) - ( USA) - 1989 U.S. Open and French Open quarter-finalist • World No. 7 in 1990

Christian Bergström (1967) - ( ) - 1993 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Paolo Bertolucci (1954) - ( Italy) - 1973 French Open quarter-finalist • World No. 12 in 1973

Mahesh Bhupathi (1974-) - ( India) - 1999/2001 French Open doubles champion; 1999 Wimbledon champion (all partnering Leander Paes) • 2002 U.S. Open doubles champion (partnering Max Mirnyi)

Jonas Björkman (1972-) - ( Sweden) - 1997 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 2006 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 2003 quarter-finalist • 1998/2002 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1998/1999/2001 Australian Open doubles champion (partnering Jacco Eltingh, Patrick Rafter, Todd Woodbridge respectively), 2007 doubles finalist • 2004/2005 French Open doubles champion (partnering Max Mirnyi); 2002/2003/2004 Wimbledon doubles champion (partnering Woodbridge) • World No. 4 in 1997 • ranked World doubles No. 1 for 70 weeks

Byron Black (1969-) - ( ) - 1995 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2000 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1994 French Open doubles champion • World No. 22 in 1996

Wayne Black (1973-) - ( Zimbabwe) - 2001 U.S. Open doubles champion and 2005 Australian Open doubles champion (partnering Kevin Ullyett)

James Blake (1979-) - ( USA) - 2005/2006 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2006 Tennis Masters Cup finalist • World No. 4 in 2006

Arnaud Boetsch (1968-) - ( France) - World No. 12 in 1996

★ 'Björn Borg' (1956-) - ( Sweden) - winner of 11 Grand Slam singles titles • 1974/1975/1978/1979/1980/1981 'French Open champion', 1976 quarter-finalist • 1976/1977/1978/1979/1980 'Wimbledon champion', 1981 finalist, 1973/1975 quarter-finalist; 1976/1978/1980/1981 U.S. Open finalist, 1975 semi-finalist, 1979 quarter-finalist • 1979/1980 'Masters champion', 1975/1977 finalist • ranked 'World No. 1' for 109 weeks &bull

Jeff Borowiak (1949-) - ( USA) - World No. 25 in 1977

★ 'John Bromwich' (1918-1999) - ( Australia) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1939/1946 'Australian Championships champion' • 1938/1939/1946/1947/1948/1949/1950 Australian Championships doubles champion (partnering Adrian Quist)

★ 'Jean Borotra' (1898-1994) - ( France) - one of the "Four Musketeers"

William Bowrey (1943-) - ( Australia) - 1968 'Australian Championships champion', 1969 Australian Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Sir Norman Brookes' (1877-1967) - ( Australia)

Jacques Brugnon (1895-1978) - ( France) - one of the "Four Musketeers"

★ 'Sergi Bruguera' (1971-) - ( Spain) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1993/1994 'French Open champion', 1997 finalist

Bob Bryan (1978-) - ( USA) - 2003 French Open doubles champion, 2005/2006 finalist • 2005 U.S. Open doubles champion • 2006/2007 Australian Open doubles champion, 2004/2005 doubles finalist • 2006 Wimbledon doubles champion, 2005 finalist • 2003/2004 Tennis Masters Cup doubles champion • ranked World No. 1 in doubles

Mike Bryan (1978) - ( USA) - 2003 French Open doubles champion, 2005/2006 finalist • 2005 U.S. Open doubles champion • 2006/2007 Australian Open doubles champion, 2004 and 2005 doubles finalist • 2006 Wimbledon doubles champion, 2005 finalist • 2003/2004 Tennis Masters Cup doubles champion • ranked World No. 1 in doubles

Earl "Butch" Buchholz (1940-) - ( USA) - 1969 Australian Open quarter-finalist • one of the Handsome Eight

★ 'Don Budge' (1915-2000) - ( USA) - winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles • 1937/1938 'Wimbledon champion' • 1937/1938 'United States Championships champion', 1936 finalist • 1938 'French Championships champion' • 1938 'Australian Championships champion' • first Grand Slam winner • 'World No. 1' for 5 years; a candidate for greatest player of all time

C



Darren Cahill (1965-) - ( Australia) - 1988 U.S. Open semi-finalist • ranked World No. 22 in 1989

★ 'Oliver Campbell' (1871-1953) - ( USA) - winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles • 1890/1891/1892 'U.S. Championships champion' • 1888/1891/1892 doubles champion

Guillermo Cañas (1977-) - ( ) - 2002/2005/2007 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 8 in 2005

Cristiano Caratti (1970-) - ( ) - 1991 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Tomas Carbonell - ( Spain) - 2001 French Open mixed champion partnering Virginia Ruano Pascual

Kent Carlsson (1968-) - ( Sweden) - World No. 6 in 1988

Gregory Carraz

Ross Case (1951) - ( Australia) - 1973/1977(January) Australian Open semi-finalist

Ray Casey (1900-1986) - ( USA) - 1925 Wimbledon doubles finalist with John Hennessey

Pat Cash (1965-) - ( Australia) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1987 'Wimbledon champion' • 1987/1988 Australian Open finalist • World No. 4 in 1988

Malcolm Chace (1875-1955) - ( USA)

Thierry Champion - ( France) - 1990 French Open quarter-final • 1991 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Michael Chang (1972-) - ( USA) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1989 'French Open champion', 1995 finalist • 1996 Australian Open finalist • 1996 U.S. Open finalist • 1995 ATP Tour Championships finalist • winner of 7 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 2 in 1996

Juan Ignacio Chela (1979) - ( Argentina) - 2004 French Open quarter-finalist • 2007 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 15 in 2004

Andrei Cherkasov - ( USSR / ) - 1990 Australian Open quarter-finalist; 1990 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • World No. 13 in 1991

Andrei Chesnokov (1966-) - ( USSR/ Russia) - 1989 French Open semi-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 9 in 1991

Francisco Clavet (1968-) - ( Spain)

Arnaud Clément - ( France) - 2001 Australian Open finalist

Jose-Luis Clerc - ( Argentina)

William Clothier (1881-1962 - ( USA)

★ 'Henri Cochet' (1901-1987) - ( France) • ranked 'World No. 1' for 3 years

Grant Connell - ( )

★ 'Jimmy Connors' (1952-) - ( USA) - winner of 8 Grand Slam singles titles • 1974 'Australian Open champion', 1975 finalist (last appearance) • 1974/1982 'Wimbledon champion', 1975/1977/1978/1984 finalist, 1973 doubles champion • 1974/1976/1978/1982/1983 'U.S. Open champion', 1975/1977 finalist, 1975 doubles champion • 1979/1980/1984/1985 French Open semi-finalist • 1977 'Masters champion' • ranked 'World No. 1' for 268 weeks

Elwood Cooke - ( USA) - 1939 Wimbledon finalist and doubles champion with Bobby Riggs

★ 'Ashley Cooper' (1936-) - ( Australia)

John Cooper (1946-) - ( Australia)

Patricio Cornejo (1944-) - ( ) - 1972 French Open finalist in doubles, 1974 US Open finalist in doubles.

Guillermo Coria (1982-) - ( Argentina) - 2004 French Open finalist, 2003 semi-finalist • 2003/2005 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 3 in 2004

Alex Corretja (1974-) - ( Spain) - 1998/2001 French Open finalist, 2002 semi-finalist • 1998 'ATP Tour Championships champion' • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 2 in 1999

Albert Costa (1975-) - ( Spain) - 2002 'French Open champion' • 1997 Australian Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 6 in 2002

Carlos Costa (1968-) - ( Spain) - ranked World No. 10 in 1992

★ 'Jim Courier' (1970-) - ( USA) - winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles • 1991/1992 'French Open champion', 1993 finalist, 1994 semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1992/1993 'Australian Open champion', 1994 semi-finalist, 1995/1996 quarter-finalist • 1991 U.S. Open finalist, 1992/1995 semi-finalist • 1993 Wimbledon finalist, 1991 quarter-finalist • 1991/1992 ATP Tour Championships finalist • winner of 5 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 58 weeks

Mark Cox (1943-) - ( Great Britain)

★ 'Jack Crawford' (1908-1991) - ( Australia) - 3 Grand Slam titles 1933

Dick Crealy (1944-) - ( Australia)

Kevin Curren (1958-) - ( South Africa/ USA) - 1984 Australian Open finalist • 1985 Wimbledon finalist, 1983 semi-finalist, 1990 quarter-finalist

D



Dwight Davis (1879-1945) - ( USA)

Scott Davis - ( USA)

Franco Davin - ( Argentina) - 1991 French Open quarter-finalist

Nikolay Davydenko (1981-) - ( Russia) - 2005/2007 French Open semi-finalist, 2006 quarter-finalist • 2005/2007 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2005 Tennis Masters Cup semi-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • World No. 3 in 2006

Phil Dent - ( Australia) - 1974 Australian Open finalist, 1968/1977 (January)/1979 quarter-finalist • 1977 French Open semi-finalist • 1977 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Taylor Dent (1981-) - ( USA)

Steve Denton (1956-) - ( USA)

Filip Dewulf (1972-) - ( ) - 1997 French Open semi-finalist, 1998 quarter-finalist

Colin Dibley (1944-) - ( Australia) - 1979 Australia Open semi-finalist • 1973 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Eddie Dibbs (1951-) - ( USA)

Mark Dickson - ( USA) - 1983 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Arnaud di Pasquale (1979-) - ( France) - 2000 Olympic bronze medalist

Novak Đoković (1987-) - (/ ) - 2007 Wimbledon finalist • 2007 French Open semi-finalist, 2006 quarter-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles

Sláva Doseděl - ( Czech Republic) - 1999 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Scott Draper - ( Australia) - 2005 Australia Open mixed doubles champion partnering Samantha Stosur

Hendrik Dreekmann (1975-) - ( Germany) - 1994 French Open quarter-finalist

Brad Drewett (1958-) - ( Australia) - 1975 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Cliff Drysdale (1941-) - ( South Africa) - one of the "Handsome Eight"

Robin Drysdale (1952-) - ( Great Britain) - 1977 (December) Australian Open quarter-finalist

Pat Dupre (1954-) - ( Belgium/ USA) - 1979 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1979 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

E



★ 'Stefan Edberg' (1966-) - ( Sweden) - winner of 6 Grand Slam singles titles • 1985/1987 'Australian Open champion', 1990/1992/1993 finalist, 1988/1991/1994 semi-finalist, 1984/1989 quarter-finalist • 1988/1990 'Wimbledon champion', 1989 finalist, 1987/1991/1993 semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • 1991/1992 'U.S. Open champion', 1986/1987 semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist (last appearance) • 1989 French Open finalist, 1985/1991/1993 quarter-finalist • 1989 'Masters champion' • winner of 4 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 72 weeks

Younes El Aynaoui (1971-) - ( Morocco) - 2000/2003 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2002/2003 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 14 in 2003

Jacco Eltingh (1970-) - ( ) - doubles specialist • ranked World Doubles No. 1 in 1995

★ 'Roy Emerson' (1936-) - ( Australia) - winner of 12 Grand Slam singles titles • 1961/1963/1965/1966/1967 'Australian champion', 1962 finalist • 1961/1964 'U.S. Championships champion', 1962 finalist • 1963/1967 'French champion', 1962 finalist • 1964/1965 'Wimbledon champion' • ranked 'World No. 1' in 1964 and 1965

Thomas Enqvist (1974-) - ( Sweden) - 1999 Australian Open finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • winner of 3 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 4 in 1999

Nicolas Escudé (1976-) - ( France) - 1998 (first appearance) Australian Open semi-finalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1999 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 17 in 2000

Kelly Evernden (1962) - ( ) - 1987 Australian Open quarter-finalist

F



★ 'Roger Federer' (1981-) - ( ) - winner of 11 Grand Slam singles titles • 2003/2004/2005/2006/2007 'Wimbledon champion', 2001 quarter-finalist, 2000 doubles quarter-finalist • 2004/2006/2007 'Australian Open champion', 2005 semi-finalist • 2004/2005/2006 'U.S. Open champion' • 2006/2007 French Open finalist, 2005 semi-finalist, 2001 quarter-finalist • 2003/2004/2006 'Tennis Masters Cup champion', 2005 finalist • winner of 14 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World ATP No. 1' for 187 [consecutive] weeks (holds all-time record for most consecutive weeks as No. 1, beating the previous record of Steffi Graf) • already a candidate for greatest player of all time.

Peter Feigl (1951-) - ( Austria) - 1978 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Wayne Ferreira (1971-) - ( South Africa) - 1992 (second appearance)/2003 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1992 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 1994 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1992 Olympic doubles silver medal winner • winner of 2 Masters Series titles

David Ferrer (1982-) - ( Spain) - 2005 French Open quarter-finalist • World No. 15 in 2005

★ 'Juan Carlos Ferrero' (1980-) - ( Spain) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 2003 'French Open champion', 2002 finalist • 2003 U.S. Open finalist • 2007 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2002 Tennis Masters Cup finalist • winner of 4 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 8 weeks

Wojtek Fibak (1952-) - ( ) - 1977/1980 French Open quarter-finalist; 1980 Wimbledon quarter-finalist; 1980 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Marcelo Filippini (1967) - ( ) - 1999 French Open quarter-finalist

Jaime Fillol (1946-) - ( Chile) - 1972 French Open finalist in doubles, 1974 US Open finalist in doubles. World No. 14 in 1974.

Mardy Fish (1981) - ( USA)- 2007 Australian Open quarter-finalist • World No. 49 in 2006

Ken Flach (1963-) - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Peter Fleming (1955-) - ( USA) - 1980 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Guy Forget (1965-) - ( France) - 1991/1993 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1991/1992/1994 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles

★ '"Four Musketeers"' ( France) - four French players of the 1920s and 1930s

Zeljko Franulovic (1947-) - ( Yugoslavia [Croatia]) - 1970 French Open finalist; 1971 French Open semi-finalist

★ 'Neale Fraser' (1933-) - ( Australia) - winner of 3 Grand Slam Singles titles • 1959/1960 'U.S. Championships champion' • 1960 'Wimbledon champion', 1958 finalist • 1957/1959/1960 Australian Championships finalist

Rod Frawley (1952) - ( Australia) - 1979 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Frank Froehling (1942) - ( USA) - 1971 French Open semi-finalist and U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Richard Fromberg (1970-) - ( Australia) - World No. 24 in 1990

Renzo Furlan (1970-) - ( Italy) - 1995 French Open quarter-finalist

G



Patrick Galbraith - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Richard Gasquet (1986-) - ( France) - 2004 French Open mixed doubles champion • 2007 Wimbledon semi-finalist • World No. 12 in 2005

Gastón Gaudio (1978-) - ( Argentina) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 2004 'French Open champion' • 2005 Tennis Masters Cup semi-finalist (lost 0-6 0-6 to Roger Federer, the first "double bagle" in TMC history) • ranked World No. 5

Sammy Giammalva, Jr. (1963-) - ( USA) - 1982 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Juan Gisbert, Sr. - (1942-) - (
/ Spain) - 1968 Australian Championships finalist

Bob Giltinan (1949-) - ( Australia) - 1977 (December) Australian Open semi-finalist

Robby Ginepri (1982-) - ( USA) - 2005 U.S. Open semi-finalist

Drew Gitlin (1958-) - ( USA) - 1982 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Vitas Gerulaitis (1954-1994) - ( USA) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1977 (December) 'Australian Open champion' • 1979 U.S. Open finalist • 1980 French Open finalist • 1977/1978 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1979/1981 Masters finalist

Brad Gilbert - (1961-) - ( USA) - 1987 U.S. Open quarter-finalist; 1990 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Hans Gildemeister(1956-) - ( ) - 1982 French Open finalist in doubles.

Shlomo Glickstein - (1958-) - ( ) - 1981 Australian Open quarter-finalist; World No. 22 in 1982

Andrés Gómez - (1960-) - ( ) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1990 'French Open champion' • 1984 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1984 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Pancho Gonzales' (1928-1995) - ( USA) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1948/1949 'U.S. champion' • 'World No. 1' an unequalled 8 years • a candidate for greatest player of all time

Fernando González (1980-) - ( Chile) - 2004 Olympic doubles gold medalist (w/Nicolás Massú) and singles bronze medalist • 2007 Australian Open finalist • 2002 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2003 French Open quarter-finalist • 2005 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Spencer Gore - ( United Kingdom [England]) - first Wimbledon (1877) winner

Tom Gorman - ( USA)

Brian Gottfried - ( USA)

Georges Goven (1948-) - ( France) - 1970 French Open semi-finalist

Jim Grabb - ( USA)

Clark Graebner - ( USA)

Sebastien Grosjean (1978-) - ( France) - 2001 Australian Open semi-finalist • 2001 French Open semi-finalist • 2003/2004 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 2001 Tennis Masters Cup finalist

Tim Gullikson - ( USA)

Tom Gullikson - ( USA)

Istvan Gulyas (1931-) - ( ) - 1966 French Open finalist, 1971 quarter-finalist

Jan Gunnarsson (1962-) - ( Sweden) - 1989 Australian Open semi-finalist • World No. 25 in 1985

Heinz Günthardt - ( Switzerland)

Magnus Gustafsson - ( Sweden) - 1994 Australian Open quarter-finalist • World No. 10 in 1991

H



Paul Haarhuis (1966-) - ( Netherlands) - doubles specialist • 1994 Australian Open doubles champion • 1995/1998/2002 French Open champion, 2000/2003 finalist • 1998 Wimbledon doubles champion, 1997/1999/2000 finalist • 1991 U.S. Open quarter-finalist, 1994 doubles champion, 1996 finalist • ranked World No. 18 and ranked World Doubles No. 1

Tommy Haas (1978-) - ( Germany) - 2000 Olympic silver medalist • 1999/2002/2007 Australian Open semi-finalist • 2004/2006/2007 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 2 in 2002

Harold Hackett (1878-1937) - ( USA)

"Handsome Eight" - eight WTC professional players of the 1960s

Victor Hanescu - ( Romania) - 2005 French Open quarter-finalist

Paul Hanley - ( Australia) - lost in the finals of the 2005 Wimbledon mixed doubles, playing with Tatiana Perebiynis.

Rodney Harmon - ( USA) - 1982 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Tim Henman (1974-) - ( United Kingdom) - 1996 Olympic Games doubles silver medalist • 1998/1999/2001/2002 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1996/1997/2003/2004 quarter-finalist • 2004 French Open semi-finalist • 2004 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1998 ATP Tour Championships semi-finalist • ranked World No. 4 in 2002

John Hennessey (1900-1981) – ( USA) - 1928 U.S. champion doubles with George Lott, world #8 in 1927 and 1928.

Jan Hernych (1979-) - ( Czech Republic) - 2006 Australian Open doubles quarter-finalist

Robert "Bob" Hewitt (1940-) - ( Australia/ South Africa) - multiple Grand Slam doubles champion

★ 'Lleyton Hewitt' (1981-) - ( Australia) - 2001 'U.S. Open champion', 2004 finalist, 2000/2002/2005 semi-finalist, 2003 quarter-finalist • 2002 'Wimbledon champion', 2005 semi-finalist, 2004/2006 quarter-finalist • 2005 Australian Open finalist • 2001/2004 French Open quarter-finalist • 2001/2002 'Tennis Masters Cup champion' • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 80 weeks

Jose Higueras (1953-) - ( Spain) - 1982/1983 French Open semi-finalist, 1977/1979 quarter-finalist

Jakob Hlasek (1964-) - ( Switzerland) - 1991 French Open quarter-finalist

Lew Hoad (1934-1994) - ( Australia)

Chip Hooper (1958-) - ( USA) - ranked World No. 17 in 1982

Frederik "Fred" Hovey (1868-1945) - ( USA) - 1895 U.S. champion

Dominik Hrbatý (1978-) - ( Slovakia) - ranked World No. 12 in 2004

Joseph "Joe" Hunt (1919-1944) - ( USA) - 1943 U.S. champion

Frank Hunter (1894-1981 - ( USA) - 1923 Wimbledon finalist • 1928/1929 U.S. Open finalist

Stephen Huss (1975-) - ( Australia) - 2005 Wimbledon doubles champion

I & J



Goran Ivanišević (1971-) - ( Yugoslavia/ Croatia) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 2001 'Wimbledon champion', 1992/1994/1998 finalist • 1989 (first appearance) /1994/1997 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1990/1992/1994 French Open quarter-finalist • 1996 U.S. Open semi-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked World No.2 in 1994

Martin Jaite (1964-) - ( Argentina) - 1985 French Open quarter-finalist

François Jauffret - ( France) - 1974 French Open semi-finalist • 1966 French amateur semi-finalist

Anders Järryd - ( Sweden) - 1987/1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1985 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1985 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Joachim Johansson (1982-) - ( Sweden) - 2004 U.S. Open semi-finalist

Thomas Johansson (1975-) - ( Sweden) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 2002 'Australian Open champion' • 2005 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1998/2000 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title

"Little Bill" Johnston - ( USA) - a co-'World No. 1' in 1919 with Gerald Patterson

Donald Johnson - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Kelly Jones - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Boro Jovanovic (1939) - ( Yugoslavia) - 1968 French Open quarter-finalist

K



★ 'Yevgeny Kafelnikov' (1974-) - ( Russia) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1996 'French Open champion', 1995 semi-finalist, 1997/2000/2001 quarter-finalist • 1999 'Australian Open champion', 2000 finalist, 1995/1996/2001 quarter-finalist • 1999/2001 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1995 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 2000 'Olympic gold medalist' • ranked 'World ATP No. 1' for 6 weeks

Bernd Karbacher (1968-) - ( Germany)

Nicolas Kiefer (1977-) - ( Germany) - 1998/2000 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1997 Wimbledon quarter-finalist (first appearance) • 2000 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Billy Knight (1935-) - ( United Kingdom)

Mark Knowles - ( ) - doubles specialist • 2002 Australian Open doubles champion, 1995/2003 finalist • 2004 U.S. Open doubles champion, 1998 finalist, 1994/2003 semi-finalist, 1995/2001/2002 quarter-finalist • 1998/2002 French Open doubles finalist, 2005 semi-finalist, 2004 quarter-finalist • 1995/1999 Wimbledon doubles semi-finalist • ranked World Doubles No. 1

Thomaz Koch (1945-) ( ) - 1969 French Open quarter-finalist • World No. 24 in 1974

★ 'Jan Kodeš' (1946-) - ( Czechoslovakia) - winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles • 1970/1971 'French Open champion', 1972/1973 quarter-finalist • 1973 'Wimbledon champion', 1972 semi-finalist • 1971/1973 U.S. Open semi-finalist

Petr Korda (1968-) - ( Czech Republic) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1998 'Australian Open champion', 1993 quarter-finalist • 1992 French Open finalist • 1998 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1995/1997 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title

Stefan Koubek (1977-) - ( Austria) - 2002 Australian Open quarter-finalist • World No. 20 in 2000

Jan Koželuh (1904-) - ( Czechoslovakia) - (not to be confused with Karel Koželuh)

Karel Koželuh (1895-1950) - ( Czechoslovakia) - (not to be confused with Jan Koželuh)

Richard Krajicek (1971-) - ( Netherlands) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title •1996 'Wimbledon champion', 1998 semi-finalist • 1992 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1993 French Open semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1997/1999/2000 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 2 Masters Series titles

★ 'Jack Kramer' (1921-) - ( USA) - 'World No. 1' for 6 years • a candidate for greatest player of all time

Aaron Krickstein (1967-) - ( USA) - 1989 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1988/1990 quarter-finalist • 1995 Australian Open semi-finalist

★ 'Johan Kriek' - ( South Africa/ USA) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1981 (first appearance)/1982 'Australian Open champion', 1984 semi-finalist • 1986 French Open semi-finalist • 1981/1982 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1980 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1987/1988 quarter-finalist

Ramanathan Krishnan - ( India)

Ramesh Krishnan - ( India) - 1981/1987 U.S. Open quarter-finalist; 1986 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Paul Kronk (1954) - ( Australia) - 1978 Australian Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Gustavo Kuerten' (1976-) - ( Brazil) - winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles • 1997/2000/2001 'French Open champion' • 1999 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1999/2001 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2000 'Tennis Masters Cup champion' • winner of 5 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 43 weeks

Karol Kučera (1974-) - ( Czechoslovakia/ Slovakia) - 1998 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1998 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Nicklas Kulti (1971-) - ( Sweden) - 1992 French Open quarter-finalist

L



★ 'René Lacoste' (1904-1996) - ( France) - 1925/1927/1929 'French Championships champion' • 1925/1928 'Wimbledon champion' • 1926/1927 'U.S. Championships champion' • one of the "Four Musketeers" • 'World No. 1' for 2 years

Nicolás Lapentti - ( Ecuador) - 1999 Australian Open semi-finalist • 2002 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Sebastien Lareau - ( Canada) - doubles specialist

★ 'William Larned' (1872-1926) - ( USA)

Art Larsen (1925-) - ( USA)

Magnus Larsson (1970-) - ( Sweden) - 1994 French Open semi-finalist • 1993/1997/1998 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 10 in 1995

★ 'Rod Laver' (1938-) - ( Australia) - 1960/1962/1969 'Australian Open champion', 1961 finalist • 1962/1969 'French Open champion', 1968 finalist • 1961/1962/1968/1969 'Wimbledon champion', 1959/1960 finalist • 1962/1969 'U.S. Open champion', 1960/1961 finalist • only player (male or female) to have won the Grand Slam twice • a candidate for greatest player of all time

Glenn Layendecker (1961-) - ( USA)

Rick Leach - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Henri Leconte (1963-) - ( France) - 1988 French Open finalist, 1986 semi-finalist, 1985/1990 quarter-finalist • 1986 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1985/1987 quarter-finalist • 1986 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Ivan Lendl' (1960-) - ( Czechoslovakia/ USA) - 1984/1986/1987 'French Open champion', 1981/1985 finalist, 1983/1988 quarter-finalist • 1985/1986/1987 'U.S. Open champion', 1982/1983/1984 finalist, 1991 semi-finalist, 1980/1990/1992 quarter-finalist • 1989/1990 'Australian Open champion', 1983/1991 finalist, 1985/1987/1988 semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • 1986/1987 Wimbledon finalist, 1983/1984/1988/1989/1990 semi-finalist • 1981/1982/1985/1986/1987 'Masters champion' (record; shared with Pete Sampras) • ranked 'World No. 1' for 270 weeks (became the first player to become No. 1 without having won a Grand Slam singles title, Kim Clijsters and Amélie Mauresmo did the same on the women's tour)

Chris Lewis (1957-) - ( ) - 1983 Wimbledon finalist

Ivan Ljubičić - ( Croatia) - 2006 French Open semi-finalist • 2006 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2004 Olympic Games doubles bronze medalist

John Lloyd (1954-) - ( Great Britain) - 1977(December) Australian Open finalist, 1985 quarter-finalist • 1984 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Feliciano López (1981 - ( Spain) - 2005 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

George Lott (1906-1991) - ( USA)

Bob Lutz (1949-) - ( USA)

M



Gene Mako (1916) - ( USA)

Xavier Malisse (1980-) - ( Belgium) - 2002 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 2004 French Open doubles champion • ranked World No. 19 in 2002

Amos Mansdorf - ( )

Jose Mancia - ( USA)

Alberto Mancini (1969-) - ( Argentina) - 1989 French Open quarter-finalist

Bruce Manson - ( USA) - 1981 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Felix Mantilla - ( Spain) - 1997 (first appearance) Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1998 French Open semi-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title

John Marks (1952-) - ( Australia) - 1978 Australian Open finalist

Todd Martin- ( USA) - 1994 Australian Open finalist, 1999/2001 quarter-finalist • 1999 U.S. Open finalist, 1994/2000 semi-finalist • 1994/1996 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1993/1999 quarter-finalist

Nicolás Massú (1979-) - ( Chile) - 2004 'Olympic gold medalist' (in singles and doubles)

Geoff Masters (1950-) - ( Australia) - 1974 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Wally Masur - ( Australia)

Shuzo Matsuoka (1967-) ( )

Gene Mayer (1956-) - ( USA) - ranked World No. 4 in 1980

Sandy Mayer - ( USA)

Tim Mayotte (1960-) - ( USA) - 1983 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1981 quarter-finalist • 1982 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1981 (first appearance) /1983/1986/1988/1989 quarter-finalist • 1989 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

★ 'John McEnroe' (1959-) - ( USA) - 1979/1980/1981/1984 'U.S. Open champion', 1985 finalist, 1978/1982/1990 semi-finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist • 1981/1983/1984 'Wimbledon champion', 1980/1982 finalist, 1977 (first appearance) /1989/1992 semi-finalist, 1985 quarter-finalist • 1984 French Open finalist, 1985 semi-finalist, 1981/1983 quarter-finalist • 1983 (first appearance) Australian Open semi-finalist, 1985/1989/1992 quarter-finalist • 1978/1983/1984 'Masters champion' • ranked 'World No. 1' for 170 weeks • a candidate for greatest player of all time

Patrick McEnroe (1966-) - ( USA)

Peter McNamara - ( Australia)

Ken McGregor (1929-) - ( Australia)

Chuck McKinley (1941-1986) - ( USA)

Maurice McLoughlin (1890-1957 - ( USA)

Paul McNamee - ( Australia)

Don McNeill - (1918-1996) - ( USA)

Frew McMillan - ( South Africa)

Miloslav Mečíř (1964-) - ( Czechoslovakia [Slovak]) - 1988 'Olympic gold medalist' • 1986 U.S. Open finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist • 1989 Australian Open finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist • 1987 French Open semi-finalist • 1988 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1986 quarter-finalist

Andrei Medvedev - ( USSR/ Ukraine) - 1999 French Open finalist • winner of 4 Masters Series titles

Fernando Meligeni (1971) - ( Brazil) - 1999 French Open semi-finalist

Alex Metreveli (1944-) - ( USSR) - 1973 Wimbledon finalist, 1972 and 1974 quarter-finalist; 1972 French Open semi-finalist; 1972 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1973 and 1975 quarter-finalist; 1974 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Max Mirnyi - ( ) - 2002 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Wesley Moodie - ( South Africa) - doubles specialist; 2005 Wimbledon doubles champion

Raymond Moore - (1946) - ( South Africa) - 1977 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Buster Mottram (1955-) - ( United Kingdom [England])

★ 'Carlos Moyà' (1976-) - ( Spain) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1998 'French Open champion', 2003/2004/2007 quarter-finalist • 1997 Australian Open finalist, 2001 quarter-finalist • 1998 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 2007 quarter-finalist • winner of 3 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 2 weeks

Marty Mulligan (1940) - ( Australia) - 1962 Wimbledon finalist; 1970 French Open quarter-finalist

Gardnar Mulloy (1913-) - ( USA)

Andy Murray ( United Kingdom [Scotland] ) - World No. 8 in 2007

Robert Murray (1892-1970) - ( USA)

★ 'Thomas Muster' (1967-) - ( Austria) - 1995 'French Open champion', 1990 semi-finalist; 1989/1997 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1994 quarter-finalist • 1993/1994/1996 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 8 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 6 weeks

N



★ 'Rafael Nadal' (1986-) - ( Spain) - winner of 3 Grand Slam singles titles • 2005 (first appearance)/2006/2007 'French Open champion' • 2006/2007 Wimbledon finalist • 2006 U.S. Open quarter-finalist, 2004 doubles semi-finalist • 2007 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 2006 Tennis Masters Cup semi-finalist • winner of 9 Masters Series titles • ranked World No. 2 in 2005 and 2006

David Nalbandian (1982-) - ( Argentina) - 2002 Wimbledon finalist • 2003 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 2005 quarter-finalist • 2004/2006 French Open semi-finalist • 2006 Australian Open semi-finalist, 2003/2004/2005 quarter-finalist • 2005 'Tennis Masters Cup champion', 2006 semi-finalist • ranked World No. 3 in 2006

★ 'Ilie Năstase' (1946-) - ( ) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1972 'U.S. Open champion', 1976 semi-finalist, 1975 quarter-finalist • 1973 'French Open champion', 1971 finalist, 1970/1974/1977 quarter-finalist • 1972/1976 Wimbledon finalist, 1977/1978 quarter-finalist • 1971/1972/1973/1975 'Masters champion', 1974 finalist • ranked 'World No. 1' for 40 weeks

Daniel Nestor (1972-) - ( Canada) - 2002 Australian Open doubles champion • 2005 U.S. Open doubles champion • 2002 French Open doubles finalist • 2002 Wimbledon doubles finalist • 2003 U.S. Open doubles semi-finalist • ranked Doubles World No. 1 in 2002

★ 'John Newcombe' (1944-) - ( Australia) - winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles • 1967/1970/1971 'Wimbledon champion', 1969 finalist, 1974 quarter-finalist • 1967/1973 'U.S. Open champion', 1969/1970/1974 semi-finalist, 1968 quarter-finalist • 1973/1975 'Australian Open champion', 1976 finalist, 1969/1970/1972/1974/1977[Dec] quarter-finalist • 1969 French Open quarter-finalist • ranked 'World No. 1' • one of the "Handsome Eight"

Jarkko Nieminen - ( ) - 2005 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • 2006 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 16 in 2006

Yannick Noah (1960-) - ( France) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1983 'French Open champion' • 1990 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1983/1985/1989 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Magnus Norman (1976-) - ( Sweden) - 2000 French Open finalist • 2000 Australian Open semi-finalist

Karel Nováček - ( Czechoslovakia/ Czech Republic) - 1994 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 1987/1993 French Open quarter-finalist

Jiří Novák (1975-) - ( Czech Republic) - 2002 Australian Open semi-finalist

Hans Nusslein (1910-1991) - ( Germany)

Joakim Nyström (1963-) - ( Sweden) - ranked World No. 7 in 1986

O



Alex O'Brien (1970-) - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Tom Okker (1944-) - ( Netherlands) - 1968 U.S. Open finalist, 1971 semi-finalist • 1969 French Open semi-finalist, 1973 quarter-finalist • 1971 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1970 quarter-finalist • 1978 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1968/1969/1975/1979 quarter-finalist

★ 'Alejandro "Alex" Olmedo' - (1936-) - ( / USA) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1959 'Australian Championships champion' • 1959 'Wimbledon champion' • 1959 U.S. Championships finalist, 1958 doubles champion, 1959 doubles finalist • inducted in the ITHF in 1987.

Manuel Orantes (1949-) - (
/ Spain) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1975 'U.S. Open champion', 1976/1977 quarter-finalist • 1974 French Open finalist, 1972 semi-finalist, 1976/1978 quarter-finalist • 1972 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1968 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1976 'Masters champion'

Jim Osborne (1945-) - ( USA) - 1971 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Rafael Osuna (1938-1969) - ( ) - inducted in the ITHF in 1979.

P



Adriano Panatta (1950-) - ( Italy) - 1976 'French Open champion', 1973/1975 semi-finalist, 1972/1977 quarter-finalist • 1979 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1976 'Davis Cup champion' • ranked World No. 4 in 1976

Leander Paes (1973-) - ( India) - doubles specialist

Jared Palmer - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Onny Parun (1947-) - ( New Zealand) - 1973 Australian Open finalist • 1975 French Open quarter-finalist • 1971/1972 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1973 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

David Pate (1962-) - ( USA)

★ 'Gerald Patterson' - ( Australia) - a co-'World No. 1' in 1919 with "Little Bill" Johnston

Andrew Pattison (1949) - (Rhodesia/ USA)

Andrei Pavel - ( Romania) - 2002 French Open quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title

Victor Pecci (1955-) - ( )

Guillermo Perez-Roldan (1969-) - ( Argentina)

Mikael Pernfors (1963-) - ( Sweden) - 1986 French Open finalist • 1990 Australian Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Fred Perry' (1909-1995) - ( Great Britain) - 1933/1934/1936 'U.S. champion' • 1934/1935/1936 'Wimbledon champion' • 1934 'Australian champion', 1935 finalist • 1935 'French champion', 1936 finalist • 'World No. 1' for 5 years

Yvon Petra (1916-) - ( France)

Hank Pfister (1953) - ( USA) - 1978, 1981 and 1982 Australian Open semi-finalist; World No. 19 in 1983

Mark Philippoussis (1976-) - ( Australia) - 1998 U.S. Open finalist • 2003 Wimbledon finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title

Barry Phillips-Moore (1937-) ( Australia) - 1968 Australian Championships semi-finalist • 1971 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Nicola Pietrangeli (1933-) - ( Italy)

Nikki Pilic - ( Yugoslavia) - one of the "Handsome Eight"

Cedric Pioline - ( France) - 1993 U.S. Open finalist • 1997 Wimbledon finalist • 1998 French Open semi-finalist

Han Jurgen Pohmann (1947-) - ( West Germany) - 1974 French Open quarter-finalist

Alexander Popp (1976-) - ( Germany) - 2000/2003 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Goran Prpić - ( Yugoslavia/ Croatia)

Patrick Proisy (1949-) - ( France) - World No. 23 in 1973 • 1973 French Open finalist

Mariano Puerta - ( Argentina) - 2005 French Open finalist

Jim Pugh - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Mel Purcell (1959) - ( USA) - World No. 21 in 1980

Q



★ 'Adrian Quist' (1913-1991) - ( Australia) - 1936/1940/1948 'Australian champion', doubles champion for 1936 and 1937 (partnering Don Turnbull); and for 1938/1939/1940/1946/1947/1948/1949/1950 (partnering John Bromwich);

R



★ 'Patrick Rafter' (1972-) - ( Australia) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 1997/1998 'U.S. Open champion' • 2000/2001 Wimbledon finalist, 1999 semi-finalist • 1997 French Open semi-finalist • 2001 Australian Open semi-finalist • 1999 'Davis Cup champion' • winner of 2 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 1 week

Dennis Ralston - ( USA) - one of the "Handsome Eight" • 1966 Wimbledon amateur finalist

Andy Ram - ( Israel) - 2006 Wimbledon mixed doubles champion partnering Vera Zvonareva

Raul Ramirez (1953-) - ( Mexico)

Richey Reneberg - ( USA)

Peter Rennert (1958-) - ( USA) - 1980 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Ernest Renshaw (1861-1899) - ( Great Britain) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1888 'Wimbledon champion' • 1980/1881/1884/1885/1886/1888/1889 doubles champion (w/Ernest Renshaw)

★ 'William Renshaw' (1861-1904) - ( Great Britain) - winner of 7 Grand Slam singles titles • 1881/1882/1883/1884/1885/1886/1889 'Wimbledon champion', 1890 finalist, 1980/1881/1884/1885/1886/1888/1889 doubles champion (w/Ernest Renshaw)

Bobby Reynolds - ( USA)

Vinnie Richards - ( USA)

Cliff Richey - ( USA)

★ 'Bobby Riggs' (1918-1995) - ( USA) - 'World No. 1' for 3 years

Marty Riessen - ( USA)

★ 'Marcelo Ríos' (1975-) - ( Chile) - 1998 Australian Open finalist; 1998/1999 French Open quarter-finalist • 1997 U.S. Open quarter-finalist • winner of 5 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1'

Tommy Robredo - ( Spain) - 2003/2005/2007 French Open quarter-finalist • 2004 U.S. Open doubles semi-finalist • 2007 Australian Open quarter-finalist, 2003 doubles quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 7 in 2006

★ 'Tony Roche' (1945-) - ( Australia) - one of the "Handsome Eight"

Olivier Rochus (1981-) - ( Belgium) - 2004 French Open doubles champion • ranked World No. 24 in 2005

★ 'Andy Roddick' (1982-) - ( USA) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 2003 'U.S. Open champion', 2006 finalist, 2001/2002/2004/2007 quarter-finalist • 2004/2005 Wimbledon finalist, 2003 semi-finalist, 2007 quarter-finalist • 2003/2005/2007 Australian Open semi-finalist, 2004 quarter-finalist • winner of 4 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 13 weeks

Christophe Roger-Vasselin - (1957) - ( France) - 1983 French Open semi-finalist

★ 'Ken Rosewall' (1934-) - ( Australia) - World No.1 in 1961, 1962, 1963 • 1953 French amateur winner; 1958/1960/1961/1962/1963/1964/1965/1966 French Pro winner; 1968 French Open winner • 1957/1960/1961/1962/1963/1968 Wembley Pro winner • 1956 U.S. amateur winner; 1963/1965/1971 U.S. Pro winner; 1970 U.S. Open winner • 1953/1955 Australian amateur winner; 1971/1972 Australian Open winner • 1971/1972 WCT Finals winner • Though forbidden as a professional player from January 1957 through March 1968 to play 12 Australian amateur, 11 Roland Garros amateur, 11 Wimbledon amateur, 11 U.S. amateur i.e. 45 Grand Slam tournaments and 11 Davis Cups (plus five other from 1968 to 1972 i.e 16 Davis Cups), has won 8 Grand Slam tournaments singles : added to his 15 major professional tournaments Rosewall is the player who has won the most major titles with 23 championships

Marc Rosset (1970-) - ( Switzerland) - 1992 'Olympic gold medalist' • 1996 French Open semi-finalist • 1999 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Derrick Rostagno - ( USA)

Ray Ruffels (1946-) - ( Australia) - 1969/1975 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1970/1977(December) quarter-finalist • 1968 Australian Championships quarter-finalist

Greg Rusedski (1973-) - ( Canada/ Great Britain) - 1997 U.S. Open finalist • 1997 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • winner of 1 Masters Series title • ranked World No. 4 in 1997

S



Andre Sa (1978-) - ( Brazil) - 2002 Wimbledon quarterfinalist

John Sadri (1956-) - ( USA)

★ 'Marat Safin' (1980-) - ( Russia) - winner of 2 Grand Slam singles titles • 2000 'U.S. Open champion', 2001 semi-finalist • 2005 'Australian Open champion', 2002/2004 finalist • 2002 French Open semi-finalist, 2000 quarter-finalist • 2001 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • winner of 5 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 9 weeks

★ 'Pete Sampras' (1971-) - ( USA) - winner of 14 Grand Slam singles titles (record) • 1990/1993/1995/1996/2002 'U.S. Open champion', 1992/2000/2001 finalist, 1998 semi-finalist, 1991 quarter-finalist • 1993/1994/1995/1997/1998/1999/2000 'Wimbledon champion' (record), 1992 semi-finalist, 1996 quarter-finalist • 1994/1997 'Australian Open champion', 1995 finalist, 1993/2000 semi-finalist, 1998 quarter-finalist • 1996 French Open semi-finalist, 1992/1993/1994 quarter-finalist • 1991/1994/1996/1997/1999 'ATP Tour Championships champion' (record; shared with Ivan Lendl), 1993 finalist, 1992/1995/1998/2000 semi-finalist • winner of 11 Masters Series titles • ranked 'World No. 1' for 286 weeks (record) • inducted in the ITHF in 2007 • a candidate for greatest player of all time

Emilio Sánchez - ( Spain) - 1988 French Open quarter-finalist • 1988 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Javier Sánchez - ( Spain)

★ 'Manuel Santana' (1938-) - ( Spain) - winner of 4 Grand Slam singles titles • 1961/1964 'French Championships champion' • 1965 'U.S. Championships champion' • 1966 'Wimbledon champion' • ranked 'World No. 1' in 1966

Jiro Sato (1908-1934) ( Japan)

Bill Scanlon - ( USA)

Sjeng Schalken (1976-) - ( Netherlands) - 2002 U.S. Open semi-finalist • 2002/2003/2004 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Michiel Schapers (1959-) - ( Netherlands) - 1985/1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 25 in 1988

Ted Schroeder (1921-) - ( USA)

Rainer Schüttler (1976-) - ( Germany) - 2003 Australian Open finalist • 2005 Wimbledon doubles quarter-finalist • ranked World No. 5 in 2003

★ 'Frank Sedgman' (1927-) - ( Australia)

★ 'Pancho Segura' (1921-) - ( Ecuador/ USA) - 'World No. 1' for 1950 and 1952

Robert Seguso - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Zenzo Shimizu (1891- 1977) - ( Japan)

Jan Siemerink - ( Netherlands) - 1998 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Dick Skeen - ( USA) - 1941 U.S. Pro Championship finalist

Henry Slocum - ( USA)

Tomáš Šmíd - ( Czechoslovakia/ USA)

★ 'Stan Smith' (1946-) - ( USA) - 1971 'U.S. Open champion' • 1972 'Wimbledon champion' • 1971/1972 French Open quarter-finalist • 1970 'Masters champion'

Harold Solomon - ( USA)

Vince(nt) Spadea - (1974-) - ( USA) - 1999 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Franco Squillari - ( Argentina) - 2000 French Open semi-finalist

Milan Šrejber - ( Czechoslovakia) - 1986 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Paradorn Srichaphan (1979-) - ( ) - ranked World No. 9 in 2003

Jonathan Stark - ( USA) - doubles specialist

Carl-Uwe Steeb (1967-) - ( Germany) - 1988/1989/1993 Davis Cup champion • World No. 14 in 1990

Radek Štěpánek - ( Czech Republic) - 2006 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Brett Steven (1969-) - ( New Zealand) - 1993 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Michael Stich (1968-) - ( Germany) - winner of 1 Grand Slam singles title • 1991 'Wimbledon champion', 1997 semi-finalist, 1992/1993 quarter-finalist • 1994 U.S. Open finalist, 1991 quarter-finalist • 1996 French Open finalist, 1991 semi-finalist • 1993 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist • 1993 'ATP Tour World Championships champion' • winner of 2 Masters Series titles

Dick Stockton - ( USA) - 1974 Wimbledon semi-finalist; 1976 and 1977 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Les Stoefen - ( USA) - 1934 U.S. Championships semi-finalist, 1934 and 1935 doubles winner

Fred Stolle (1938-) - ( Australia) - 1969 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1969 French Open quarter-finalist • 1969/1972 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Sandon Stolle - ( Australia) - doubles specialist

Jason Stoltenberg - ( Australia)

Allan Stone (1945-) - ( Australia) - 1971 Australian Open semi-finalist, 1968/1977[December] Australian Open doubles champion

Eric Sturgess - ( South Africa)

Cyril Suk (1967-) - ( Czech Republic) - doubles specialist

Henrik Sundström (1964-) - ( Sweden) - 1984 French Open quarter-finalist

Jonas Svensson - ( Sweden) - 1988 French Open semi-finalist • 1989 Australian Open quarter-finalist

T



Roscoe Tanner (1951-) - ( USA) - 1977[Jan] 'Australian Open champion', 1979 Wimbledon finalist, 1975/1976 semi-finalist, 1980/1983 quarter-finalist • 1974/1979 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1972/1980/1981 quarter-finalist

Balazs Taroczy (1954- ) - ( Hungary) - 1976/1981 French Open quarter-finalist; World No. 13 in 1982

Roger Taylor (1941-) - ( United Kingdom) - one of the "Handsome Eight"

Brian Teacher (1954- ) - ( USA) - 1980 'Australian Open champion', 1982 quarter-finalist • 1982 Wimbledon quarter-finalist

Eliot Teltscher - ( USA)

Ben Testerman - ( USA)

★ '"Big Bill" Tilden' (1893-1953) - ( USA) - 1920/1921/1922/1923/1924/1925/1929 'U.S. Championships champion' • 1920/1921/1930 'Wimbledon champion' • 7 times 'World No. 1' • a candidate for greatest player of all time

Mikael Tillström (1972) - ( Sweden) - 1996 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Ion Ţiriac - ( Romania)

★ 'Tony Trabert' - ( USA) - 1953/1955 'U.S. Championships champion' • 1954/1955 'French Championships champion' • 1955 'Wimbledon champion'

U



Kevin Ullyett (1972-) - ( Zimbabwe) - 2001 U.S. Open doubles champion • 2005 Australian Open doubles champion • 2002 Australian Open mixed doubles champion (partnering Daniela Hantuchova)

V



Christo Van Rensburg (1962-) - ( South Africa) - World No. 19 in 1988

Robert Van't Hof (1959- ) - ( USA) - World No. 25 in 1983

Fernando Verdasco (1983-) - ( Spain) - World No. 24 in 2006

Martin Verkerk (1978-) - ( Netherlands) - 2003 French Open finalist

★ 'Guillermo Vilas' (1952-) - ( Argentina) - 1977 'French Open champion', 1975/1978/1982 finalist, 1976/1979/1980/1983/1986 quarter-finalist • 1977 'U.S. Open champion', 1975/1976/1982 semi-finalist • 1978/1979 'Australian Open champion', 1977[Jan] finalist, 1980 semi-finalist • 1975/1976 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1974 'Masters champion'

★ 'Ellsworth Vines' (1911 - 1994) - ( USA) - 'World No 1' for 4 years (1932/1935/1936/1937) - 'US Open Champion' (1931/1932) - 'Wimbledon Champion' (1932) - Wimbledon finalist (1933); a candidate for greatest player of all time

Danie Visser - ( South Africa) - doubles specialist

Alexander Volkov (1967-) - ( Russia) - 1993 U.S. Open semi-finalist, 1992 quarter-finalist

Adrian Voinea (1974) - ( Romanina) - 1995 French Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Gottfried von Cramm' (1909-1976) - ( Germany) - 1934/1936 'French Championships champion'

W



Butch Walts - ( USA) - 1978 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Kim Warwick - ( Australia) - 1980 Australian Open finalist

MaliVai Washington (1969-) - ( USA) - 1996 Wimbledon finalist • 1994 Australian Open quarter-finalist

David Wheaton (1969-) - ( USA) - 1991 Wimbledon semi-finalist • 1990 Australian Open quarter-finalist • 1990 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

★ 'Mats Wilander' (1964-) - ( Sweden) - 1982 (first appearance)/1985/1988 'French Open champion', 1983/1987 finalist, 1984 semi-finalist, 1989 quarter-finalist • 1983/1984/1988 'Australian Open champion', 1985 finalist, 1990 semi-finalist • 1988 'U.S. Open champion', 1987 finalist, 1985 semi-finalist, 1983/1984 quarter-finalist • 1987/1988/1989 Wimbledon quarter-finalist • 1987 Masters finalist • ranked 'World No. 1' for 20 weeks

★ 'Tony Wilding' (1883-1915) - ( New Zealand) - 1906/1909 'Australian Open champion', 1910/1911/1912/1913 'Wimbledon champion'

Tim Wilkison (1959-) - ( USA) - 1986 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Todd Witsken (1963-1998) - ( USA) - 1988 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Todd Woodbridge (1971-) - ( Australia) - one of "The Woodies"

Mark Woodforde (1965-) - ( Australia) - one of "The Woodies"

Chris Woodruff (1973-) - ( USA) - 2000 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Y



Mikhail Youzhny (1982-) - ( Russia) - 2006 U.S. Open semi-finalist

Jaime Yzaga (1967-) - ( Peru) - 1991 Australian Open quarter-finalist (first appearance) • 1994 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Z



Mariano Zabaleta (1978-) - ( Argentina) - 2001 U.S. Open quarter-finalist

Vladimir Zedník (1947-) - ( Czechoslovakia) • 1973 Australian Open quarter-finalist

Nenad Zimonjić (1976-) - ( Serbia) - 2004 Australian Open mixed doubles champion partnering Elena Bovina • 2006 French Open mixed doubles champion partnering Katarina Srebotnik

Slobodan Zivojinovic (1963-) - ( Yugoslavia) - 1985 Australian Open semi-finalist (first appearance) • 1986 Wimbledon semi-finalist, 1987 quarter-finalist

See also



List of female tennis players

List of tennis players

List of sportsmen

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
Vacation By VVacation By V
List of male tennis players Travel Deals