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Ivan Ljubičić - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ivan Ljubičić

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ivan Ljubičić
Country Flag of Croatia Croatia
Residence Monte Carlo, Monaco
Date of birth March 19, 1979
Place of birth Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Height 6 ft 4 in (193 cm)
Weight 190 lb (86 kg)
Turned Pro 1998
Plays Right; One-handed backhand
Career Prize Money $5,488,405
Singles
Career record: 279 - 186
Career titles: 6
Highest ranking: No. 3 (May 1, 2006)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open QF (2006)
French Open SF (2006)
Wimbledon 3rd (2006)
U.S. Open 3rd (2005)
Doubles
Career record: 75 - 76
Career titles: 0
Highest ranking: No. 70 (May 16, 2006)
Olympic medal record
Men's Tennis
Bronze 2004 Doubles

Ivan Ljubičić [ˈiʋan ˈʎubitʃitɕ] (born March 19, 1979) is a Croatian tennis player. His career-high ATP Entry ranking was World No. 3, and his current Entry list ranking is No. 4 (as of November 6, 2006). Tall and powerfully built, he is noted for his strong serve and has achieved his best results in indoor tournaments played on carpet or hardcourt. He uses a one-handed backhand and often plays from the baseline.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Ljubičić was born in Banja Luka, Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina), to a Bosniak mother and Croatian father. He started playing tennis as a child in 1988, and he soon won his first local awards as a junior. In May 1992, because of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Ljubičić family left Banja Luka, and Ivan, his mother and his brother moved to Opatija, Croatia, while his father was unable to leave. In November 1992, they were reunited and moved to Rijeka.

Soon after, in April 1993, Ljubičić went to a tennis club in Montcalieri near Torino, Italy. During the next three years, Ljubičić grew into a promising prospect. He decided to play for Croatia and in 1995 won his first junior championship - he became the Croatian under-16 champion. The same year, he won his first ATP points, and played for the Croatian team in the Winter Cup (European under-16 indoors championship). Pairing up with Željko Krajan, he won the Orange Bowl (the unofficial world under-16 championship).

In 1996, the family moved to Zagreb, while Ivan continued his successes. He joined the tennis club Mladost and played in more and more junior ITF tournaments. His biggest success as a junior was the final of Wimbledon where he was defeated by Vladimir Voltchkov of Belarus. He also played in the Australian Open junior semifinal in 1997, and won the Eddie Harre tournament, which made him the no. 2 junior in the world. In early 1997 he started being trained by the Italian professional coach Riccardo Piatti. His successes continued: quarterfinal of junior French Open, and entering into the professional tennis.

[edit] Playing career

[edit] 1998-2003

Ljubičić entered professional tennis in 1998, and played in the final of the ATP Challenger in Zagreb, where he lost to Alberto Berasategui. He played a number of smaller tournaments the same year, but had little success and finished the year as #293.

In 1999, his luck turned, and he won two Futures tournaments, as well as a Challenger in Besançon, France. He won another two victories in the qualifications for the Casablanca Tour event, where he was defeated by Juan Carlos Ferrero. He then entered the Super 9 tournament in Monte Carlo (today's Monte Carlo Masters) where he reached the third round after an amazing run where he defeated Andrei Medvedev and Yevgeni Kafelnikov. He also played in the Croatia Open in Umag where he was eliminated only in the semifinal by Magnus Norman. He finished the year as #77.

In 2000, Ljubičić played two semifinals, in Sydney and in Bastad, and three quarterfinals (Marseille, Copenhagen and Brighton). He also played in the third round of the Olympic tournament.

He won his first ATP singles title at Lyon in 2001, after defeating Gustavo Kuerten, Gaston Gaudio, Marat Safin and Younes El Aynaoui. At that point he reached #29 in the professional rankings, and would continue to play well, participating in seven ATP Tour semifinals - Adelaide, Rotterdam, Miami, St. Polten, Gstaad, Umag, Cincinnati. He finished the year 2001 as #37.

The year 2002 he was in two semifinals (Rotterdam, Gstaad) and four quarterfinals (Adelaide, Dubai, Umag, Tashkent) on the ATP Tour, and it the first time he passed the first round on a Grand Slam, when he reached the 3rd round of Australian Open where he was stopped by Wayne Ferreira in five sets. He ended the year as #49, and also no. 2 in the number of aces behind Wayne Arthurs.

In 2003, he reached the semifinals of Milan, Dubai, Bangkok and Basel, and also the 3rd round of Monte Carlo Masters and the quarterfinals in Rome Masters. He lost in the second round in the U.S Open to Andy Roddick who would then go on to become the champion that year. The score was 6-3,6-7,6-3, 7-6. After the match, he went on to say that if the match had been played anywhere else, he would have won. He also stated that no one in the locker room liked the American, which was proven by other players to be the unequivocal truth.

[edit] 2004-2005

In 2004, he started the year as the runner-up to Nicolas Escude in Doha, and also played semifinals in Hamburg Masters, in Indianapolis and in the Madrid Masters. He also reached the quarterfinals in Basel and 1/8th finals in the Miami Masters.

At the 2004 Olympics, Ljubičić teamed up with Mario Ančić to win the bronze medal in tennis doubles, winning against the Indians Bhupathi and Paes after having been defeated by the Chilean duo of González and Massú, the eventual gold medalists, in the semifinals.

In 2005, Ljubičić produced markedly better results. He won two ATP titles and was the runner-up at another six, losing to world no. 1 Roger Federer in three of them, and world no. 2 Rafael Nadal in another one. Most notably, he reached the finals of two Masters Series Events, losing to Nadal in Madrid and to Tomas Berdych at the Paris Indoors Tournament. He finished the year ranked #9 in the world and earned his first appearance at the year-end Masters Cup where he was eliminated in the group stage (Ljubicic was one of a number of entrants who were invited due to the withdrawal of higher-ranked players, such as #2 Rafael Nadal).

Ljubičić has also been the top player of the Croatian Davis Cup team since the departure of Goran Ivanišević. In Davis Cup 2005, the Croatian team defeated the United States in the first round played in March 2005. Ljubičić defeated Andre Agassi convincingly in straight sets in his first singles match. He then teamed with Mario Ančić to defeat the Bryan Brothers, then the world's second-ranked doubles team. He finally clinched victory for his country, defeating America's number one player and former world number one Andy Roddick in five sets. In the July quarterfinal, Ljubičić again won his singles games against Romania's Victor Hanescu as well as Andrei Pavel, and then together with Ančić defeated the Pavel-Trifu duo in five sets. In the semifinal held in September against the Russian team, Ljubičić defeated Mikhail Youzhny in five sets, together with Ančić defeated Igor Andreev and Dmitry Tursunov in another five-set game, and finally defeated Nikolay Davydenko to secure victory for Croatia. Then in the finals Ljubičić defeated Karol Kučera and also paired with Mario Ančić to help secure Croatia's first Davis Cup victory.

[edit] 2006

Prior to the Australian Open, Ljubicic played a tournament in Chennai, seeded 1 he was expected to do well on the hardcourts there. Playing well he reached the final and defeated Spaniard Carlos Moya 7-6, 6-2. It proved to be a great preparation for the Australian Open.

At the 2006 Australian Open he reached the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time ever in his career. He defeated Thomas Johansson of Sweden 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 in the fourth round. He lost to eventual finalist Marcos Baghdatis of Cyprus in the quarter-final 4-6 2-6 6-4 6-3 3-6.

After the Australian Open he played at the Zagreb Indoor Open, which is played on carpet, a surface typically favoured by Ljubicic. He reached the final once more and subsequently defeated Stefan Koubek 6-3, 6-4 in the final.

He bettered this feat when he made the semi-finals of the 2006 French Open, a run that ended with a loss to Rafael Nadal, who holds the record for the longest win-streak on clay. It was speculated that Ljubicic was able to make it this far because his highest ranked opponent was not even ranked in the top 70. After the match, Ljubicic made controversial comments about how Nadal took too much time in between points. He also stated that he hoped Roger Federer would defeat him in the final. Ljubičić then traveled to Queen's Club, defeating Razvan Sabau 7-6 6-2 before losing to Gael Monfils 7-6 7-5 in the round of 16. Many people have speculated why Ljubičić does not do well on grass in spite of his huge serve, but analysts have said that Ljubičić needs more time on groundstrokes that the grass surface does not give.

At the 2006 Wimbledon Championships, Ljubičić had a tough first round opponent in '05 quarterfinalist Feliciano Lopez. He won 11-9 in the fifth. He then defeated Justin Gimelstob before losing in the third round to Dmitry Tursunov after being up two sets to none.

He then traveled to Gstaad, Switzerland to play in the Allianz Suisse Open on red clay. Being the top seed, he defeated Spaniard Albert Portas in the first round and Marco Chiudinelli in the second round before losing to seed Feliciano Lopez in straight sets. In the Canada Masters 2006, he reached the third round before losing out to Fernando Gonzalez. He then went to the Bangkok Open where he was the top seed, and reached the final round. He met America's James Blake but was defeated 6-3, 6-1 and moved to number 3 on the ATP ace list. He did not remain the number three due to David Nalbandian who pushed him away by advacing to the semis in Madrid. Nalbandian is considered the better all-round player , while Ljubicic is famous for his hard hitting serve.

[edit] Titles (6)

[edit] Singles (6)

Legend
Grand Slam (0)
Tennis Masters Cup (0)
ATP Masters Series (0)
ATP Tour (6)
No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score
1. October 8, 2001 Lyon, France Carpet MoroccoYounes El Aynaoui (Morocco) 6-3 6-2
2. October 9, 2005 Metz, France Hard FranceGaël Monfils (France) 7-6 6-0
3. October 16, 2005 Vienna, Austria Hard SpainJuan Carlos Ferrero (Spain) 6-2 6-4 7-6
4. January 8, 2006 Chennai, India Hard SpainCarlos Moya (Spain) 7-6 6-2
5. February 5, 2006 Zagreb, Croatia Carpet AustriaStefan Koubek (Austria) 6-3 6-4
6. October 15, 2006 Vienna, Austria Hard ChileFernando Gonzalez (Chile) 6-3 6-4 7-5

[edit] Singles Finalist (9)

[edit] Masters Series - Runner-ups (3)

Year Tournament Opponent in Final Score in Final
2005 Madrid Spain Rafael Nadal 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 4-6, 6-7
2005 Paris Czech Republic Tomáš Berdych 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 4-6
2006 Miami Switzerland Roger Federer 6-7, 6-7, 6-7

[edit] Grand Slam timeline

Tournament 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002
Australian Open QF 2r 2r 1r -
French Open SF 1r 2r 3r -
Wimbledon 3r 1r 1r 2r 2r
US Open 1r 3r 1r 2r -
Tennis Masters Cup RR - - -

[edit] External links


Association of Tennis Professionals | Top ten male tennis players as of October 2006
1. Roger Federer (Switzerland) | 2. Rafael Nadal (Spain) | 3. David Nalbandian (Argentina)
4. Ivan Ljubičić (Croatia) | 5. Andy Roddick (USA) | 6. Nikolay Davydenko (Russia)
7. Fernando González (Chile) | 8. Tommy Robredo (Spain) | 9. James Blake (USA)
10. Tomáš Berdych (Czech Republic)

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