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Andre Kirk Agassi, (born April 29 1970, in Las
Vegas, Nevada) is a professional male former World No. 1
tennis player from the United States. He has won eight Grand Slam singles
titles, and is one of only five players to have won all four Grand Slam
events. He is considered among the all-time great tennis
players.
Agassi was married to the actress Brooke Shields from 1997
to 1999. Since 2001, he has been married to the former World No. 1 woman
tennis player Steffi Graf and had two children.
Early
life
Agassi's father, (an Armenian from Iran) Emmanuel "Mike"
Agassian (who represented Iran in boxing at the 1948 and 1952 Olympic
Games before emigrating to the United States), was intent on having a
child win all four tennis Grand Slams. He called Agassi's two older
siblings "guinea pigs" in the development of his coaching techniques. He
honed Andre's eye-coordination when he was an infant by hanging tennis
balls above his crib. He gave Agassi paddles and balloons when he was
still in a high chair. When Agassi started playing tennis, his ball
collection filled 60 garbage cans with 300 balls per can, and Agassi would
hit 3,000-5,000 balls every day. When Andre was five years old, he was
already practicing with pros such as Jimmy Connors and Roscoe
Tanner.
Mike Agassi learned tennis by watching tapes of champions.
Mike Agassi took a very systematic approach to the physics and psychology
of tennis, and still remains active in the sport. (More information can be
found in Mike Agassi's book, The Agassi Story.)
At age of
14, Andre was shipped off to teaching guru Nick Bollettieri's Tennis
Academy in Florida. He turned professional when he was
16.
Tennis career
1986-1997
Agassi turned
professional in 1986, and won his first top-level singles title in 1987 at
Itaparica. He won six further tournaments in 1988, and by December that
year he had surpassed US$2 million in career prize money after playing in
just 43 tournaments ? the quickest player in history to do so.
As a
young up-and-coming player, Agassi embraced a rebel image. He grew his hair
to rock-star length, sported an ear-ring, and wore colorful shirts that
pushed tennis' still-strict sartorial boundaries. He boasted of a
cheeseburger-heavy diet and endorsed the Canon Rebel camera. "Image is
everything" was the ads's tag line, and it became Andre's as
well.
Strong performances on the tour meant that Agassi was quickly
tipped as a future Grand Slam champion. But he began the 1990s with a
series of near-misses. He reached his first Grand Slam final in 1990 at
the French Open, where he lost in four sets to the seasoned veteran player
Andrés Gómez. Later that year he lost in the final of the US Open to
another up-and-coming teenaged star, Pete Sampras. The rivalry between
these two American players was to become the dominant rivalry in tennis
over the rest the of the decade. In 1991, Agassi reached his second
consecutive French Open final where he faced his former Bollettieri
Academy-mate Jim Courier. Courier emerged the victor in a dramatic
rain-interrupted five-set final.
Agassi chose not to play at
Wimbledon from 1988-90, and publicly stated that he did not wish to play
there because of the event's traditionalism, particularly its
"predominantly-white" dress code which players at the event are required
to conform to. Many observers at the time speculated that Agassi's real
motivation was that his strong baseline game would not be well suited to
Wimbledon's grass court surface. Agassi decided to play at Wimbledon in
1991, leading to weeks of speculation in the media about what he would
wear ? he eventually emerged for the first round in a completely white
outfit. He reached the quarter-finals on that occasion.
To the
surprise of many, Agassi's Grand Slam breakthrough came at Wimbledon in
1992, when he beat Goran Ivani?evi? in a tight five-set
final.
Following wrist surgery in 1993, Agassi came back strongly
in 1994 and captured the US Open, beating Michael Stich in the final. He
then captured his first Australian Open title in 1995, beating Sampras in
a four-set final. He won a career-high seven titles that year and he
reached the World No. 1 ranking for the first time that April. He held it
for 30 weeks on that occasion through to November. He compiled a
career-best 26-match winning streak during the summer hardcourt circuit,
which ended when he lost in the US Open final to Sampras.
In 1995,
Agassi won seven singles titles, the biggest being the Australian Open,
the Cincinnati Masters, the Miami Masters, and the Canada Masters. In
terms of win/loss record, 1995 was Agassi's best year (72/10) (includes
Davis Cup). This is slightly short of Sampras's best season, 1994, in
which he (Sampras) won 77 matches and lost 12. In 1996, Agassi won the
men's singles Gold Medal at the Olympic Games in Atlanta, beating Sergi
Bruguera of Spain in straight sets in the final. He also repeated at the
Cincinnati Masters and the Miami Masters.
1997 was a poor year for
Agassi. He won no top-level titles and his ranking sank to World No. 141
in November. His form was perhaps affected by the intense publicity
surrounding his high-profile and turbulent relationship and marriage to
actress Brooke Shields.
1998-2004
In 1998, Agassi
rededicated himself to tennis. He shaved his balding head, began a
rigorous conditioning program, and worked his way back up the rankings by
playing in Challenger Series tournaments (a circuit for professional
players ranked outside the world's top 50). Perhaps most remarkably, the
one-time rebel emerged as a gracious and thoughtful athlete, looked up to
by younger players. After winning matches, he took to bowing and blowing a
two-handed kisses to spectators on each side of the court, a gesture seen
as a rather humble acknowledgment of their support for him and for
tennis.
In 1998, Agassi won five titles and leapt from No. 122 on
the rankings at the start of the year, to No. 6 at the end of it, making
it the highest jump into the Top 10 made by any player in tennis. He won
five titles in ten finals, and finished runner-up at the Miami
Masters.
Agassi entered the history books in 1999 when he beat
Andrei Medvedev in a five-set French Open final to become only the fifth
male player to have won all four Grand Slam singles titles (a feat last
achieved in the 1960s by Roy Emerson). He followed this up by reaching the
Wimbledon final, where he lost to Sampras. He then won the US Open, beating
Todd Martin in five sets in the final, and finished the year ranked the
World No. 1.
Agassi began 2000 by capturing his second Australian
Open title, beating Yevgeny Kafelnikov in a four-set final. He was the
first male player to have reached four consecutive Grand Slam finals since
Rod Laver achieved the Grand Slam in 1969. 2000 also saw Agassi reach the
semi-finals at Wimbledon, where he lost in five sets to Patrick Rafter in
a very high quality battle considered by many to be one of the best
matches ever played at Wimbledon 1. At the inaugural Tennis Masters Cup in
Lisbon, Agassi made it all the way to the final after defeating Marat Safin
6-3, 6-3 in the semifinals to end the Russian's hopes to become the
youngest World No. 1 in the history of tennis. Agassi eventually lost to
Gustavo Kuerten 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. This loss allowed Kuerten to be crowned
year end World No. 1. 2000 is considered by many of his fans to be a
disappointing season for Agassi, as he managed to win only one tournament
(2000 Australian Open).
Agassi opened 2001 by successfully
defending his Australian Open title with a straight-sets final win over
Arnaud Clement. At Wimbledon, he battled Rafter again in the semi-finals
and lost 8-6 in the fifth set. At the US Open he lost in the
quarter-finals to Sampras in what is considered to be one of tournament's
all-time greatest matches. Sampras won 6-7, 7-6, 7-6, 7-6 in a match with
no breaks of serve.
Agassi and Sampras' last duel came in the final
of the US Open in 2002. The battle between the two veterans saw Sampras
emerge victorious in four sets, and left Sampras with a 20-14 edge in
their 34 career meetings. (The match in fact proved to be the last of
Sampras' career. He did not play in an event on the professional tour
again, and officially announced his retirement in 2003.) Agassi's US Open
finish, along with his victories at the Miami Masters, Rome Masters, and
Madrid Masters, helped him finish 2002 as the oldest year-end No. 2 at 32
years and 8 months.
In 2003, Agassi won the eighth Grand Slam title
of his career at the Australian Open, where he beat Rainer Schüttler in
straight sets in the final. In May that year, he recaptured the World No.1
ranking to become the oldest No. 1 ranked male tennis player in history at
33 years and 13 days. He held the No. 1 ranking on that occasion for 13
weeks. At the year-end Tennis Masters Cup, he lost in the final to Roger
Federer and finished the year ranked World No. 4.
In 2004, the
34-year-old Agassi won the Cincinnati Masters to bring his career total to
59 top-level singles titles and a record 17 ATP Masters Series titles. He
became the second-oldest singles champion in Cincinnati's storied history
(the tournament began in 1899), surpassed only by Ken Rosewall who won the
title in 1970 at age 35.
Agassi has also won one doubles title (at
the Cincinnati Masters in 1993, partnering Petr Korda). He is one of only
five male players to have won all the Grand Slams ? along with legends Don
Budge, Roy Emerson, Rod Laver and Fred Perry. He is in fact the first male
tennis player to win the four Grand Slams on four different surfaces. The
previous players won the Australian Open, Wimbledon, and the US Open on
grass courts and the French Open on clay courts; whereas Agassi won the
Australian Open on Rebound Ace, the French Open on clay, Wimbledon on
grass, and the US Open on hardcourts. After winning French Open in 1999,
Agassi became the first male tennis player to win the Career Golden Slam.
Agassi also helped the United States win the Davis Cup in 1990 and 1992.
He was named the BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year in 1992.
Agassi has earned more than US$30 million in prize-money throughout his
career, second only to Sampras. In addition to this, he also earns over
US$25 million a year through endorsements, the most by any tennis player
and fourth in all sports (first place is Tiger Woods at US$70 million a
year).
2005
Agassi started off 2005 with strong runs,
most of which were cut short by Roger Federer. He lost to Federer in the
quarterfinals of the Australian Open and the semifinals at Dubai. He
reached the quarterfinals at Indian Wells after a dominant victory over
Guillermo Coria, but withdrew from his match with Lleyton Hewitt with a
swollen big toe. Agassi lost in the semifinals at Miami to Federer in a
tight match. Although the claycourt season is the toughest on the body,
Agassi played in Rome and reached the semifinals which he lost to Coria in
a tough battle. At the 2005 French Open, Agassi lost to Jarkko Nieminem, in
their first-round match after enduring back pain related to a pinched
sciatic nerve. He lost in five sets with 6-0 in the fifth. After much
media speculation about retirement, the 35-year-old Agassi won in Los
Angeles and made the final at Montreal before falling to world No. 2
Rafael Nadal in three long sets that he might have won if a few points had
gone differently. His coach Darren Cahill and close friend and personal
trainer Gil Reyes worked with Agassi throughout the summer to prepare for
the 2005 US Open. Agassi made a spectacular run at the Open, beating
Razvan Sabau 6-3, 6-3, 6-1, Ivo Karlovic in the second round 7-6(7-4),
7-6(7-5), 7-6(7-4); Tomá? Berdych 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, 7-6(7-2); and Xavier
Malisse 6-3, 6-4, 6-7(5-7), 4-6, 6-2. His quarterfinal match against
fellow American James Blake has been called one of the best matches in US
Open history. After dropping the first two sets, 3-6, 3-6, Agassi took the
next two, 6-3, 6-3. In the fifth set, Blake served for the match at 5-4,
but Agassi broke his serve, then won the tiebreak 8-6 to secure the
victory at 1:15 a.m. He defeated Robby Ginepri, another rising, talented
American with a consistent baseline game, in his third consecutive
five-set match to earn a spot in the final against World No. 1 Roger
Federer. After losing the first set 6-3, Agassi broke Federer twice to win
the second, 6-2. He broke Federer again and at this point looked to be the
better player. Agassi had a 30-love lead but with a few costly errors was
broken to force a tiebreak, which Federer took, 7-1. Andre ran out of gas
which allowed Federer to reel off five straight games. Being down 5-0 in
the fourth set, Agassi held to make it 5-1 before Federer closed it out to
win the championship. After the match, Agassi thanked New York for the 20
years of memories, hinting at potential retirement. However, Agassi has
made clear that he will only retire on his terms, when he feels that he
cannot perform at his best on the court. He will likely continue for
another year, as he has qualified for the 2005 Masters Cup (which is
limited to the eight best players in the world) and is scheduled to play
the lead-in tournament to the 2006 Australian Open.
Coming into the
2005 Masters Cup, Agassi is 29-5 on hard courts (with his only losses
coming to Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal), and is 5-4 on clay (wins over
Gasquet, Ljubicic, and Hrbaty, losses to Coria and Lopez).
In 2005,
Agassi left Nike after 17 years and signed an endorsement deal with Adidas.
2
Hampered by a third degree ankle injury caused by several torn
ligaments, Agassi lost his opening match against Nikolay Davydenko in the
Masters Cup and was forced to withdraw. The withdrawal list also included
Rafael Nadal, Andy Roddick, Lleyton Hewitt, and Marat
Safin.
2006
Agassi withdrew from the Australian Open
because of an ankle injury. Once he withdrew, he immediately requested a
wildcard to enter the Delray Beach International Tennis Championships,
where he eventually finished as a quarterfinalist losing to Guillermo
Garcia Lopez 4-6, 2-6. He was then forced to retire from SAP Open because
of a lower back injury causing him severe pain in his lower back and down
his legs. Health permitting, Agassi is scheduled to play tournaments in
Dubai, Indian Wells and Miami to close out the winter hardcourt season. It
remains to be seen how much of a commitment Agassi will make to the
European clay court and grass court seasons this year. Agassi's top
priority in 2006 will once again be making yet another run at the US Open
in August. Expect all scheduling decisons to be made with that goal in
mind.
Playing style
Agassi employs a baseline style of
play, but unlike most such players, he typically makes contact with the
ball inside the baseline -- exceptionally difficult even for
professionals. This is possible because of his short backswing, which also
helps him return fast serves. He is also blessed with the best hand and eye
coordination, rivaled only by Roger Federer. John McEnroe and others have
called Agassi the best service returner ever to play professional
tennis.
After Agassi's rededication to tennis in 1998, he has
focused more on physical conditioning than in the past and is now one of
the fittest players on the tour. His upper-body strength allows him to
bench press 350 lbs. He has remarkable endurance and rarely appears tired
on court. As long as he is not injured, he handles long, grueling matches
arguably better than any other player on the tour (even Roger Federer has
been known to tire by the fifth set). Indeed, Agassi is often ready to
start the next point when his opponent is catching his breath. One of his
strategies is to wear down his opponents, continually putting pressure on
them by returning the ball early and deep at angles. Agassi will try to
stand in nearly one spot and hit the corners to make his opponent
scramble. He will often pass up the winner and hit a slightly less
aggressive shot to make his opponent run a little more to retrieve a few
more shots. His penchant for running players around point after point has
earned him the nickname "The Punisher".
Agassi's biggest weakness
currently is his lack of consistent speed, and players who are able to
consistently hit at sharp angles with pace give him trouble. Agassi used
to be one of the fastest players on tour; however, his recent injuries
have forced him to consistently run his fastest selectively, usually in
Grand Slams and Tennis Masters Series events. To make up for this
recently-adopted weakness, Agassi generally keeps his opponent on the
defense. (Federer is the only player with a long winning streak against
Agassi; even Sampras lost to Agassi many times).
Personal and
family life
After a four-year courtship, Agassi married actress
Brooke Shields in a lavish ceremony on April 19 1997. That February, they
had filed suit against The National Enquirer claiming it printed
"false and fabricated" statements: Brooke was undergoing counseling,
binge-eating and taking pills; Agassi "lashed into" Brooke and he and
Brooke's mother "tangled like wildcats" when she demanded a prenup; the
case was dismissed. Agassi filed for divorce, which was granted on April
9, 1999.
By the time the divorce was final, Agassi was dating the
German tennis legend Steffi Graf. With only their mothers as witnesses,
they were married at his home on October 22, 2001. Their son, Jaden Gil,
was born 6 weeks prematurely on October 26 that year. Their daughter, Jaz
Elle, was born on October 3 2003.
Agassi's older sister Rita
married the former tennis legend Pancho Gonzales. In 1995, when Gonzales
died in Las Vegas, Andre paid for his brother-in-law's
funeral.
Andre has participated in many charity organizations, and
founded the Andre Agassi Charitable Association, which assists the youth
of Las Vegas. In 1995, he has won 1995's ATP Arthur Ashe's Humanitarian
award in recognition of his efforts helping disadvantaged youth in
LA.
The Andre Agassi Charitable Foundation has always and will
continue to fund organizations which offer programs that consistently
carry out the mission of the Foundation. The Foundation's mission is to
provide educational and recreational institutions and activities for
abandoned, abused, and at-risk kids. The following organizations are fine
examples:
The Andre Agassi Boys & Girls Club
In 1997,
Agassi opened the Boys & Girls Club, a 25,000-square-foot facility that
features an indoor basketball court, outdoor tennis courts, a computer
lab, library and teen centre. It sees as many as 400 children a day in the
summer and well over 2,000 during the year.
Its junior tennis team,
Team Agassi, includes mostly players with no previous tennis experience.
As of January 2006, the team boasted four nationally ranked players as
well as a number of regionally ranked players. Coached by Tim Blenkiron,
the group practices regularly, attends study sessions, and often travels
to play in various tournaments. The program also encourages members to
respect each other and appreciate the challenges of winning and
losing.
A basketball program, the Agassi Stars, began in 2000.
Headed by Coach Jermone Riley, the Stars are required to attend study hall
sessions, write to universities they might be interested in attending, and
balance athletics and education.
The Foundation hopes to make these
programs a college recruiting ground for kids with academic as well as
athletic potential. In a community where drugs and gangs are prevalent
forces, the Agassi Club promotes learning and gives kids a safe place to
go after school.
Ethnicity question
Agassi's
ethnicity, beyond being an American citizen, has been a subject of
discussion by fans around the world. His father Mike Agassi is of Armenian
and Assyrian ethnicity from the state of Iran, and there have been attempts
to "claim" Agassi by both the Armenian and Iranian communities in the
United States and abroad. Agassi has often seemed somewhat ambivalent, for
example, joking after his "All-Armenian" match against Sargis Sargsian at
the US Open in 2004, "Well, I'm only half-Armenian" 3, though he agreed to
appear in a PBS documentary about Armenian-Americans. His father has
written in his book, The Agassi Story, about his experience of
being an outsider in Muslim Iran, but Andre has also shown interest in the
Iranian aspect of his heritage, in February 2005 expressing a desire to
visit Iran, which holds "a special place" in his
heart.4
Quotes
About Pete Sampras' retirement: "You grow
up with a guy, you compete against him for so long, he's such a big part of
your career, something that's pretty special, so you do have that sense of
personal regret that he's not around any more. You miss having that
around."
During the 2005 US Open: "I've been motivated by
overcoming challenge and overcoming the hurdles and obstacles that face
me. There still is plenty out there to get motivated by."
(from
Mats Wilander, asked to name the top 5 tennis players of all time; he
placed Agassi, Sampras, Federer, and Borg in the top 4 (in no order) and
tied McEnroe, Lendl, and Connors for fifth place): ON AGASSI: ?He has some
limitations, like he can?t serve and volley, yet he has won all four Slams.
He has a very high energy level, quite like Borg. He is on fifth gear from
the very first point. There is some abnormality in his eyes, otherwise he
wouldn?t have had such a phenomenal return. He sees the ball like none
else and just guides it wherever he wants to. He?s just played a Grand
Slam final at 35, that tells me he wasted the first five years of his
career, otherwise he couldn?t have lasted this long. No one has done more
to tennis than Agassi and Borg.?
Video games
* Andre
Agassi Tennis for the SNES, Sega Genesis, Game Gear, and Mobile
phone * Agassi Tennis Generation for PS2 and GBA *
Smash Court Pro Tournament for PS2
Grand Slam
record
Australian Open *Singles champion: 1995, 2000,
2001, 2003 *Singles semi-finalist: 1996, 2004 *Singles
quarter-finalist: 2005
French Open *Singles champion:
1999 *Singles finalist: 1990, 1991 *Singles semi-finalist: 1988,
1992 *Singles quarter-finalist: 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003 *Doubles
quarter-finalist: 1992
Wimbledon *Singles champion:
1992 *Singles finalist: 1999 *Singles semi-finalist: 1995, 2000,
2001 *Singles quarter-finalist: 1991, 1993
U.S.
Open *Singles champion: 1994, 1999 *Singles finalist: 1990,
1995, 2002, 2005 *Singles semi-finalist: 1988, 1989, 1996,
2003 *Singles quarter-finalist: 1992, 2001, 2004
Grand Slam
finals
Wins (8)
Year
Championship Opponent in
Final Score in Final 1992
Wimbledon Goran Ivani?evi? 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, 1-6,
6-4 1994 US Open Michael Stich 6-1,
7-6, 7-5 1995 Australian Open Pete Sampras
4-6, 6-1, 7-6, 6-4 1999 French Open Andrei Medvedev
1-6, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 1999 US Open Todd
Martin 6-4, 6-7, 6-7, 6-3, 6-2 2000 Australian Open
Yevgeny Kafelnikov 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 2001
Australian Open Arnaud Clement 6-4, 6-2, 6-2
2003 Australian Open Rainer Schuettler 6-2, 6-2,
6-1
Runner-ups (7)
Year
Championship Opponent in
Final Score in Final 1990 French
Open Andres Gomez 6-3, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4 1990
US Open Pete Sampras 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 1991
French Open Jim Courier 3-6, 6-4, 2-6, 6-1,
6-4 1995 US Open Pete Sampras 6-4,
6-3, 4-6, 7-5 1999 Wimbledon Pete Sampras
6-3, 6-4, 7-5 2002 US Open Pete Sampras
6-3, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4 2005 US Open Roger Federer
6-3, 2-6, 7-6, 6-1
Famous matches
* US Open
quarterfinal 1989: defeated Jimmy Connors 6-1, 4-6, 0-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Agassi's first five-set win. At one point during a changeover, Agassi
joked to his box that he was losing sets on purpose to prove that he could
win in five. The previous time he played Connors was at the 1988 US Open
quarterfinal in which he beat Connors convincingly and did not lose a
set. * French Open final 1990: lost to Andrés Gómez 6-3, 2-6,
6-4, 6-4. Agassi's first Grand Slam final. * US Open final 1990: lost
to Pete Sampras 6-4, 6-3, 6-2. The first of five Grand Slam finals
contested by the top two players of their generation. * French Open
final 1991: lost to Jim Courier 6-3, 4-6, 6-2, 1-6, 4-6. Blew 2 sets to 1
lead after rain delay. Many questioned if Agassi had the heart to win a
major championship. * Wimbledon final 1992: defeated Goran Ivani?evi?
6-7(8), 6-4, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4. Agassi's first Grand Slam title occurring at
the tournament no one thought he could ever win. Still his only Wimbledon
championship. * Wimbledon quarterfinal 1993: lost to Pete Sampras 6-2,
6-2, 3-6, 3-6, 6-4. The first of only two 5-set matches between the two
(The other was the 2000 Australian Open semis). * US Open 4th Round
1994: defeated Michael Chang 6-1, 6-7(3), 6-3, 3-6, 6-1. Outlasts Chang en
route to becoming the first unseeded man to win the US Open championship in
28 years. Knocked off five seeded players along the way. First US Open
title. * Australian Open 1995 final: defeated Pete Sampras 4-6, 6-1,
7-6(6), 6-4. Agassi's only Grand Slam Final victory over Sampras. *
Atlanta Summer Olympics Gold Medal Match 1996: defeated Serge Bruguera
6-2, 6-3, 6-1. Demolished two-time French Open Champion to achieve
important personal goal of winning an Olympic Gold Medal. * French Open
1st round: lost to Marat Safin 7-5, 5-7, 2-6, 6-3, 2-6 in what was the
Russian's first Grand Slam match. Safin's win foreshadowed his win over
Pete Sampras in the 2000 US Open final. * French Open final 1999:
defeated Andrei Medvedev 1-6, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4. A spectacular
come-from-behind victory that completed his career Grand Slam at the
"advanced" age of 29, and his return to the top of tennis after being as
low as #141. Referred to as the "Miracle in Paris". Agassi has stated that
he considers this his greatest moment on a tennis court. * US Open final
1999: defeated Todd Martin 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-7(2), 6-3, 6-2. Another
come-from-behind thriller. * Australian Open 2000 semi-final: defeated
Pete Sampras 6-4, 3-6, 6-7(0), 7-6(5), 6-1. En route to his second
Australian Open crown. Tennis Magazine stated: "This was
Sampras-Agassi for the ages." * Wimbledon semi-final 2000: lost to
Patrick Rafter 7-5, 4-6, 7-5, 4-6, 6-3. This match was universally praised
for its asthetic beauty as the world's greatest baseliner battled the
game's most fluid and athletic volleyer over five tense sets. *
Australian Open 2001 semi-final: defeated Patrick Rafter 7-5, 2-6, 6-7(5),
6-2, 6-3. Exacted some revenge for 2000 Wimbledon semi loss to Rafter.
Rallied from 2 sets to 1 down to stun Rafter in front of an energized
Australian crowd. * Wimbledon semi-final 2001: lost to Patrick Rafter
2-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2, 8-6. Although not considered possible, the rematch
topped the standard set by their encounter from the year before. * US
Open 2001 quarter-final: lost to Pete Sampras 6-7(9), 7-6(2), 7-6(2),
7-6(5). Match featured no breaks of serve. Many consider this the best
Agassi-Sampras match played. * US Open 2002 final: lost to Pete Sampras
6-3, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. Sampras' final competitive match. * French Open 2003
2nd round: defeated Mario Ancic 5-7, 1-6, 6-4, 6-2, 7-5. Rallied back from
two sets to love against the young and powerful Ancic to win the match.
One of only six matches Agassi has won after being down two sets to love.
Three of them have been at the French Open. * French Open 2004 1st
round: lost to Jerome Haehnel 4-6, 6-7(4), 3-6. Shock first round loss to
lowly French career journeyman. Arguably the greatest upset in French Open
history. * US Open 2004 quarter-final: lost to Roger Federer 3-6, 6-2,
5-7, 6-3, 3-6. 5th set marred by record-breaking winds. By far Roger
Federer's most difficult match en route to the title. * Australian Open
2005 4th round: defeated Joachim Johansson 6-7(4), 7-6(5), 7-6(3), 6-4. Won
despite Johansson's world-record 51 aces. * French Open 2005 1st round:
lost to Jarkko Nieminen 5-7, 6-4, 7-6, 1-6, 0-6. Possibly Agassi's last
match at the French Open. He led two sets to one heading into the fourth
set, but a pinched sciatic nerve hampered Agasi's movement very
noticeably. Agassi limped off the court with tears in his eyes after the
match. The match was a major indicator to many that Agassi's career might
be coming to a close soon. * US Open 2005 quarter-final: defeated James
Blake 3-6, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3, 7-6(6). Agassi had never come back from two sets
down in the US Open. This was called the best match of the 2005 Open and
one of the best in US Open history. * US Open 2005 semi-final: defeated
Robby Ginepri in his third consecutive five-set thriller: 6-4, 5-7, 6-3,
4-6, 6-3. At 35 years old, he played his best tennis in the fifth
set. * US Open 2005, final: lost to Roger Federer in his sixth US Open
final. In the finale of Agassi's magic run at the Open which included 3
five-set matches in a row, Agassi met Federer and appeared to have the
upper hand, being up a break in the third set with the match tied at one
set each. However, Federer withstood the pressure and rallied to beat
Agassi 6-3, 2-6, 7-6(1), 6-1. * Tennis Masters Cup 2005, Round Robin:
lost to Nikolay Davydenko 6-4, 6-2. Agassi was suffering from a sprained
ankle injured while he was playing racquetball three weeks before.
Although the match itself was unremarkable, the afterward was, when one of
the tournament organizers absurdly accused Agassi of faking injury and
losing on purpose because he (Agassi) was playing in Shanghai. It turned
out that the same injury would cause Agassi to withdraw the 2006
Australian Open.
Titles (60)
| Legend
(Singles) | | Grand Slam (8) | | Tennis Masters Cup (1)
| | Olympic Gold (1) | | ATP Masters Series (17) | | ATP Tour
(33) | |
Singles (60)
| No. |
Date | Tournament |
Surface | Opponent in the final |
Score | | 1. | November 23, 1987 | Itaparica, Brazil
| Hard | Luiz Mattar (Brazil) | 7-6 6-2 | | 2. | February 15, 1988 |
Memphis, USA | Hard | Mikael Pernfors (Sweden) | 6-4 6-4 7-5 | | 3. |
April 25, 1988 | Charleston, USA | Clay | Jimmy Arias (USA) | 6-2 6-2
| | 4. | May 2, 1988 | Forest Hills, USA | Clay | Slobodan Zivojinovic
(Yugoslavia) | 7-5 7-6 7-5 | | 5. | July 11, 1988 | Stuttgart Outdoors,
Germany | Clay | Andres Gomez (Ecuador) | 6-4 6-2 | | 6. | July 25,
1988 | Stratton, USA | Hard | Paul Annacone (USA) | 6-2 6-4 | | 7. |
August 15, 1988 | Livingston, USA | Hard | Jeff Tarango (USA) | 6-2 6-4
| | 8. | October 2, 1989 | Orlando, Florida, USA | Hard | Brad Gilbert
(USA) | 6-2 6-1 | | 9. | February 5, 1990 | San Francisco, USA | Carpet
| Todd Witsken (USA) | 6-1 6-3 | | 10. | March 12, 1990 | Key Biscayne,
USA | Hard | Stefan Edberg (Sweden) | 6-1 6-4 6 6-2 | | 11. | July 16,
1990 | Washington, USA | Hard | Jim Grabb (USA) | 6-1 6-4 | | 12. |
November 12, 1990 | Tour Championships, Frankfurt, Germany | Carpet |
Stefan Edberg (Sweden) | 5-7 7-6 7-5 6-2 | | 13. | April 1, 1991 |
Orlando, USA | Hard | Derrick Rostagno (USA) | 6-2 1-6 6-3 | | 14. |
July 15, 1991 | Washington, USA | Hard | Petr Korda (Czechoslovakia) | 6-3
6-4 | | 15. | April 27, 1992 | Atlanta, USA | Clay | Pete Sampras (USA)
| 7-5 6-4 | | 16. | June 22, 1992 |
Wimbledon | Grass | Goran Ivani?evi? (Croatia) | 6-7 6-4
6-4 1-6 6-4 | | 17. | July 20, 1992 | Toronto, Canada | Hard | Ivan
Lendl (USA) | 3-6 6-2 6-0 | | 18. | January 2, 1993 | San Francisco,
USA | Hard | Brad Gilbert (USA) | 6-2 6-7 6-2 | | 19. | February 22,
1993 | Scottsdale, USA | Hard | Marcos Ondruska (Russia) | 6-2 3-6 6-3
| | 20. | February 2, 1994 | Scottsdale, USA | Hard | Luiz Mattar
(Brazil) | 6-4 6-3 | | 21. | July 25, 1994 | Toronto, Canada | Hard |
Jason Stoltenberg (Australia) | 6-4 6-4 | | 22. |
August 29, 1994 | US Open | Hard |
Michael Stich (Germany) | 6-1 7-6 7-5 | | 23. | October 17, 1994 |
Vienna, Austria | Carpet | Michael Stich (Germany) | 7-6 4-6 6-2 6-3 |
| 24. | October 31, 1994 | Paris, France | Carpet | Marc Rosset
(Switzerland) | 6-3 6-3 4-6 7-5 | | 25. |
January 16, 1995 | Australian Open |
Hard | Pete Sampras (USA) | 4-6 6-1 7-6 6-4 | | 26. | February 6, 1995
| San Jose | Hard | Michael Chang (USA) | 6-2 1-6 6-3 | | 27. | March
13, 1995 | Key Biscayne | Hard | Pete Sampras (USA) | 3-6 6-2 7-6 | |
28. | July 17, 1995 | Washington | Hard | Stefan Edberg(Sweden) | 6-4 2-6
7-5 | | 29. | July 24, 1995 | Montreal | Hard | Pete Sampras (USA) |
3-6 6-2 6-3 | | 30. | August 7, 1995 | Cincinnati | Hard | Michael
Chang (USA) | 7-5 6-2 | | 31. | August 14, 1995 | New Haven | Hard |
Richard Krajicek (Netherlands) | 3-6 7-6 6-3 | | 32. | March 18, 1996
| Key Biscayne | Hard | Goran Ivani?evi? (Croatia) | 3-0 40-0 | | 33.
| July 22, 1996 | Olympic Games, Atlanta, USA | Hard | Sergi Bruguera
(Spain) | 6-2 6-3 6-1 | | 34. | August 5, 1996 | Cincinnati | Hard |
Michael Chang (USA) | 7-6 6-4 | | 35. | February 9, 1998 | San Jose |
Hard | Pete Sampras (USA) | 6-2 6-4 | | 36. | March 2, 1998 |
Scottsdale | Hard | Jason Stoltenberg (Australia) | 6-4 7-6 | | 37. |
July 20, 1998 | Washington | Hard | Scott Draper (Australia) | 6-2 6-0
| | 38. | July 27, 1998 | Los Angeles | Hard | Tim Henman (UK) | 6-4
6-4 | | 39. | October 19, 1998 | Ostrava | Carpet | Jan Kroslak
(Slovakia) | 6-2 3-6 6-3 | | 40. | April 5, 1999 | Hong Kong | Hard |
Boris Becker (Germany) | 6-7 6-4 6-4 | | 41. |
May 24, 1999 | French Open | Clay |
Andrei Medvedev (Ukraine) | 1-6 2-6 6-4 6-3 6-4 | | 42. | August 16,
1999 | Washington | Hard | Yevgeny Kafelnikov (Russia) | 7-6 6-1 | |
43. | August 30, 1999 | US
Open | Hard | Todd Martin (USA) | 6-4 6-7 6-7 6-3 6-2 | | 44.
| November 1, 1999 | Paris | Carpet | Marat Safin (Russia) | 7-6 6-2 4-6
6-4 | | 45. | January 17, 2000 |
Australian Open | Hard | Yevgeny Kafelnikov (Russia) |
3-6 6-3 6-2 6-4 | | 46. | January 15,
2001 | Australian Open | Hard | Arnaud Clement
(France) | 6-4 6-2 6-2 | | 47. | March 12, 2001 | Indian Wells | Hard
| Pete Sampras (USA) | 7-6 7-5 6-1 | | 48. | March 19, 2001 | Key
Biscayne | Hard | Jan-Michael Gambill (USA) | 7-6 6-1 6-0 | | 49. |
July 23, 2001 | Los Angeles | Hard | Pete Sampras (USA | 6-4 6-2 | |
50. | March 4, 2002 | Scottsdale | Hard | Juan Balcells (Spain) | 6-2 7-6
| | 51. | March 18, 2002 | Key Biscayne | Hard | Roger Federer
(Switzerland) | 6-3 6-3 3-6 6-4 | | 52. | May 6, 2002 | Rome, Italy |
Clay | Tommy Haas (Germany) | 6-3 6-3 6-0 | | 53. | July 22, 2002 |
Los Angeles, USA | Hard | Jan-Michael Gambill (USA) | 6-2 6-4 | | 54.
| October 14, 2002 | Madrid, Spain | Hard | Jiri Novak (Czech Republic) |
W/O | | 55. | January 13, 2003 |
Australian Open | Hard | Rainer Schuettler (Germany) |
6-2 6-2 6-1 | | 56. | February 10, 2003 | San Jose, USA | Hard |
Davide Sanguinetti (Italy) | 6-3 6-1 | | 57. | March 17, 2003 | Key
Biscayne | Hard | Carlos Moyà (Spain) | 6-3 6-3 | | 58. | April 21,
2003 | Houston, USA | Clay | Andy Roddick (USA) | 3-6 6-3 6-4 | | 59. |
August 2, 2004 | Cincinnati, USA | Hard | Lleyton Hewitt (Australia) | 6-3
3-6 6-2 | | 60. | July 31, 2005 | Los Angeles, USA | Hard | Gilles
Muller (Luxembourg) | 6-4 7-5 | |
Doubles (1)
|
No. | Date | Tournament
| Surface | Partner | Opponents
in the final | Score | | 1. | August 16,
1993 | Cincinnati Masters | Hard | Petr Korda (Czech Republic) | Stefan
Edberg (Sweden) & Henrik Holm (Sweden) | 7-6 6-4 |
|
Performance timeline
| Tournament | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 |
2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | 1997 | 1996 | 1995 | 1994 | 1993
| 1992 | 1991 | 1990 | | Australian Open | align="center"|- |
align="center"|QF | align="center"|SF | align="center"|W
| align="center"|- | align="center"|W |
align="center"|W | align="center"|4r | align="center"|4r
| align="center"|- | align="center"|SF | align="center"|W
| align="center"|- | align="center"|- | align="center"|- | align="center"|-
| align="center"|- | | French Open | align="center"| |
align="center"|1r | align="center"|1r | align="center"|QF |
align="center"|QF | align="center"|QF | align="center"|2r |
align="center"|W | align="center"|1r | align="center"|- |
align="center"|2r | align="center"|QF | align="center"|2r |
align="center"|- | align="center"|SF | align="center"|F | align="center"|F
| | Wimbledon | align="center"| | align="center"|- | align="center"|- |
align="center"|4r | align="center"|2r | align="center"|SF |
align="center"|SF | align="center"|F | align="center"|2r |
align="center"|- | align="center"|1r | align="center"|SF |
align="center"|4r | align="center"|QF | align="center"|W
| align="center"|QF | align="center"|- | | US Open | align="center"| |
align="center"|F | align="center"|QF | align="center"|SF | align="center"|F
| align="center"|QF | align="center"|2r | align="center"|W
| align="center"|4r | align="center"|4r | align="center"|SF |
align="center"|F | align="center"|W | align="center"|1r |
align="center"|QF | align="center"|1r | align="center"|F | | Grand Slam
W-L | align="center"| | align="center"|10-2 | align="center"|9-3 |
align="center"|19-3 | align="center"|11-3 | align="center"|20-3 |
align="center"|14-3 | align="center"|23-2 | align="center"|7-4 |
align="center"|3-1 | align="center"|11-4 | align="center"|22-3 |
align="center"|11-2 | align="center"|4-2 | align="center"|16-2 |
align="center"|10-3 | align="center"|12-2 | | Tournaments
Won | align="center"| | align="center"|1 |
align="center"|1 | align="center"|4 |
align="center"|5 | align="center"|4 |
align="center"|1 | align="center"|5 |
align="center"|5 | align="center"|0 |
align="center"|3 | align="center"|7 |
align="center"|5 | align="center"|2 |
align="center"|3 | align="center"|2 |
align="center"|4 | | Hardcourt W-L | align="center"|
| align="center"|19-3 | align="center"|37-10 | align="center"|32-6 |
align="center"|36-7 | align="center"|35-10 | align="center"|25-9 |
align="center"|41-9 | align="center"|47-10 | align="center"|11-10 |
align="center"|34-7 | align="center"|53-3 | align="center"|29-6 |
align="center"|27-8 | align="center"|19-7 | align="center"|17-7 |
align="center"|26-5 | | | Tournament | 1989 | 1988 | 1987 | 1986
| | Australian Open | align="center"|- | align="center"|- |
align="center"|- | align="center"|- | | French Open |
align="center"|3r | align="center"|SF | align="center"|2r |
align="center"|- | | Wimbledon | align="center"|- | align="center"|- |
align="center"|1r | align="center"|- | | US Open | align="center"|SF |
align="center"|SF | align="center"|1r | align="center"|1r | | Grand
Slam W-L | align="center"|7-2 | align="center"|10-2 | align="center"|1-3 |
align="center"|0-1 | | Tournaments Won |
align="center"|1 | align="center"|6 |
align="center"|1 | align="center"|0
| | Hardcourt W-L | align="center"|20-6 | align="center"|33-6 |
align="center"|21-10 | align="center"|4-5 |
|
Head-to-Head
*vs. Sampras, Pete: 14-20 *vs. Roddick,
Andy: 5-1 *vs. Ginepri, Robby: 4-0 *vs. Blake, James: 4-1 *vs.
Dent, Taylor: 5-0 *vs. Kiefer, Nicolas: 6-0 *vs. Rusedski, Greg:
8-2 *vs. Henman, Tim: 2-1 *vs. Johansson, Thomas: 6-1 *vs. Novak,
Jiri: 5-1 *vs. Gaudio, Gaston: 4-1 *vs. Davydenko, Nikolay:
2-1 *vs. Coria, Guillermo: 5-2 *vs. Chang, Michael: 15-7 *vs.
Ivanisevic, Goran: 4-3 *vs. Rafter, Patrick: 10-5 *vs. Connors,
Jimmy: 2-0 *vs. McEnroe, John: 2-2 *vs. Becker, Boris: 10-4 *vs.
Safin, Marat: 3-3 *vs. Hewitt, Lleyton: 4-4 *vs. Courier, Jim:
5-7 *vs. Muster, Thomas: 5-4 *vs. Federer, Roger: 3-8 *vs. Nadal,
Rafael: 0-1 *vs. Grosjean, Sebastien: 4-3 *vs. Nalbandian, David:
1-0 *vs. Ferrero, Juan Carlos: 2-3 *vs. Kuerten, Gustavo:
7-4 *vs. Corretja, Alex: 5-3 *vs. Costa, Albert: 4-1 *vs. Moya,
Carlos: 3-1 *vs. Malisse, Xavier: 5-0 *vs. Pioline, Cedric:
3-0 *vs. Haas, Tommy: 6-3
*Official ATP profile *Profile on
tenniscorner.net *Davis Cup record *Andre Agassi Foundation *IOC
profile *Agassi Open
Agassi,
Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi,
Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi,
Andre Agassi, Andre Agassi, Andre
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Agassi de:Andre Agassi et:Andre Agassi es:Andre
Agassi fr:Andre Agassi it:Andre Agassi he:????? ???? nl:Andre
Agassi ja:???????? no:Andre Agassi pl:Andre Agassi pt:Andre
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Agassi, Andre
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