Alex Rădulescu Explained

Alex Rădulescu
Residence:Monaco
Birth Date:1974 12, df=y
Birth Place:Bucharest, Romania
Plays:Right-handed (one-handed backhand)
Turnedpro:1992
Careerprizemoney:$698,887
Singlesrecord:40–56
Singlestitles:0
Highestsinglesranking:No. 51 (10 March 1997)
Australianopenresult:1R (1997, 1998)
Frenchopenresult:1R (1997)
Wimbledonresult:QF (1996)
Usopenresult:3R (1997)
Doublesrecord:8–15
Doublestitles:0
Highestdoublesranking:No. 184 (2 February 1998)
Wimbledondoublesresult:1R (1993)
Updated:4 December 2021

Alex Rădulescu (born 7 December 1974) is a former tennis player from Romania, who competed for Germany.

Rădulescu turned professional in 1995. The righthander reached his highest individual ranking on the ATP Tour on 10 March 1997, when he became World No. 51. At the 1996 Wimbledon tournament Rădulescu had his best finish at a Grand Slam tournament, where he reached the quarterfinals by defeating Arnaud Boetsch, Stefano Pescosolido, David Wheaton and Neville Godwin before losing to MaliVai Washington. He currently coaches at the Tennis-Company in Munich.

Junior Grand Slam finals

Doubles: 1 (1 runner-up)

ATP career finals

Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)

Legend
Grand Slam Tournaments (0–0)
ATP World Tour Finals (0–0)
ATP Masters Series (0–0)
ATP Championship Series (0–0)
ATP World Series (0–1)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–1)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
Finals by setting
Outdoors (0–1)
Indoors (0–0)

ATP Challenger and ITF Futures Finals

Singles: 6 (4–2)

Legend
ATP Challenger (3–2)
ITF Futures (1–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (1–2)
Clay (1–0)
Grass (1–0)
Carpet (1–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss0–1Gothenburg, SwedenChallengerHard Jeremy Bates2–6, 3–6
Win1–1Andorra la Vella, AndorraChallengerHard Kenneth Carlsen4–6, 6–3, 7–6
Win2–1Velenje, SloveniaChallengerCarpet Oleg Ogorodov7–6, 6–7, 6–3
Win3–1Annenheim, AustriaChallengerGrass David Wheaton6–4, 6–2
Loss3–2Segovia, SpainChallengerHard Radek Štěpánek5–7, 5–7
Win4–2Poland F1, WrocławFuturesClay Darko Madjarovski2–6, 6–1, 6–2

Doubles: 2 (2–0)

Legend
ATP Challenger (2–0)
ITF Futures (0–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–0)
Clay (1–0)
Grass (1–0)
Carpet (0–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Win1–0Bristol, United KingdomChallengerGrass Pietro Pennisi Massimo Bertolini
Dick Norman
6–4, 7–5
Win2–0Prague, Czech RepublicChallengerClay Andrei Pavel Eyal Ran
Glenn Wilson
6–4, 6–2

Performance timeline

Singles

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Tournament199319941995199619971998SRW–LWin%
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenAAAA1R1R0 / 20–2
French OpenQ3AQ3Q11RA0 / 10–1
WimbledonQ1AAQF3R1R0 / 36–3
US OpenAAA1R3R1R0 / 32–3
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–00–04–24–40–30 / 98–9
ATP Masters Series
Indian WellsAAAQ1AA0 / 00–0
MiamiAQ11R1R1RA0 / 30–3
RomeAAQ3A1RA0 / 10–1
HamburgQ2Q2Q1Q22RA0 / 11–1
StuttgartAAA1RQ1Q20 / 10–1
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–00–10–21–30–00 / 61–6