Carsten Arriens Explained

Carsten Arriens
Residence:Munich, Germany
Birth Date:1969 4, df=yes
Birth Place:Frankfurt, West Germany
Turnedpro:1991
Plays:Right-handed
Careerprizemoney:$314,588
Singlesrecord:28–36
Singlestitles:1
Highestsinglesranking:No. 109 (26 July 1993)
Australianopenresult:Q2 (1995, 1996, 1997, 1998)
Frenchopenresult:2R (1993)
Usopenresult:2R (1995)
Doublesrecord:0–0
Doublestitles:0
Highestdoublesranking:No. 892 (19 November 2001)
Updated:22 April 2022

Carsten Arriens (born 11 April 1969) is a former professional tennis player from Germany.

Career

Arriens played his first tournament on the ATP Tour in 1991, at the Geneva Open, where he upset world number 33 Omar Camporese.

In 1992 he won the Guarujá Open, as a qualifier. It would be his only tour title. He also reached the quarter-finals in Long Island.

At the 1993 French Open, Arriens won his first Grand Slam match, outlasting Thomas Enqvist in five sets. He was then defeated by MaliVai Washington in the second round.[1] He had a quiet year in 1994, with his best result being a quarter-final appearance in the Athens International.

In 1995, while playing New Zealander Brett Steven in the opening round of the French Open, Arriens became the first player in the Open era to be disqualified from the French championships. Upon losing the second set, to level the match at 1–1, the German threw his racquet into the net in frustration, from the baseline. He received a warning from Andreas Egli, the chair umpire, but after retrieving his racquet again hurled it away, this time at his chair. It however struck a linesman on his lower leg and the tournament referee was called, which culminated in Arrien's disqualification.[2]

Also that year, Arriens made the second round of the US Open, with a win over Karol Kučera and then came up against fourth seed Boris Becker, who beat him in straight sets. He made three quarter-finals in the 1995 ATP Tour, at Dubai, Oporto and Scottsdale. In Dubai he defeated world number seven Alberto Berasategui.[3]

He has coached several players including Andreas Beck, Louk Sorensen and Alexander Waske.

He was Team captain of the Germany Davis Cup team from 2013 to 2014.

ATP career finals

Singles: 1 (1 title)

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 (1–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (1–0)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
Finals by setting
Outdoors (1–0)
Indoors (0–0)

ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals

Singles: 3 (1–2)

Legend
ATP Challenger (1–1)
ITF Futures (0–1)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–0)
Clay (0–2)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (1–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss0-1Buenos Aires, ArgentinaChallengerClay Juan Gisbert-Schultze1–6, 6–7
Win1-1Kyoto, JapanChallengerCarpet Mahesh Bhupathi3–6, 6–2, 7–6
Loss1-2Germany F10, AlbstadtFuturesClay Daniel Elsner3–6, 2–6

Doubles: 1 (1–0)

Legend
ATP Challenger (0–0)
ITF Futures (1–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (1–0)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)

Performance timeline

Singles

Tournament1992199319941995199619971998SRW–LWin%
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenAAAQ2Q2Q2Q20 / 00–0
French OpenA2RA1RQ3Q3A0 / 21–2
WimbledonAAAAAAA0 / 00–0
US OpenA1RA2RAQ2A0 / 21–2
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–01–20–01–20–00–00–00 / 42–4
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
Indian WellsAAAQ1Q1AA0 / 00–0
Miami1RAAQ1Q1AA0 / 10–1
HamburgAAAAQ2AA0 / 00–0
RomeAQ1AAQ1AA0 / 00–0
CanadaAAAQ1AAA0 / 00–0
StuttgartAAAAQ1AA0 / 00–0
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–10–00–00–00–00–00–00 / 10–1

Notes and References

  1. http://www.itftennis.com/procircuit/players/player/profile.aspx?playerid=10000058 ITF Tennis Profile
  2. New Straits Times, "Germany's Arriens thrown out", 1 June 1995
  3. http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/Ar/C/Carsten-Arriens.aspx#bioGridDoubles ATP World Tour Profile