Chris Pridham Explained

Chris Pridham
Residence:Oakville, Ontario, Canada
Birth Date:11 April 1965
Birth Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Turnedpro:1985
Plays:Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
Careerprizemoney:$431,272
Singlesrecord:54–78
Singlestitles:0
2 Challenger, 0 Futures
Highestsinglesranking:No. 75 (14 March 1988)
Australianopenresult:3R (1989)
Frenchopenresult:2R (1992)
Wimbledonresult:3R (1988)
Usopenresult:2R (1992)
Othertournaments:yes
Olympicsresult:1R (1988)
Doublesrecord:2–8
Doublestitles:0
1 Challenger, 0 Futures
Highestdoublesranking:No. 234 (25 November 1991)
Wimbledondoublesresult:Q3 (1991, 1992)
Updated:16 December 2021

Chris Pridham (born April 11, 1965) is a former touring professional tennis player.

Pridham had a career Grand Prix / ATP tour win–loss record of 54 and 78. His career high singles ranking was World No. 75, which he attained in March 1988. The 6'0 right-hander's best tournament results were a semi-finals appearance in the 1987 Wellington Classic, and 1992 Johannesburg Grand Prix events. His best Grand Slam event showings was reaching the third rounds of the 1988 Wimbledon championships and the 1989 Australian Open.

1985

Pridham played his first professional match in March 1985 at the Montreal Challenger, going down in 3 sets to World No. 60 Leif Shiras 3–6, 6–3, 3–6. He played one other tour event that year, the Player's International, also in Montreal, where he also fell in the first round, this time to World No. 130 Jonathan Canter 0–6, 6–7.

1986

Pridham played in 8 challenger tennis events and one grand prix event for the 1986, going 4 wins, 8 losses at the challenger level and 0 and 1 in grand prix events. He won his first match of his touring year over World No. 151 Huub Van Boeckel 7–5, 7–6 before losing in the next round, at the Benin City-1 Challenger in February. The following week at the Enugu Challenger he lost in the first round. The following month Pridham fell in the first round at the Rio de Janeiro-1 Challenger and two weeks later he had the same result at the San Luis Potosi Challenger.

Pridham resumed tour play in September, defeating World No. 127 Jon Levine in the first round at the West Palm, FL Challenger before falling to World No. 246 Marc Flur in straight sets. The following week in Athens, Greece he lost World No. 241 Brian Levine in the first round in three sets. Then in November he played in only grand prix event of the year, the Stockholm Open, losing there in the first round as well, to World No. 167 Shahar Perkiss three and three. Pridham then went 1 and 1 the following week at the Helsinki Challenger and again the next week at the Benin-2 Challenger. He finished the year World No. 263 in singles and No. 408 in doubles.

Most notable win defeating Bjorn Borg in 1992.(to come)

Davis Cup

As a Davis Cup player for Canada between 1988 and 1990, Pridham had a career singles win-lose record of 4 and 5.

ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals

Singles: 5 (2–3)

Legend
ATP Challenger (2–3)
ITF Futures (0–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (2–3)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Win1–0Setúbal, PortugalChallengerHard Rikard Bergh6–4, 6–1
Loss1–1Coquitlam, CanadaChallengerHard Ville Jansson4–6, 2–6
Loss1–2Azores, PortugalChallengerHard Francisco Roig3–6, 6–2, 4–6
Loss1–3Ponte Vedra, United StatesChallengerHard Tommy Ho6–7, 4–6
Win2–3Bloomfield Hills, United StatesChallengerHard Tommy Ho6–3, 6–4

Doubles: 1 (1–0)

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

Performance timeline

Singles

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Tournament198519861987198819891990199119921993SRW–LWin %
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenQ1AQ32R3R1RAQ12R0 / 44–4
French OpenAAA1RAAA2RA0 / 21–2
WimbledonAAA3R1RQ1A1RQ20 / 32–3
US OpenAAA1RAAA2RQ10 / 21–2
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–00–03–42–20–10–02–31–10 / 118–11
Olympic Games
Summer OlympicsNot Heldstyle=background:#afeeee1RNot HeldANH0 / 10–1
ATP Masters Series
MiamiAAA2RAAAAA0 / 11–1
Canada1RA2RA1R1R2R3R2R0 / 75–7
CincinnatiAAAAAAAAQ30 / 00–0
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–10–01–11–10–10–11–12–11–10 / 86–8