Jörn Renzenbrink Explained

Jörn Renzenbrink
Itf Name:Joern Renzenbrink
Country: Germany
Birth Date:1972 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Hamburg, West Germany
Turnedpro:1991
Retired:2003
Plays:Right-handed
Careerprizemoney:$504,929
Singlesrecord:34–54
Singlestitles:0
2 Challenger, 0 Futures
Highestsinglesranking:No. 70 (12 September 1994)
Australianopenresult:3R (1994)
Frenchopenresult:1R (1993, 1994, 1995)
Wimbledonresult:2R (1994)
Usopenresult:4R (1994)
Doublesrecord:7–18
Doublestitles:1
0 Challenger, 0 Futures
Highestdoublesranking:No. 153 (17 July 1995)
Updated:11 March 2023

Jörn Renzenbrink (born 17 July 1972) is a retired professional tennis player from Germany.

Career

A right hander, Renzenbrink had his best Grand Slam performance in the 1994 US Open, when he made it into the fourth round. He started his campaign with a straight sets victory over South African Grant Stafford, followed by a four-sets defeat of Morocco's Karim Alami and then a win over Italian Andrea Gaudenzi. In the fourth round he met Jonas Björkman and took him to five sets, but lost.

Renzenbrink never won a singles tournament on the ATP Tour but was runner-up on one occasion, at the 1994 KAL Cup Korea Open. He did however win a doubles title, with fellow German Markus Zoecke, as qualifiers, at the 1995 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships in Newport, Rhode Island.[1]

He won two ATP Challenger Series tournaments during his career, the first in Andorra in 1993 and the other at Aachen in his home country.[2]

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)

Doubles: 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 (0–0)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (1–0)
Carpet (0–0)
Finals by setting
Outdoors (1–0)
Indoors (0–0)

ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals

Singles: 4 (2–2)

Legend
ATP Challenger (2–2)
ITF Futures (0–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (1–2)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (1–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Loss0–1Segovia, SpainChallengerHard Guillaume Raoux6–7, 6–7
Win1–1Andorra la Vella, AndorraChallengerHard Ronald Agenor6–4, 5–7, 6–3
Loss1–2Cologne, GermanyChallengerHard Karsten Braasch4–6, 4–6
Win2–2Aachen, GermanyChallengerCarpet Martin Damm5–7, 6–3, 6–4

Doubles: 2 (0–2)

Legend
ATP Challenger (0–2)
ITF Futures (0–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–1)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–1)
Carpet (0–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Loss0–1Cologne, GermanyChallengerHard Pat Cash Alexander Mronz
Udo Riglewski
4–6, 2–6
Loss0–2Annenheim, AustriaChallengerGrass Karsten Braasch Diego Nargiso
Nicolas Pereira
7–6, 4–6, 6–7

Performance timeline

Singles

Tournament19921993199419951996SRW–LWin %
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenA1R3R1RQ10 / 32–3
French OpenA1R1R1RQ10 / 30–3
WimbledonAQ12R1R1R0 / 31–3
US OpenQ2A4RAQ10 / 13–1
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–26–40–30–10 / 106–10
ATP Masters Series
HamburgA2R2R2R1R0 / 43–4
RomeAAAQ1A0 / 00–0
CanadaAAAA1R0 / 10–1
ParisAAQ2AA0 / 00–0
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–01–11–11–10–20 / 53–5

Notes and References

  1. http://www.atpworldtour.com/en/players/enwiki/R273/overview ATP World Tour Profile
  2. http://www.itftennis.com/procircuit/players/player/profile.aspx?playerid=10002419 ITF Tennis Profile