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 |
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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) | |
| |
Result | W–L | Date | Tournament | Tier | Surface | Opponent | Score |
---|
Loss | 0–1 | | Segovia, Spain | Challenger | Hard | Guillaume Raoux | 6–7, 6–7 |
Win | 1–1 | | Andorra la Vella, Andorra | Challenger | Hard | Ronald Agenor | 6–4, 5–7, 6–3 |
Loss | 1–2 | | Cologne, Germany | Challenger | Hard | Karsten Braasch | 4–6, 4–6 |
Win | 2–2 | | Aachen, Germany | Challenger | Carpet | Martin Damm | 5–7, 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) | |
| |
Performance timeline
Singles
Notes and References
- http://www.atpworldtour.com/en/players/enwiki/R273/overview ATP World Tour Profile
- http://www.itftennis.com/procircuit/players/player/profile.aspx?playerid=10002419 ITF Tennis Profile