Mariano Zabaleta Explained

Mariano Zabaleta
Residence:Tandil, Argentina
Birth Date:1978 2, df=y
Birth Place:Tandil, Argentina
Turnedpro:1996
Retired:2010
Plays:Right-handed (double-handed backhand)
Careerprizemoney:US$3,204,127
Singlesrecord:202–213
Singlestitles:3
Highestsinglesranking:No. 21 (3 April 2000)
Australianopenresult:3R (2000)
Frenchopenresult:4R (2002, 2003)
Wimbledonresult:1R (2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2007)
Usopenresult:QF (2001)
Othertournaments:yes
Olympicsresult:3R (2000)
Doublesrecord:12–35
Doublestitles:0
Highestdoublesranking:No. 174 (7 July 2003)
Australianopendoublesresult:1R (2003, 2005, 2006)
Frenchopendoublesresult:1R (2003, 2007)
Wimbledondoublesresult:2R (2003)
Usopendoublesresult:1R (2004, 2005)
Othertournamentsdoubles:yes
Olympicsdoublesresult:1R (2000, 2004)
Updated:14 January 2022

Mariano Zabaleta (born 28 February 1978) is a retired professional male tennis player from Argentina. He had an unusual but effective service motion. His best shot was his forehand and his favourite surface was clay. Zabaleta's career highlights include reaching the quarter-finals of the 2001 US Open and the final of the 1999 Hamburg Masters. He achieved a career-high singles ranking of World No. 21.

Tennis career

Juniors

Zabaleta was an outstanding junior in 1995 and finished the year as No. 1 with a junior career singles record of 84–7 (also reaching as high as No. 10 in doubles), with his only loss in 1995 being to Peter Wessels in the quarter-finals of the US Open.

Zabaleta won three of the major junior events in 1995. The Italian Open juniors without losing a set against Martin Lee in the final 6–4, 6–2 and followed that up with French Open juniors which was also achieved without dropping a set and he defeated compatriot Mariano Puerta 6–2, 6–3 as he had done four times in 1995 and not losing a set in the process. Zabaleta finished his junior career with victory in the Orange Bowl over Tommy Haas 6–2, 3–6, 6–1 and that was the only set he dropped in the tournament.[1]

Pro tour

Zabaleta struggled initially with the transition from juniors to seniors. In 1996 he won his first Challenger event in Birmingham, Alabama over Bill Behrens 6–4, 6–4 and his quarter final performance in Bournemouth was his best showing on the main tour.

In 1997, he made the final of the Guayaquil Challenger losing to Tomas Nydahl. In 1998 Zabaleta reached the third round of the French Open as a qualifier and defeated the number 2 player in the world and reigning Australian Open champion Petr Korda 6–0, 6–2, 3–6, 4–6, 6–3 before losing to Hicham Arazi. Later in the year Zabaleta made his first semifinal in Amsterdam losing to Magnus Norman and then in November he won his first ATP title as a senior at Bogotá defeating Ramón Delgado 6–4, 6–4 in the final.

In 1999, Zabaleta was a finalist on three occasions without winning a title, his best performance was reaching the final of the Hamburg Masters against Marcelo Ríos. Zabaleta had matchpoint in the fourth set and lost the set in the tiebreak and lost the match 7–6(5), 5–7, 7–5, 6–7(5), 2–6. Zabaleta lost to Rios again in St Pölten and in Amsterdam to Younes El Aynaoui.

Zabaleta reached the third round of the 2000 Australian Open his best ever showing at the event before losing to Andre Agassi, but he was involved in an Americas Zone Group Davis Cup tie with rivals Chile in Santiago when Zabaleta was leading 7–5, 2–6, 7–6(1) 3–1, when sections of the Chilean crowd incensed by what was perceived to be bad calls against Nicolás Massú threw missiles, fruits, coins, bottles, plastic chairs among other things. Zabaleta's father was hurt in the disturbances and required 10 stitches and the Argentines did not complete the tie after they were escorted from the court by police.[2] Zabaleta reached the third round of the Olympics in Sydney defeating Marcelo Ríos and Jeff Tarango before losing to Max Mirnyi.

While there were no titles in 2001 and 2002 for Zabaleta, he achieved his best ever Grand Slam performance surprisingly at the US Open where he made the quarter-finals on a fast hardcourt, whereas most of success has come on the clay. He defeated Sébastien Grosjean who was in the top 10 at the time, in the first round, then Taylor Dent, Greg Rusedski and Xavier Malisse were beaten before Marat Safin ended his run. He also reached the fourth round of the 2002 French Open defeating top 10 player Yevgeny Kafelnikov and falling to Àlex Corretja.

2003 was Zabaleta's best year overall with a 33–25 record and for the first time a positive record on both hardcourt 12–11 and on clay 20–11. He made the semis in Auckland and Scottsdale losing to Gustavo Kuerten and Mark Philippoussis respectively, he made first his final since 1999 at Acapulco in the process avenging the defeat in Auckland by Gustavo Kuerten in the semi-finals before losing to Agustín Calleri.

Zabaleta matched his fourth round showing from the previous year at the French Open losing to Guillermo Coria in a match that lasted over 4 hours and 41 minutes and went to 5 sets. Then Zabaleta won his second title in Båstad defeating Nicolás Lapentti 6–3, 6–4. At the after match presentation the organisers played a recording of the ABBA song "Money, Money, Money" that Zabaleta made with Younes El Aynaoui which the crowd enjoyed and had a good laugh about.[3] Zabaleta followed up with a semi final in Kitzbühel losing to reigning French Open champion Juan Carlos Ferrero.

In 2004, Zabaleta had defended his title in Båstad against childhood friend and French Open champion Gastón Gaudio 6–1, 4–6, 7–6(4). He made the semi-finals of the Italian Open defeating Tim Henman and Nicolás Massú who were both in the top 15 at the time, before losing to Carlos Moyà. He also had quarter final appearances in Viña del Mar, Buenos Aires and Kitzbühel.

Zabaleta started 2005 with quarter final appearances in Viña del Mar losing to Fernando González. After pushing the world number 1 Roger Federer to 3 sets in Miami Masters. In the third round of the Monte Carlo Masters, Zabaleta was leading David Ferrer by a set and had to be carried off the court with a foot injury which kept him out for two months and he missed the French Open in the process. He came back to play in Båstad and lost in the quarter-finals to Tomáš Berdych and made the semi-finals in Kitzbühel and after a series of poor results, then he had surgery on his knee.

Zabaleta continued to suffer knee problems in 2006 and finished outside the top 100 for the first time since 1997. He started 2007 by winning the La Serena Challenger defeating Juan-Pablo Brzezicki and was a finalist in Florianópolis losing to Óscar Hernández. After qualifying for the U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships, Zabaleta reached the final without losing a set and in the process defeated both finalists from 2006 Mardy Fish and Jürgen Melzer before losing to Croat Ivo Karlović. Zabaleta won the Bermuda Challenger and with this victory took him back inside the top 100 in the ATP rankings.

In 2008, Zabaleta suffered very poor results, which led to him dropping beyond top 1000. In March 2009, he lost the 2009 Challenger de Providencia final in Santiago de Chile against countryman Máximo González.

After playing on the Challenger circuit in 2009, Zabaleta retired from tennis in 2010 and is now taking part on a TV show on ESPNhttp://www.fuebuena.com.ar/?p=8047

Personal and miscellaneous

In 2004 he started his own show called Tenis Pro in which he takes the video camera with him to all the tournaments and highlights life on tour in a light hearted manner and along with Juan Ignacio Chela conduct various interviews with other players, along with other various skits.

It is worth noting that Zabaleta has no relation to the former West Ham United and Manchester City footballer Pablo Zabaleta, although the latter was interviewed by the former for a football website.[4]

Junior Grand Slam finals

Singles: 1 (1 title)

ATP career finals

Singles: 8 (3 titles, 5 runner-ups)

Legend
Grand Slam Tournaments (0–0)
ATP World Tour Finals (0–0)
ATP World Tour Masters Series (0–1)
ATP Championship Series (0–1)
ATP World Series (3–3)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–0)
Clay (3–5)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
Finals by setting
Outdoors (3–5)
Indoors (0–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Win1–0Bogotá, ColombiaInternational SeriesClay Ramón Delgado6–4, 6–4
Loss1–1Hamburg, GermanyMasters SeriesClay Marcelo Ríos7–6(7–5), 5–7, 7–5, 6–7(5–7), 2–6
Loss1–2St Pölten, AustriaInternational SeriesClay Marcelo Ríos4–4 ret.
Loss1–3Amsterdam, NetherlandsWorld SeriesClay Younes El Aynaoui0–6, 3–6
Loss1–4Acapulco, MexicoChampionship SeriesClay Agustín Calleri5–7, 6–3, 3–6
Win2–4Båstad, SwedenInternational SeriesClay Nicolás Lapentti6–3, 6–4
Win3–4Båstad, SwedenInternational SeriesClay Gastón Gaudio6–1, 4–6, 7–6(7–4)
Loss3–5Houston, United StatesInternational SeriesClay Ivo Karlović4–6, 1–6

ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals

Singles: 7 (3–4)

Legend
ATP Challenger (3–4)
ITF Futures (0–0)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–0)
Clay (3–4)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
ResultW–LDateTournamentTierSurfaceOpponentScore
Win1–0Birmingham, United StatesChallengerClay Bill Behrens6–4, 6–4
Loss1–1Guayaquil, EcuadorChallengerClay Tomas Nydahl0–6, 3–6
Loss1–2Guayaquil, EcuadorChallengerClay Sergio Roitman3–6, 6–4, 1–6
Win2–2La Serena, ChileChallengerClay Juan-Pablo Brzezicki6–2, 6–4
Loss2–3Florianopolis, BrazilChallengerClay Óscar Hernández5–7, 6–7(6–8)
Win3–3Paget, BermudaChallengerClay Frank Dancevic7–5, 5–7, 6–3
Loss3–4Santiago, ChileChallengerClay Máximo González4–6, 3–6

Performance Timelines

Singles

Tournament19961997199819992000200120022003200420052006200720082009SRW–L
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenAAA2R3R2R1R1RA2R1RA1RA0 / 85–8
French OpenQ21R3R1R2R1R4R4R2RAQ22RAQ10 / 911–9
WimbledonAAAA1R1R1R1RAAA1RAA0 / 50–5
US OpenAAA1RAQF1R1R1R1R1R1RAA0 / 84–8
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–12–11–33–35–43–43–41–21–20–21–30–10–00 / 3020–30
ATP Masters Series
Indian WellsA1RA1R3RA1R2R1R1RAAAA0 / 73–7
MiamiA1RA1R3R1R1R1R2R3RAAAA0 / 84–8
Monte CarloAAA1R2RQ11R1R1R3RAAAA0 / 63–6
HamburgAAAbgcolor=thistleFQFQ23R3R2RAAQ1ANM10 / 513–5
Rome1RQ1A1R2RQ2A2Rbgcolor=yellowSFAAAAA0 / 56–5
CanadaAAAA1RA2R2R1RAAAAA0 / 42–4
CincinnatiAAAA1RA1RQF2RAAAAA0 / 44–4
Madrid1AAAQFAA1R1RQ1AAAAA0 / 33–3
ParisAAA1RAA1R1R1RAAAAA0 / 40–4
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–10–20–08–78–70–13–88–97–84–30–00–00–00–00 / 4638–46
Year-end ranking10325763286159532754832431041141292

1This event was held in Stuttgart from 1996 through 2001.

Doubles

Tournament199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007SRW–LWin %
Grand Slam tournaments
Australian OpenAAAAAAA1RA1R1RA0 / 30–3
French OpenAAAAAAA1RAAA1R0 / 20–2
WimbledonAAAAAAA2RAAAA0 / 11–1
US OpenAAAAAAAA1R1RAA0 / 20–2
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–00–00–00–00–00–01–30–10–20–10–10 / 81–8
Olympic Games
style=background:#EFEFEF align=leftSummer OlympicsANot Heldstyle=background:#afeeee1RNot Heldstyle=background:#afeeee1RNot Held0 / 20–2
ATP Masters Series
RomeQ2AAAAAAAAAAA0 / 00–0
CanadaAAAAAAA1RAAAA0 / 10–1
style=text-align:leftWin–loss0–00–00–00–00–00–00–00–10–00–00–00–00 / 10–1

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Zabaleta Junior Playing Activity. ITF. 2008-05-27.
  2. News: Umpires in the firing line Davis Cup spats.. Referee's Assistant News Channel. 2008-05-27.
  3. News: ATP Insider 2003 . . 2008-05-15.
  4. Web site: Pablo ZABALETA: "With Argentina, you can't fail". Mundo Albiceleste. 23 September 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140723120321/http://mundoalbiceleste.com/Article.aspx?id=2833. 23 July 2014.