Gastón Gaudio
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nickname | El Gato | |
Country | Argentina | |
Residence | Buenos Aires, Argentina | |
Date of birth | 9 December 1978 | |
Place of birth | Buenos Aires, Argentina | |
Height | 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) | |
Weight | 155 lb (70 kg) | |
Turned Pro | 1996 | |
Plays | Right; One-handed backhand | |
Career Prize Money | $5,831,477 | |
Singles | ||
Career record: | 265-180 | |
Career titles: | 8 | |
Highest ranking: | No. 5 (25 April 2005) | |
Grand Slam results | ||
Australian Open | 3rd round (2005, 2006) | |
French Open | W (2004) | |
Wimbledon | 2nd round (2002, 2006) | |
U.S. Open | 3rd round (2002, 2006) | |
Doubles | ||
Career record: | 25-37 | |
Career titles: | 3 | |
Highest ranking: | No. 78 (14 June 2004) |
Gastón Gaudio (born December 9, 1978 in Temperley, Buenos Aires), nicknamed El Gato (The Cat in Spanish), is a professional tennis player from Argentina. His career-high ATP Entry ranking was #5 (4/25/20050.
Gaudio is one of the most unpredictable players in the modern game, as he is capable of spectacular shotmaking especially with his outstanding single hand backhand and clever dropshots and within a short timeframe can self-destruct, which leaves himself and tennis fans in general frustrated with his inability to attain a level consistently enough and something that Gaudio acknowledges. “"I always think that I am my worst opponent. I always play against myself first and then against the other one. So I'm playing against two guys during the match...It's like mentally I don't know what is going to happen in the next ten minutes. Maybe I get depressed in ten minutes. I don't know myself too much...Yeah, I was working with a psychiatrist (sic), and I still do.” [1]
Contents |
[edit] Tennis Career
Gaudio started playing tennis at the age of 6 and was ranked second in the Argentine juniors behind Mariano Zabaleta. He turned professional in 1996 and in 1998 he won two ATP Challenger event in Santa Cruz, Bolivia over Luis Adrian Morejon and finished year by winning in Santiago defeating Karim Alami.
[edit] 1999
Gaudio won two consecutive Challengers in Nice and Espinho defeating Jacobo Diaz and Markus Hipfl respectively. Gaudio's first notable performance was when he reached the third round at the French Open as a qualifer, so he won 5 matches in total at the event, including coming back from 2 sets down to love in the second round against Bernd Karbacher to win 6-7(3) 4-6 6-3 6-1 6-4, then losing to world number 6 Alex Corretja in the next round .
[edit] 2000
2000 saw Gaudio establish himself on the main tour and won his only challenger for the year in Braunschweig over countryman Franco Squillari 6-4 6-7(2) 6-4 .In addition to his Challenger title, Gaudio made semi finals in Auckland, Santiago and in his most impressive performance of the season was his semi final appearance in the Monte Carlo Masters where he defeated Marat Safin, Felix Mantilla, Julien Boutter and Juan Carlos Ferrero without losing a set, before losing to Dominik Hrbaty. Gaudio made the final of the Stuttgart even losing in 5 sets to Franco Squillari and played in the Olympic Games losing to Vladimir Voltchkov in the first round.
[edit] 2001
Gaudio made his Davis Cup debut in and helped Argentina return to the World Group after a 5-0 winning record in his singles matches which were all played at home on clay. While there was no debut title, he made the final in Viña del Mar losing to bitter rival Guillermo Coria , he would avenge that defeat to Coria in a hard fought contest in the quarter finals of the Buenos Aires Open, which involved both players making gestures and insulting each other at regular intervals after this victory he lost in the semi finals to Jose Acasuso . On the hardcourts he made the quarter finals in the Miami Masters defeating Yevgeny Kafelnikov and Juan Carlos Ferrero along the way.
[edit] 2002
Continuing on from his successful Davis Cup debut. In 2002 Gaudio defeated Ivo Karlovic in the fifth match to secure a semi final place for Argentina. Gaudio won first ATP tournament in Barcelona without losing a set where he defeated world #1 Lleyton Hewitt in the semi finals and then trashed Albert Costa 6-4 6-0 6-2 in the final, who later would become the French Open champion that year. Gaudio followed up the title in Barcelona by winning Mallorca the next week where he defeated world #2 Gustavo Kuerten in the semi finals before defeating the Finn Jarkko Nieminen in the final 6-2 6-3.
Gaudio made the fourth round of the French Open losing to Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-7 6-1 6-7 6-2 6-4, while leading 4-1 in the final set and this inability to close out matches when in a winning position has been a constant fixture in his career. After Roland Garros Gaudio made the final in Gstaad and the semi finals in Kitzbühel losing on both occasions to Alex Corretja. In the Davis Cup semi final against Russia Gaudio was leading 5-1 in the 5th set against Yevgeny Kafelnikov and had a match point which was overruled by umpire Jorge Dias in Kafelnikov’s favour who then went on to take the set 8-6 and the match.
[edit] 2003
There were no titles for Gaudio in 2003, but he was involved in two controversies, the first of them involved Guillermo Coria in the Hamburg Masters, where they were part of an all-Argentine semi final line up the others being David Nalbandian and Agustin Calleri. Gaudio and Coria played in one semi final and after Coria won the first set and then Gaudio won the second set. Coria took an injury timeout for cramps and then after the timeout, Coria, after breaking serve at the change of ends beats his left breast while staring at his opponent, which Gaudio took as an insult. Coria preceded to win the last 6-0 and was moving around the court without problems and there was allegedly a confrontation after the match in the locker room. [2]
The other was the Davis Cup semi final against Spain in Málaga, where the two top players David Nalbandian and Guillermo Coria where unavailable due to injury. An out of form Gaudio was called up along with Agustin Calleri, Mariano Zabaleta and Lucas Arnold. Spain won 3-2, but Gaudio lost both of his matches easily to Juan Carlos Ferrero losing 14 games in a row in a 6-4 6-0 6-0 defeat and in the fifth match against Carlos Moya 6-1 6-4 6-2 and was roundly criticised back in Argentina for these performances. [3]
[edit] 2004
2004 started slowly for Gaudio and after reaching the final in Barcelona losing to Tommy Robredo in 5 sets and on the back of two victories in the World Team Cup over Martin Verkerk and Lleyton Hewitt. Gaudio came into the French Open ranked 44th and was unseeded for the tournament after defeating compatriot Guillermo Cañas over 2 days in 5 sets, then he won another 5 set match against Jiří Novák, then Thomas Enqvist, Igor Andreev and Lleyton Hewitt were dismissed on route to the semi finals, where three out of four semi finalists were Argentine and then defeated Nalbandian in 3 sets.
In the all-Argentine final Gaudio defeated Guillermo Coria 0-6 3-6 6-4 6-1 8-6 Gaudio became the first Argentine to win a Grand Slam since Guillermo Vilas, in 1977, the first man to win a Grand Slam after losing the first 6-0. He became the fifth lowest ranked player to win a Grand Slam, the first man in 70 years to win a Grand Slam saving match points in the final. Gaudio reached the top 10 in the ATP Entry rankings for the first time. He then went onto make 3 more consecutive finals in his next tournaments in Båstad. Stuttgart and Kitzbühel and made his first appearance at the Tennis Masters Cup where had 0-3 record.
[edit] 2005
Gaudio consolidated his top 10 ranking in 2005, by winning 5 tournaments and his 42-8 on clay only second to Nadal. Gaudio and Coria were at the centre of another dispute at the World Team Cup where Gaudio said "Let's be truthful, this isn't a team, because there's someone who makes decisions choosing the best for himself. I can understand that a player gets tired and decides to rest before Paris. I also did so on Tuesday against the Czechs but not in the most important match of all. Coria and I were the best team and if we were a real team this wouldn't have happened." [1]
He lost in fourth round of Roland Garros to David Ferrer after leading 4-0 in the 5th set and losing 6 consecutive games, when leading in the 5th set Gaudio said to Ferrer’s coach at one point."Don't worry; I'm not going to win today”. Gaudio also qualified again for the Tennis Masters Cup where he made the semi finals defeating Mariano Puerta and Fernando Gonzalez and lost to Nikolay Davydenko in the round robin, before losing to Roger Federer 6-0 6-0 in the semi finals.
[edit] 2006-2007
Gaudio was not been able to keep up his level of play to the standards he set from mid 2004 to 2005. His best performances for 2006 have included semi finals in Acapulco and the Monte Carlo Masters and he finished the year ranked at 34.
Continuing on from his 3rd round loss at the 2006 US Open to Marc Gicquel, Gaudio started 2007 poorly and lost 8 consecutive matches stretching back to 2006 before recording a victory over Luis Horna who retired from the match with a strained hamstring, but Gaudio followed up with a conventional win against Juan Pablo Guzman before losing to Juan Carlos Ferrero in the quarter finals of Acapulco.
[edit] Trivia
- Gaudio's one-handed backhand, has been praised by Guillermo Vilas for its high quality.
- He is engaged to Argentine actress Marcela Kloosterboer.
- Gaudio played football and rugby as well as tennis as a child and chose tennis to help out his parents financially when their business ran into economic problems. [4]
- He is a passionate fan of Independiente football club.
- His mother is from Galicia.
- The only 5 set matches he has won have all been at Roland Garros, has not won a match that has gone into the 5th set away from Roland Garros.
[edit] Quotes
- On his compatariots David Nalbandian and Guillermo Coria. "They are the 'galácticos,' the Real Madrid team and I am Valencia". [5]
- Mariano Zabaleta said this about Gaudio winning Roland Garros. “I have known Gastón since I was 10 years old. He is a friend like the friends I have of all my life. With him or Juan Chela, friendship goes far away from tennis. The truth is that what happened to him is unbelievable because winning Roland Garros is everyone of us' dream. When I saw him crying on TV, I cried too. And my mother dropped a lot of tears; she was deeply touched because she loves him like a son.” [6]
- After losing to Massu in the US Open 2003: “Today I’d have lost even against my mother.”
- After the Mercedes Cup in Stuttgart: “I want to come next year and win. If I don't get the car I'm going to steal it!”
- At the Roland Garros press conference after he won in 2004 "It is 100-percent satisfaction. When I returned to Buenos Aires after playing Davis Cup in Moscow and Málaga, you had the impression it was my fault and that hurt me," he said. "That's why I have enjoyed this moment twice as much because there are many people who have helped me through my difficult moments. Now it's like a revenge."
- When Fred Stolle asked him about his footfaults . Stolle said “Why don’t you stand back from the line a bit”. Gaudio said “Yes, I had never thought of that before”.
- When asked how one could stop Federer winning his third straight Masters Cup title: "I think maybe you should ask someone else. Don't ask me." [7]
[edit] Performance timeline
Tournament | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | Career |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australian Open | 1r | 3r | 3r | 2r | 2r | 3r | 1r | 1r | - | 0 |
French Open | 4r | 4r | W | 3r | 4r | 1r | 2r | 3r | 1 | |
Wimbledon | 2r | - | - | 1r | 2r | 1r | 1r | 1r | 0 | |
US Open | 3r | 1r | 2r | 1r | 3r | 1r | 1r | 1r | 0 | |
Tennis Masters Cup | - | SF | 1r | - | - | - | - | - | 0 |
[edit] Grand Slam singles finals
[edit] Wins (1)
Year | Championship | Opponent in Final | Score in Final |
2004 | French Open | Guillermo Coria | 0-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1, 8-6 |
[edit] Titles (8)
Legend (Singles) |
Grand Slam (1) |
Tennis Masters Cup (0) |
ATP Masters Series (0) |
ATP Tour (7) |
[edit] Singles Titles (8)
No. | Date | Tournament | Surface | Opponent | Score |
1. | 22-04-2002 | Barcelona,Spain | Clay | Albert Costa (Spain) | 6-4 6-0 6-2 |
2. | 29-04-2002 | Mallorca,Spain | Clay | Jarkko Nieminen (Finland) | 6-2 6-3 |
3. | 24-05-2004 | French Open | Clay | Guillermo Coria (Argentina) | 0-6 3-6 6-4 6-1 8-6 |
4. | 31-01-2005 | Viña del Mar,Chile | Clay | Fernando González (Chile) | 6-3 6-4 |
5. | 07-02-2005 | Buenos Aires,Argentina | Clay | Mariano Puerta (Argentina) | 6-4 6-4 |
6. | 01-05-2005 | Estoril,Portugal | Clay | Tommy Robredo (Spain) | 6-1 2-6 6-1 |
7. | 04-07-2005 | Gstaad,Switzerland | Clay | Stanislas Wawrinka (Switzerland) | 6-4 6-4 |
8. | 31-07-2005 | Kitzbühel,Austria | Clay | Fernando Verdasco (Spain) | 2-6 6-2 6-4 6-4 |
[edit] Singles finalist (8)
- 2000: Stuttgart (lost to Franco Squillari)
- 2001: Vina del Mar (lost to Guillermo Coria)
- 2002: Gstaad (lost to Alex Corretja)
- 2004: Barcelona (lost to Tommy Robredo)
- 2004: Båstad (lost to Mariano Zabaleta)
- 2004: Stuttgart (lost to Guillermo Canas)
- 2004: Kitzbühel (lost to Nicolas Massu)
- 2005: Stuttgart (lost to Rafael Nadal)
[edit] Doubles Titles (3)
- 2004: Viña del Mar (with Juan Ignacio Chela)
- 2004: Estoril (with Juan Ignacio Chela)
- 2006: Stuttgart (with Max Mirnyi)
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ A few interesting and funny tennis quotes from the tour - www.tennis-x.com
- ^ "Old insult gives final edge by Linda Pearce", The Age, 2004-06-06.
- ^ "Today McEnroe my inspiration", Sport Africa, 2004-06-07.
- ^ "Tennis Feuds by Paul Fein", Sports Illustrated South Africa, 2006-12-20.
- ^ "French Open tennis : Argentina keeps rewriting history", International Herald Tribune, 2004-06-03.
- ^ "(Spanish) El Gato de Triumfo", Clarin, 2004-06-14.
- ^ "Gaston Gaudio press conference losing to Roger Federer", ASAP Sports, 2005-11-19.
[edit] External links
Association of Tennis Professionals | Top ten South American male tennis players as of April 2, 2007 | |
---|---|
1. Fernando Gonzalez (Chile) (5) • 2. David Nalbandian (Argentina) (12) • 3. Juan Ignacio Chela (Argentina) (23) • 4. Guillermo Cañas (Argentina) (29) • 5. Agustin Calleri (Argentina) (33) • 6. José Acasuso (Argentina) (37) • 7. Gastón Gaudio (Argentina) (43) • 8. Juan Monaco (Argentina) (52) • 9. Nicolás Massú (Chile) (55) • 10. Juan Martín del Potro (Argentina) (58) |