Nicolas Kiefer

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Nicolas Kiefer
Nickname(s) Kiwi
Country Flag of Germany Germany
Residence Sievershausen, Germany
Date of birth July 5, 1977 (1977-07-05) (age 30)
Place of birth Holzminden, West Germany
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight 180 lb (82 kg/13 st)
Turned pro 1995
Plays Right-handed; two-handed backhand
Career prize money $6,645,562
Singles
Career record: 338 - 245
Career titles: 6
Highest ranking: No. 4 (January 10, 2000)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open SF (2006)
French Open 4r (2005)
Wimbledon QF (1997)
US Open QF (2000)
Doubles
Career record: 79 - 110
Career titles: 3
Highest ranking: No. 56 (February 17, 2003)

Infobox last updated on: May 19, 2008.

Olympic medal record
Men's tennis
Silver 2004 Athens Doubles

Nicolas Kiefer (born July 5, 1977 in Holzminden), is a tennis player from Germany. His mother, Nicole, is French. He won a silver medal in men's doubles with partner Rainer Schüttler at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.

Kiefer was taken notice of as an outstanding junior. He won the Junior Australian Open, US Open and was a finalist and semi-finalist at Wimbledon and the French Open finishing as the number 2 junior behind Zabaleta when he was 18.

On January 10, 2000 he reached his second quarterfinal at the Australian Open and afterwards was ranked World No. 4, his highest position to date.

Nicolas has been known to have a few tennis superstitions. He is sometimes seen tapping his racquet on the corners of the court after a point, although the reasons behind this are not clear. He also, when serving, frequently asks for the ball with which he has just won a point to re-use it in the next one.

Kiefer became infamous for an incident on January 25, 2006, during the quarter finals of the Australian Open. While facing Sébastien Grosjean late in the fifth set of a marathon match, Kiefer threw his racquet mid-point. Grosjean lost the point, hitting the ball into the net. Grosjean protested that the racquet distracted his shot. The umpire Carlos Bernades said he did not believe the act was intentional and noted Grosjean had already hit the ball before the flying racquet could have had any effect on his shot. Grosjean eventually lost the fifth and final set to Kiefer. Kiefer went through to the semi-finals where he was defeated by the 2004 champion Roger Federer.

Kiefer injured his wrist while playing at the 2006 French Open, and announced his return on July 5, 2007, having fallen to the 404th position on ATP. He announced that he was "tired of waiting and anxious to start traveling again and to see his name on scoreboards". Kiefer returned at the 2007 Gerry Weber Open, losing in the first round to eventual champion Tomáš Berdych. At Wimbledon, he made the third round after defeating #30 seed Filippo Volandri and Fabrice Santoro, both in straight sets, before losing in 4 sets (3 of which were tiebreakers) to Novak Đoković. At Newport, however, he ended up losing in round 1. At Los Angeles, he reached the semifinals in only his 4th tournament since coming back from injury; he had to default against Radek Stepanek, another player coming back from injury, because of an injury sustained during his quarterfinal win. He also made an impressive showing at the 2007 Madrid Masters, where he beat number five seed Fernando González in the quarterfinals before losing in the semifinals to world number one Roger Federer 6–4, 6–4. After the tournament, Kiefer's ranking will be around 62, moving up about fifty positions from 112.

Contents

[edit] Career singles finals (18)

[edit] Wins (6)

Legend
Grand Slam
Tennis Masters Cup
ATP Masters Series
ATP Tour (6)
No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score
1. September 22, 1997 Toulouse, France Hard (i) Flag of Australia Mark Philippoussis 7–5, 5–7, 6–4
3. April 12, 1999 Tokyo, Japan Hard Flag of South Africa Wayne Ferreira 7–6(5), 7–5
3. June 7, 1999 Halle, Germany Grass Flag of Sweden Nicklas Kulti 6–3, 6–2
4. September 13, 1999 Tashkent, Uzbekistan Hard Flag of Switzerland George Bastl 6–4, 6–2
5. February 7, 2000 Dubai, UAE Hard Flag of Spain Juan Carlos Ferrero 7–5, 4–6, 6–3
6. October 2, 2000 Hong Kong Hard Flag of Australia Mark Philippoussis 7–6(4), 2–6, 6–2

[edit] Runner-up (12)

  1. Singapore (1997)
  2. Dubai (1999)
  3. Vienna (1999)
  4. Moscow (2001)
  5. Halle (2002)
  6. Halle (2003)
  7. Memphis (2004)
  8. Scottsdale (2004)
  9. Indianapolis (2004)
  10. Los Angeles (2004)
  11. Moscow (2005)
  12. St. Petersburg (2005)

[edit] External links