Todd Reid
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Country | Australia | |
Residence | Melbourne, Australia | |
Date of birth | 3 June 1984 | |
Place of birth | Sydney, Australia | |
Height | 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) | |
Weight | 70 kg (150 lb/11 st) | |
Turned pro | 2002 | |
Plays | Right-handed; two-handed backhand | |
Career prize money | $298,841 | |
Singles | ||
Career record: | 14 - 22 | |
Career titles: | 0 | |
Highest ranking: | 105 (20 September 2004) | |
Grand Slam results | ||
Australian Open | 3rd Round (2004) | |
French Open | 1st Round (2004) | |
Wimbledon | 1st Round (2004) | |
US Open | Never Played | |
Doubles | ||
Career record: | 2-7 | |
Career titles: | 0 | |
Highest ranking: | 305 (10 February 2003) | |
Todd Reid (born 3 June 1984) is an Australian tennis professional. He peaked in the Men's Tour in September 2004, reaching a highest singles rank of 105. His highest doubles rank was 305, which he achieved in February 2003.
Contents |
[edit] Junior Years
As Junior tennis player Todd Reid reached the Australian Open junior final in 2002, he finished runner up to Clement Morel. On his road to the final he defeated Richard Gasquet. Reid's biggest junior moment came at Wimbledon 2002 where he won the title, defeated the likes of Steve Darcis and Frank Dancevic on his way to victory.
[edit] Senior Years
Todd began playing future tournaments in 2001 and won his first future tournament in 2002 in New Zealand. He began playing challenger tournaments after his maiden future victory, with his ranking reaching new heights he made the cut for the qualifying tournament in Nottingham and played his first ATP match against Greg Rusedski after qualifying. Todd Reid's 2004 Australian summer was the biggest highlight of his professional career where he reached the final of a challenger in New Caledonia (losing to Guillermo Canas in the final), made the quaterfinal in Adelaide and Sydney and made the third round of the Australian Open in which he played Sargis Sargsian in the second round, playing through cramping and vomitting to pull out a five set victory on Vodafone Arena.
From around May 2005 Reid dropped out of sight on the professional tour due to injuries, playing only a few Futures events in Victoria, Australia in early 2006.
[edit] Comeback
Todd Reid made his comeback in Spain F16, going down in the finals 6-4, 6-2.
[edit] External links
- ATP Tour profile for Todd Reid
- Davis Cup profile for Todd Reid
- Tennis Australia profile