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'''Goran Šimun Ivanišević''' [{{IPA|ˈɡɔran ˈiʋaniːʃɛʋitɕ}}] (born [[September 13]], [[1971]] in [[Split]])to father Srdjan and mother Gorana (an ethnic serb) is a former professional [[tennis]] player from [[Croatia]]. He is best remembered for winning the men's singles title at [[The Championships, Wimbledon|Wimbledon]] in [[2001]] (having previously been runner-up at the championships in [[1992]], [[1994]] and [[1998]]). Ivanišević has also played [[football (soccer)|football]] for the Croatian team Hajduk Split in 2001.
'''Goran Šimun Ivanišević''' [{{IPA|ˈɡɔran ˈiʋaniːʃɛʋitɕ}}] (born [[September 13]], [[1971]] in [[Split]])to father Srdjan and mother Gorana is a former professional [[tennis]] player from [[Croatia]]. He is best remembered for winning the men's singles title at [[The Championships, Wimbledon|Wimbledon]] in [[2001]] (having previously been runner-up at the championships in [[1992]], [[1994]] and [[1998]]). Ivanišević has also played [[football (soccer)|football]] for the Croatian team Hajduk Split in 2001.


Ivanišević's name is synonymous with his strong [[serve (tennis)|serve]], which is one of the greatest to date. His career-high singles ranking was World No. 2 (behind [[Pete Sampras]]) in 1994.
Ivanišević's name is synonymous with his strong [[serve (tennis)|serve]], which is one of the greatest to date. His career-high singles ranking was World No. 2 (behind [[Pete Sampras]]) in 1994.

Revision as of 14:32, 18 July 2006

Goran Ivanišević
Goran Ivanišević preparing to serve the ball at Wimbledon, 2004
Country (sports)Croatia
ResidenceMonte Carlo, Monaco
Height193 cm (6ft 4in)
Turned pro1988
Retired2004
PlaysLeft
Prize money$19,876,579
119,963,104 Croatian Kunas
Singles
Career record599 - 333
Career titles22
Highest ranking2 (4 July, 1994)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenQF ('89, '94, '97)
French OpenQF ('92, '94)
WimbledonF ('92, '94, 98), W ('01)
US OpenSF ('96)
Doubles
Career record263 - 225
Career titles9
Highest ranking20 (6 January, 1992)

Goran Šimun Ivanišević [ˈɡɔran ˈiʋaniːʃɛʋitɕ] (born September 13, 1971 in Split)to father Srdjan and mother Gorana is a former professional tennis player from Croatia. He is best remembered for winning the men's singles title at Wimbledon in 2001 (having previously been runner-up at the championships in 1992, 1994 and 1998). Ivanišević has also played football for the Croatian team Hajduk Split in 2001.

Ivanišević's name is synonymous with his strong serve, which is one of the greatest to date. His career-high singles ranking was World No. 2 (behind Pete Sampras) in 1994.

Career

Ivanišević turned professional in 1988, and won his first career doubles title later that year in Frankfurt (with Rüdiger Haas).

Ivanišević made his first significant impact on the tennis world in 1990. In the French Open, he knocked-out Boris Becker in the first round of the men's singles and went on to reach the quarter-finals. Becker reportedly remarked about Ivanisevic that "even God could not have played any better". He was also runner-up in the French Open men's doubles (with Petr Korda). A few weeks later at Wimbledon, Ivanišević made it all the way to the semi-finals, where he again met Becker and put up an impressive display before going down in four sets. Becker predicted after the match Ivanišević would be a future Wimbledon champion. Ivanišević also won his tour first singles title in 1990 at Stuttgart, and helped Yugoslavia win the World Team Cup.

Ivanišević quickly became known on the tour for his strong, attacking style of play and for an extremely powerful serve. For several years, he was the leading scorer of aces on the tour. A brilliant player, who was capable of beating anyone in the world when he was at his very best, he was also known for occasional on-court temper tantrums and, from time-to-time, for "tanking" in matches (particularly in final sets) and being blown away by opponents he should have been capable of beating.

Ivanišević lost in the second round at Wimbledon in 1991 and courted controversy during the championships by not only expressing his strong Croatian patriotic sentiments during the period of independence from Yugoslavia, but also urging the top women's player Monica Seles (a Serbia-born ethnic Hungarian) to publicly express her stance, which she refused to do.

In 1992 Ivanišević reached the Wimbledon singles final, where he faced Andre Agassi. Both up-and-coming stars were gunning for their first Grand Slam title. In a dramatic five-set encounter, it was Agassi who eventually won 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4. Later that summer, at the Olympic Games in Barcelona, Ivanišević won Bronze Medals in both singles and doubles for the newly-independent nation of Croatia. He also won four singles titles that year.

Olympic medal record
Men’s Tennis
Bronze medal – third place 1992 Barcelona Singles
Bronze medal – third place 1992 Barcelona Doubles

Ivanišević reached the Wimbledon final for the second time in 1994, where he faced defending-champion Pete Sampras. Ivanišević put up a strong fight in the first two sets, but was then blown away in third as Sampras won 7-6, 7-6, 6-0. Ivanišević reached his career-high singles ranking of World No. 2 in July that year.

In 1995, Ivanišević won the Grand Slam Cup, beating Todd Martin in the final 7-6, 6-3, 6-4. Continuing his strong performances at the Wimbledon tournament, he would reach the semifinals that year, losing to Pete Sampras in a hard fought five set match, 7-6 4-6 6-3 4-6 6-3.

In 1996 he won a career-best five singles titles. He reached the Grand Slam Cup final again, but this time lost to Becker in straight sets. He set a tour record by serving 1,477 aces over the course of the season. Ivanišević also teamed-up with Iva Majoli to win the 1996 Hopman Cup for Croatia. Ivanišević would also reach his first Grand Slam semifinal other than Wimbledon at the U.S. Open that year, falling once again to Pete Sampras in four sets.

In 1998, Ivanišević reached his third Wimbledon final. He faced Sampras again and pushed him to five sets before losing a closely-fought contest 6-7, 7-6, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2. After three final defeats, many people wondered if the man often touted as a future Wimbledon winner would ever fulfill his promise.

Ivanišević finished runner-up in the French Open men's doubles in 1999 (with Jeff Tarango). However for much of 1999, 2000 and 2001, he struggled with a shoulder injury and his performance and world ranking began to steadily slide.

In the summer of 2001, Ivanišević was ranked the World No. 125. This was not good enough to earn him an automatic place in the main draw at Wimbledon but, given his past record as a three-time finalist, the organizers decided to give him a wildcard entry. Against all expectations, he powered his way through the draw to reach the final, setting-up a showdown the previous year's runner-up and former US Open champion Patrick Rafter. (It was the first singles final which Ivanišević had qualified for since 1998.) In an epic struggle lasting three hours and one minute, Ivanišević out-lasted Rafter to win in five sets 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 2-6, 9-7. Just two months shy of his 30th birthday, Ivanišević became the lowest-ranked player and the first wildcard entry to win Wimbledon.[1]

Ivanišević received the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality Award in 2001.

Goran Ivanišević and Mario Ančić playing doubles during the 2004 Queen's Club Championships.

The 2001 Wimbledon win proved to be the last of Ivanišević's career. He temporarily retired later in 2001 due to shoulder surgery, but remained listed at the bottom of the ATP's rankings. He returned to tennis in 2004, but retired permanently after a third-round loss to Lleyton Hewitt at Wimbledon. After the match, he again prominently displayed his Croatian heritage, this time by putting on a Croatia national football team jersey and saying he didn't mind losing as now he could watch Croatia beat England in Euro 2004 (regrettably for him Croatia lost).

Over the course of his career Ivanišević won 22 top-level singles titles and 9 doubles titles.

In 2005 Ivanišević was a member of the Croatian team for the Davis Cup final against Slovakia in Bratislava, though he did not play in any of the match-ups. Croatia won the final 3-2.

In June 2006 he performed in the Calderstones Park tournament in Liverpool.

Quotes

  • "The trouble with me is that every match I play against five opponents: umpire, crowd, ball boys, court, and myself."
  • "I wouldn't want to go to a sports psychiatrist, because when you're finished, you come out more crazy than you go in."
  • "I still break racquets, but now I do it in a positive way."
  • "My fines? I pay more fines than some guys' career prize money on the tour."
  • "I think it's interesting, you have three movies in one match: horror, comedy, drama. It's fun. I enjoy it. I am like that. I don't like to change. And if I could choose, I would be the same again. Just me, and I like who I am."
  • "In every game I play there are three players in me that could surface anytime, Good Goran, Bad Goran, Crazy Goran!"

Trivia

  • In the 1993 US Open, Ivanišević won a third set tie-break against Daniel Nestor 20-18. This tied the record for the longest tie-break (in terms of points) ever played since the tie-break system was introduced in 1970. Ivanišević won another third set 20-18 tie-break in the 1997 Queen's Club semi-final against Greg Rusedski. Besides Ivanišević, only Björn Borg (1st round Wimbledon 1973 against Premjit Lal) and Roger Federer (semi-final, Tennis Masters Cup 2004, against Marat Safin) won such drawn out tie-breaks.
  • Due to his on-court temper outbursts, Ivanišević has often been likened to John McEnroe; in fact, Ivanišević himself said McEnroe was his idol. By coincidence, McEnroe played his last ATP Tour singles match against Ivanišević, at the 1992 Grand Slam Cup.
  • A few months after winning Wimbledon, Goran was given the opportunity to play in a football match for his boyhood team Hajduk Split.
  • In 2004, Goran participated in a reality TV show called The Exchange Office, where he swapped jobs with road sweeper Alojz Pucek and swept streets in Zagreb. Reportedly, eyewitnesses who recognized Goran were utterly shocked, and one even passed out. [2]
  • As a great football fan, Goran also participated in a friendly match of Croatian national team, and he scored a goal.

Grand Slam singles finals

Wins (1)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
2001 Wimbledon Patrick Rafter 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 2-6, 9-7

Runner-ups (3)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
1992 Wimbledon Andre Agassi 7-6, 4-6, 4-6, 6-1, 4-6
1994 Wimbledon Pete Sampras 6-7, 6-7, 0-6
1998 Wimbledon Pete Sampras 7-6, 6-7, 4-6, 6-3, 2-6

Singles titles (22)

  • 1990
    • Stuttgart Outdoor
  • 1991
    • Manchester
  • 1992
    • Adelaide, Stuttgart Indoor, Sydney Indoor, Stockholm
  • 1993
    • Bucharest, Vienna, Paris
  • 1994
    • Kitzbuhel, Tokyo Indoor
  • 1995
    • Grand Slam Cup
  • 1996
    • Zagreb, Dubai, Milan, Rotterdam, Moscow
  • 1997
    • Zagreb, Milan, Vienna
  • 1998
    • Split
  • 2001
    • Wimbledon

Team titles (2)

  • 1996

Hopman Cup Winner with Croatia

  • 2005

Davis Cup Winner with Croatia