- Chris Guccione
Chris Guccione (born July 30, 1985), is an Australian tennis player from Greenvale, Victoria. The lanky, red-headed Guccione was born to Italian father Santo and Australian mother Diane. Guccione burst onto the scene in the 2004 Medibank International tournament, where he defeated then-recent World No. 1 Juan Carlos Ferrero. Guccione is noted for his good service; he hit 50 aces in a qualifying match at Wimbledon in 2005. - Tomáš Cakl
Tomáš Cakl is a professional male tennis player from the Czech Republic. He turned pro in 2000, and reached a career high singles ranking of #142 in February 2006. He's mostly been playing challenger tournaments. - Olivier Patience
Olivier Patience is a French professional tennis player. His career-high ATP singles ranking was no. 87, on July 19, 2004. During 2006, Patience won 3 ATP Challenger Series tournaments. He registered his best performance in a Grand Slam event to date, when he reached the 3rd round at Roland Garros in 2007. He defeated Jonathan Eysseric in the first round in four sets, and then Mariano Zabaleta 7-5, 6-3, 3-6, 2-6, 6-4, but then lost to Novak Đoković in 5 sets, 6-7, 6-2, … - Guillermo Cañas
Guillermo Ignacio 'Willy' Cañas is an Argentine professional tennis player. He was born in Argentina's capital, Buenos Aires, and named after Argentine tennis star Guillermo Vilas. His highest singles ranking was 8th (June 2005). Canas plays a defensive counter-punching game from the baseline, and utilises his retrieving skills in order to frustrate opponents. He uses a two-handed backhand and his favourite surface is clay, but he is adept on hardcourt and grass too. - Ernests Gulbis
Ernests Gulbis is a tennis player from Latvia. He is currently ranked 86thth in the world for singles, and 195th for doubles. Considered one of the brightest young talents in men's tennis, he is the second-highest ranked player born in 1988 behind Juan Martin Del Potro. Gulbis is coached by Nikola Pilić, the former Yugoslavian tennis player and Croatian Davis Cup captain, and has been training at the Niki Pilic Tennis Academy in Germany since he was 12. - Sam Querrey
Sam Querrey (born October 7, 1987 in San Francisco, California, United States) is a pro American tennis player from Thousand Oaks, California. Many tennis experts have touted Querrey as America's next great talent, including Davis Cup Captain Patrick McEnroe. Querrey stands at 6'6, 200 pounds. He has a huge serve and forehand. Querrey turned down a scholarship offer from USC to turn pro. - Evgeny Korolev
Evgeny Korolev is a Russian tennis player; also the cousin of retired Russian player Anna Kournikova. He began playing tennis at age four with his father and picked up his first ATP points at age 15 in three German Challengers. He can speak Russian, German, English and Spanish. He is currently the second-youngest member of the Top 100, behind only Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina. - Noam Okun
Noam Okun (born April 16 1978, in Haifa, Israel) is a professional tennis player. In 2002, Okun reached a career-high singles ranking of # 95 in the world. Okun has won several challenger tournaments in his career and has been a consistent competitor on the tour, often qualifying for major events like Grand Slam (tennis). - Fabio Fognini
"' (born May 24, 1987 in Sanremo) is a professional tennis player from Italy. Fognini is 2-9 and 0-1 on non-Challenger ATP tour matches, however has made the finals of three singles and one doubles tournament on the ATP Challenger tour. As of and on June 25, 2007, Fognini has reached World Number 147"', his highest singles ranking. Fognini weighs 163 pounds and is 5 feet 10 inches tall. He currently resides in Arma di Taggia, Italy. - Janko Tipsarević
Janko Tipsarević is a Serbian tennis player. In his career, he won two Futures and nine tournaments from ATP Challenger Series. Tipsarević also won Junior 2001 Australian Open title. He is currently ranked No. 47 player on ATP singles rankings; and second Serbian tennis player, after Novak Đoković. - Vince Spadea
Vincent Spadea (born July 4, 1974 in Chicago) is an ATP Tour professional tennis player from the United States. Spadea turned professional in 1993. Going into the 2006 season, he has won one singles and three doubles titles and over $4,105,000 in prize money. He is credited with overcoming the longest losing streak in pro tennis history (21 matches). Working hard on the challenger circuit after his fall, … - Frederic Niemeyer
Frederic Niemeyer is a tour and Davis Cup tennis player. Niemeyer resides in Deauville, Quebec. He i s currently the World No. 275 in singles. His career ATP tour record (for International Series events or better) is 10-23. The 6'3, right-handed Niemeyer joined the challenger circuit in 1998. His best results have been winning the 1999 Urbana, 2001 São Paulo-1, 2005 Joplin, 2005 Forest Hills, 2006 Santa Clarita, California, and 2007 Cardiff ATP Challenger Series events. - Noam Behr
Noam Behr (born on October 13, 1975, in Tel Aviv, Israel) is an Israeli left-handed professional tennis player who turned pro in 1994. His career high singles ranking was # 127 (October 2001), and his career high doubles ranking was # 109 (October 1999). - Wang Yeu-Tzuoo
Wang Yeu-tzuoo, (born February 8, 1985 in Saudi Arabia) is a professional tennis player from Taiwan. He also goes by the nickname "Jimmy". As of March 6, 2005, Wang is the highest ranked player from Taiwan, and #85 in world in the ATP rankings. The righthander stands 5 feet 10 inches and weighs 141 pounds. Wang's trademark look is his wearing a white baseball cap backwards. - Eyal Ran
Eyal Ran (born on November 21, 1972, in Qiryat Ono, Israel) is a professional right handed Israeli tennis player. His career high ATP ranking in singles was 138 (21-Apr-97), and in doubles it was 71 (11-Oct-99). - Jérôme Haehnel
Jérôme Haehnel is a tennis player who defeated Andre Agassi in the first round of the French Open in 2004. Haehnel's career-high singles ranking is no. 78, which he reached on February 21, 2005. Recently he has been competing in various ATP Challenger Series tournaments around Europe.
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