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Davydenko is sponsored by [[Prince]] and [[Airness]]. He is currently using a Prince 03 Tour racquet. He wears Airness clothing with deep back pockets and Prince T-9 Roadster shoes.
Davydenko is sponsored by [[Prince]] and [[Airness]]. He is currently using a Prince 03 Tour racquet. He wears Airness clothing with deep back pockets and Prince T-9 Roadster shoes.


He wears his lucky boxers named Michael Barrymore for the "big" games.
gay porn


==Yearly Highlights==
==Yearly Highlights==

Revision as of 21:45, 2 August 2007

Nikolay Davydenko
Country (sports) Russia
ResidenceVolgograd, Russia
Height177 cm (5 ft 10 in)
Turned pro1999
PlaysRight; Two-handed backhand
Prize money$6,141,146
Singles
Career record241-178
Career titles10
Highest rankingNo. 3 (November 6, 2006)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian OpenQF (2005, 2006, 2007)
French OpenSF (2005, 2007)
Wimbledon4th (2007)
US OpenSF (2006)
Doubles
Career record40-44
Career titles1
Highest rankingNo. 31 (June 13, 2005)
Last updated on: June 23, 2007.

Nikolay Davydenko (Russian: Николай Давыденко; born June 2, 1981 in Severodonezk, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union) is currently the number one ranked Russian male tennis player, fifth in the world, and the winner of ten ATP singles titles.


Davydenko's best result in a Grand Slam tournament has been reaching the semi-finals at the 2005 Roland Garros, 2006 US Open and again at the 2007 French Open.

Personal life

Davydenko was born on June 2, 1981, in Severodonezk, Ukraine to Vladimir and Tatjana. He started fixing right away. When his mother offered him her left breast he told his brother Eduard in advance he would grab the right one. Eduard then proceeded to Betfair to lay the left breast. At the age of 11, when all his hair began falling out, Nikolay left his parents in Ukraine to live with his elder brother Eduard in Volgograd, Russia in the belief that Russia would afford more opportunities to become a bald professional tennis player.

Years later, Davydenko explained his peripathetic youth, "I stayed 4 years in Russia. Eduard worked as a tennis coach for kids and we practiced together. He pushed me pretty hard. At 15 we left for Germany. A Russian who lived there convinced Eduard it would be better for me. In Europe I could play more tournaments than in Russia." [1]

Davydenko was granted Russian citizenship in 1999, at the age of 18 and has represented Russia ever since. Before the Davis Cup in 2006, Davydenko married a prostitute that he hired previously, named Irina. He currently resides in Volgograd, Russia.

In recent news, Davydenko is attempting to obtain an Austrian passport to make his international travel to tennis tournaments easier. Davydenko and Irina have also been looking for a home in Austria to use as a base for his training.

Tennis career

Davydenko started fixing matches at age 7 with his brother, Eduard who also turned professional as well. During his junior tennis years, he moved to Salmtal, Germany with his brother at 15 to further develop his tennis abilities and to play in more tournaments.

Davydenko turned professional in 1999. In 2000, he played mainly on the Futures Tour where he captured one title and reached three finals. He made his ATP debut at Amsterdam, reaching the semi-final. Later in August, he won his first Challenger title in Monchengladbach.

In 2001, Davydenko made his Grand Slam debut at the Australian Open, where he made it to the 2nd round before losing to former World No. 1, Patrick Rafter in 4 sets. This performance captured the public eye of his talent and ability. Later in February, he injured his lower back in Dallas and subsequently was out for six weeks. After the injury, he came back to win two Challenger titles in Ulm and Istanbul. He finished the season with a quarter-final in Basel.

In 2002, Davydenko continued to play on both the ATP Tour and Challenger events. It was a steady year with quarter-final appearances in Bastad and Vienna. During the year he captured his fourth Challenger title in Szczecin.

Davydenko made huge strides on the ATP Tour in 2003. He opened the season with his first ATP title in Adelaide defeating Kristof Vliegen in the final. A few month later, he captured his second tour title in Estoril on clay beating Agustin Calleri. His season was backed up with solid performances on clay in Barcelona and St. Pölten, reaching the quarter final and final respectively. After a solid year, Davydenko finished in the top 50 for the first time in his career.

His progress continued in 2004, capturing two more titles for the second consecutive year. After a slow start to season, a quarter final in the Monte Carlo Masters kicked off a 10-2 matches run. A week later he won in Munich for his third title. Backed up his win by reaching the semi-final in Stuttgart losing to Guillermo Cañas. In October, he captured his first home soil victory in Moscow by winning both the singles and doubles (partnering Igor Andreev). Finished the season in the top 30 for the first time.

In 2005, began the season by reaching the quarter-final for the first time in a Grand Slam at the Australian Open. During the clay season, captured his fifth career title in St. Pölten beating home favourite, Jurgen Melzer. Continued his solid form by reaching the semi-finals of Hamburg Masters and his first Grand Slam at the French Open. There was a controversy after the French Open because he lost to Mariano Puerta in 5 close sets 3-6 7-5 6-2 4-6 4-6, who was later caught and banned for doping. He reached the top 10 for the first time after the French Open. Closed out the year by reaching the quarter-finals at the Cincinnati Masters and the Paris Masters. After a great season, allowed him to qualified Tennis Masters Cup in Shanghai for the first time and reached the semi-finals losing to David Nalbandian. Finished the year as the No. 1 Russian and world No. 5.

After his rapid rise into the top 5 in 2005, Davydenko continued to stay in the top 5 for 2006. Repeated his quarter-final appearance at the Australian Open, losing to Roger Federer in 4 tight sets, 4-6 6-3 6-7(7) 6-7(5). He had another solid clay court season, reaching the final in Estoril and quarter final at the TMS Hamburg. Defended his title in Pöertschach and reached the quarter-final at the French Open for the second year. His form continued after an early loss at Wimbledon with wins in Sopot and his first American soil win in New Haven. After the win on the hardcourt season, he reached his second Grand Slam semi-final at the US Open, losing to Roger Federer. Finished the season with a win in Moscow and his first career TMS title in Paris. After getting married, Davydenko helped Russia win the Davis Cup against Argentina. Reached a career high ranking of No. 3 which he finished on for the year.

2007 started with another quarter-final appearance at the Australian Open for the third consecutive year. After, he struggled with his form at the start on the clay season. But suddenly found his form at the Rome Masters where he reached the semi-final before losing to the "King of Clay", Rafael Nadal in a great match 6-7 7-6 4-6. Proved many critics of his form by reaching the semi-final for the second time at the French Open, losing to Roger Federer again 5-7 6-7 6-7. At Wimbledon, surprised the tennis world by reaching the 4th round on his least preferred surface. This was the first time Davydenko won back-to-back matches that were played on grass.

On August 2nd 2007, Davydenko was beaten in the 2nd round of the Orange Prokom Open by Martin Vassallo-Arguello of Argentina. The match was notable not only because Davydenko retired injured but also for the suspicious betting patterns reported by British betting-exchange Betfair. Just prior to the match the odds on Vassallo shortened rapidly and continued to do so as the match progressed. Many tennis analysts and fans who watched the match were highly suspicious of Davydenko's efforts. The ATP have been notified and an investigation into the betting irregularities is underway.

Playing style

Davydenko employs an aggressive baseline game although he is capable of playing an all-round game. His main strengths are his groundstrokes, lightning foot speed, balance and return game. His groundstrokes are technically sound on both forehand and backhand, he hits the ball extremely early which creates great power, depth and consistency resembling the great Andre Agassi. Opponents often struggle to break his game down because he hits the ball so early it does not give his opponents much time to hit their shots putting them under intense pressure. Davydenko's best shot has to be his backhand which he can hit down the line, cross court and with extreme angles. He is best known in the tennis world for his running shots which he hits extremely early while on the run to past his opponent. Though he is not tall, Davydenko has a very effective serve which he can hit with high pace when he wants to. On tour, Davydenko is considered the cleanest ballstriker.

Davydenko's main weakness is his ability to close matches, volleys and variation. He has numerously loss matches while in a lead. This was evident during the Tennis Masters Cup against James Blake and Rafael Nadal where he won the first sets and had leads in the second but lost. Again his inability to close matches against top players out was shown against Federer at the French Open in 2007. He had leads in all three sets but ended up on the losing side. Davydenko is not the best volleyer on tour and does not usually go into the net because of his solid baseline game. But he is arguably the best drive volley player in the world hitting both forehand and backhand drives at the net. He also lacks variation in his game which is noticed by many tennis critics. Many people have dubbed him as a "Ball Machine". He is sometimes faking injuries.

Equipment

Davydenko is sponsored by Prince and Airness. He is currently using a Prince 03 Tour racquet. He wears Airness clothing with deep back pockets and Prince T-9 Roadster shoes.

He wears his lucky boxers named Michael Barrymore for the "big" games.

Yearly Highlights

2000

  • Captured first Futures title at Germany #3 and reached final following week at Germany #4
  • In June, reached back-to-back Futures finals at Germany #6 and #7 and made ATP debut in Amsterdam, reaching SF (l. to Sluiter)
  • Two weeks later, reached back-to-back Challenger semifinals at Wrexham and Togliatti
  • In August, won first Challenger title at Monchengladbach (d. Kempes)

2001

  • Made Grand Slam debut at Australian Open, defeating Fukarek in 1st RD before losing to Rafter in four sets in 2nd RD
  • Missed six weeks after injuring lower back and hip in 1st RD at Dallas Challenger in February
  • Did not win a match again until May in Antwerp Challenger (l. in QF)
  • Advanced to 2nd RD on Roland Garros debut (d. Bjorkman, l. to Hewitt)
  • Captured Challenger titles in Ulm (d. Labadze) and Istanbul (d. Saulnier)
  • Finished season with QF in Basel

2002

  • Won 12 ATP level matches and went 16-9 in Challenger play
  • On clay in Båstad, defeated Rochus and González before losing to eventual champion Carlos Moyà.
  • Captured fourth career Challenger title in Szczecin (d. D. Sánchez)
  • Finished season with second ATP QF in Vienna

2003

  • The No. 2 Russian (behind No. 41 Kafelnikov) captured two ATP titles and finished in Top 50 for first time in his career
  • Opened season with his first career title in Adelaide (d. Vliegen) and three months later began clay court circuit with title in Estoril (d. Kafelnikov in QF, Mirnyi in SF, Calleri in F)
  • Followed with QF in Barcelona (d. Nalbandian, l. to Moyà) and in May advanced to final in St. Poelten (d. Verkerk, l. to Roddick)
  • Compiled records of 19-15 on clay and 11-13 on hard

2004

  • The No. 3 Russian (behind Safin, Youzhny) compiled his best pro season by finishing in Top 30 for first time and capturing two ATP titles for second straight year
  • After a 3-9 start through mid-April, turned things around at ATP Masters Series Monte Carlo where he reached QF (l. to Moyà) and began a 10-2 run
  • Followed with title in Munich (d. No. 5 Schüttler in QF, Verkerk in F) and 3rd RD at AMS Rome (d. González, l. to Spadea)
  • In July, reached SF in Stuttgart (l. to Cañas) and one month later advanced to QF in Long Island
  • In October, captured first career title on Russian soil in Moscow by winning singles and doubles titles (w/Andreev)
  • Saved one match point in SF win over Youzhny, then saved three match points in final against Rusedski
  • Compiled records of 19-12 on clay, 7-10 on hard, 7-4 on carpet, 0-3 on grass
  • Earned a career-high $651,372.

2005

  • Davydenko began the year with a run to the quarterfinals at the Australian Open
  • During the claycourt season, Davydenko followed his success at the Australian with semifinal appearances at the Hamburg Masters and the French Open.
  • He closed out the year by reaching the quarterfinals at the Cincinnati Masters and the Paris Masters, and the semifinals at the Tennis Masters Cup in Shanghai.
  • He finished the year as the No. 1 Russian and the No. 5 player in the world.

2006

  • He repeated his run to the Australian Open quarterfinals, losing to eventual champion Roger Federer in four sets.
  • Davydenko won Pörtschach (clay), Sopot (clay) and New Haven (hard) beginning his hard court winning streak.
  • He reached the semis outlasting Tommy Haas in the US Open quarterfinals, rebounding from a two-set deficit to win the 3 hour-45 minute epic 4-6, 6-7(3), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, but lost to Roger Federer 1-6, 5-7, 4-6.
  • Finished the regular season by winning his second Moscow crown and his first ATP Masters Series tournament in Paris.
  • Helped Russia win the Davis Cup against Argentina, 3-2.
  • Davydenko finished the year as the No.1 Russian and ranked No.3 in the world.

2007

  • He started out strong at Doha, losing in the semifinal to 4th seed Andy Murray in straight sets 5-7 2-6.
  • At the Australian Open, he reached the quarterfinal, losing to 12th seeded Tommy Haas of Germany in 5 sets.
  • At Rotterdam, as the No. 1 seed, he made it to the semifinal and had chances multiple times to take out Ivan Ljubičić, but failed to convert on those chances. Ljubičić eventually won the match in a third set tiebreaker.
  • At the Rome Masters, he lost to two-time defending champion and king of clay, Rafael Nadal in the semi-final, 6-7 7-6 4-6. This was a very tight match and could have gone either way. He is the closest player to beat Nadal on clay since 2006 until Nadal's defeat to Roger Federer in Hamburg.
  • Reached the semi-final at the French Open, losing to Roger Federer 5-7, 6-7, 6-7 in a closely fought match where Davydenko had many oportunities to at least win one of the sets, but lost his concentration and nerves during the tight points.
  • Reached the 4th round of Wimbledon for the first time in his career before losing to Marcos Baghdatis.

Masters Series singles finals

Wins (1)

Year Championship Opponent in Final Score in Final
2006 Paris Slovakia Dominik Hrbaty 6-1, 6-2, 6-2

Titles (11)

Singles wins (10)

Legend
Grand Slam (0)
Tennis Masters Cup (0)
ATP Masters Series (1)
ATP Tour (9)
Titles by Surface
Hard (2)
Clay (5)
Grass (0)
Carpet (3)
No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score
1. January 5, 2003 Adelaide, Australia Hard Belgium Kristof Vliegen 6-2, 7-6(3)
2. April 13, 2003 Estoril, Portugal Clay Argentina Agustin Calleri 6-4, 6-3
3. May 2, 2004 Munich, Germany Clay Netherlands Martin Verkerk 6-4, 7-5
4. October 17, 2004 Moscow, Russia Carpet (I) United Kingdom Greg Rusedski 3-6, 6-3, 7-5
5. May 21, 2005 St. Pölten, Austria Clay Austria Jürgen Melzer 6-3, 2-6, 6-4
6. May 27, 2006 Pöertschach, Austria Clay Romania Andrei Pavel 6-0, 6-3
7. August 6, 2006 Sopot, Poland Clay Germany Florian Mayer 7-6(6), 5-7, 6-4
8. August 26, 2006 New Haven, USA Hard Argentina Agustin Calleri 6-4, 6-3
9. October 15, 2006 Moscow, Russia Carpet (I) Russia Marat Safin 6-4, 5-7, 6-4
10. November 5, 2006 Paris, France Carpet (I) Slovakia Dominik Hrbaty 6-1, 6-2, 6-2

Singles runner-ups (3)

No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score
1. 26 May, 2003 St. Pölten, Austria Clay United States Andy Roddick 6-3, 6-2
2. 8 May, 2006 Estoril, Portugal Clay Argentina David Nalbandian 6-3, 6-4
3. 17 July, 2006 Bastad, Sweden Clay Spain Tommy Robredo 6-2, 6-1

Doubles wins (1)

No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents in the final Score
1. October 17, 2004 Moscow, Russia Carpet (I) Russia Igor Andreev India Mahesh Bhupathi
Sweden Jonas Björkman
3-6, 6-3, 6-4

Team titles (3)

Performance timeline

Tournament 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 Career
Australian Open QF QF QF 2r 1r 1r 2r 0
French Open SF QF SF 1r 2r 2r 2r 0
Wimbledon 4r 1r 2r 1r 1r 1r - 0
US Open SF 2r 3r 2r 2r 1r 0
Tennis Masters Cup RR SF - - - - 0

External links