Marcel Felder

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Marcel Felder Tennis player
Nation: UruguayUruguay Uruguay
Birthday: July 9, 1984
Size: 174 cm
Weight: 65 kg
1st professional season: 2001
Resignation: 2013
Playing hand: Right
Trainer: Jorge Gerosi
Prize money: $ 217,109
singles
Career record: 19:14
Highest ranking: 227 (December 28, 2009)
Double
Career record: 13:16
Highest ranking: 82 (June 11, 2012)
Sources: official player profiles at the ATP / WTA and ITF (see web links )

Marcel Felder , who leads the Uruguayan Olympic Committee under the name Marcel Félder , (born July 9, 1984 in Montevideo ) is a Uruguayan tennis player .

Career

In 2001, Felder won the Uruguayan championship in doubles alongside Federico Dondo . In that year he became a professional and established himself primarily as a dual specialist. On April 24, 2012 he made it into the top 100 in the world rankings in doubles for the first time. He achieved his highest ranking with rank 82 on June 11 of the same year, which is mainly due to his successes on the ATP Challenger Tour . There he won nine doubles titles, three of them in 2011 and four more in 2012. He was also in four other finals in the 2011 season and in one in the 2012 season. He won all but one of the titles on the South American continent. Such a success was denied to him individually. He did not qualify successfully in Grand Slam tournaments either. On June 16, 2013, Felder declared that after 14 years of participating in the competition, he no longer wanted to compete on the ATP tour.

Since 2000 Felder has played for the Uruguayan Davis Cup team , in whose history he is the most successful doubles player. In 2002 he was a member of Uruguay's squad at the South American Games in Brazil . There he won gold in doubles on the side of Martín Vilarrubí . In 2003 and 2007 he took part in the Pan American Games with the Uruguayan team .

successes

Legend
Grand Slam
Tennis Masters Cup
ATP Masters Series
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
ATP International Series Gold
ATP World Tour 500
ATP International Series
ATP World Tour 250
ATP Challenger Tour (9)

Double

Tournament victories

No. date competition Topping partner Final opponent Result
1. August 21, 2005 EcuadorEcuador manta Hard court ArgentinaArgentina Brian Dabul BrazilBrazil Franco Ferreiro Marcelo Melo
BrazilBrazil 
6: 3, 4: 6, 6: 4
2. August 10, 2008 BrazilBrazil Campos do Jordão Hard court ArgentinaArgentina Brian Dabul BrazilBrazil Márcio Torres Izak van der Merwe
South AfricaSouth Africa 
6: 4, 7: 6 9
3. April 10, 2011 ColombiaColombia Pereira sand ColombiaColombia Carlos Salamanca ColombiaColombia Alejandro Falla Eduardo Struvay
ColombiaColombia 
7: 6 5 , 6: 4
4th September 25, 2011 BrazilBrazil Campinas sand BrazilBrazil Caio Zampieri BrazilBrazil Fabrício Neis João Pedro Sorgi
BrazilBrazil 
7: 5, 6: 4
5. October 2, 2011 BrazilBrazil Recife Hard court ArgentinaArgentina Guido Andreozzi BrazilBrazil Rodrigo-Antonio Grilli André Miele
BrazilBrazil 
6: 3, 6: 3
6th March 11, 2012 ChileChile Santiago de Chile sand ChileChile Paul Capdeville ChileChile Jorge Aguilar Daniel Garza
MexicoMexico 
6: 7 3 , 6: 4, [10: 7]
7th April 29, 2012 BrazilBrazil São Paulo sand ChileChile Paul Capdeville BrazilBrazil André Ghem João Pedro Sorgi
BrazilBrazil
7: 5, 6: 3
8th. May 13, 2012 BrazilBrazil Rio Quente Hard court ArgentinaArgentina Guido Andreozzi BrazilBrazil Thiago Alves Augusto Laranja
BrazilBrazil 
6: 3, 6: 3
9. June 10, 2012 ItalyItaly Caltanissetta sand CroatiaCroatia Antonio Veić SpainSpain Daniel Gimeno Traver Iván Navarro
SpainSpain 
5: 7, 7: 6 5 , [10: 6]

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Campeones Nacionales 2001 (Spanish) in La República of March 11, 2002, accessed on March 16, 2014
  2. Marcel Felder se retira del circuito ATP - Hasta acá llegamos (Spanish) on www.futbol.com.uy from June 16, 2013, accessed on June 16, 2013
  3. Results of the Uruguayan athletes ( memento of March 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) on the COU website, accessed on March 14, 2014