Victor Anagnastopol

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Victor Anagnastopol Tennis player
Nation: RomaniaRomania Romania
Birthday: March 23, 1986
Resignation: 2017
Playing hand: Right
Trainer: Sorin Anagnastopol
Prize money: $ 42,429
singles
Career record: 0-0
Highest ranking: 469 (June 13, 2011)
Double
Career record: 1: 2
Highest ranking: 295 (December 12, 2011)
Sources: official player profiles at the ATP / WTA and ITF (see web links )

Victor Anagnastopol (born March 23, 1986 in Bucharest ) is a former Romanian tennis player .

Career

2003 to 2010

Anagnastopol began playing tennis at the age of six and was already playing smaller tournaments on the Junior Tour. From 2003 he took part in the professional tour at tournaments of the ITF Future Tour . In his first future tournament, he made it into the double-finals with a bye and two injury-related tasks. He was unable to repeat this success in the following years, and it was often the end of the first laps for him. In the world rankings , he made it into the top 500 for the first time in June 2006 with 488th place. He did not hold this rank until the end of the year and slipped to 648th place, in doubles he was outside the top 1000 .

Due to his world rankings, he could continue to compete almost exclusively on the Future Tour and won his first double title there in 2008. On the Challenger Tour he received a wildcard for the double field for the tournament in Bucharest , but was eliminated in the first round against the fourth seeded pairing Rameez Junaid and Philipp Marx . After another first round on the Challenger Tour in Brașov , he made his debut on the ATP World Tour . Together with Marius Copil he started in the double competition in Bucharest thanks to a wildcard . There they prevailed in the first round against their compatriots Victor Crivoi and Adrian Ungur . In the second round they lost to number 2 on the seeding list and the later finalists Marcel Granollers and Santiago Ventura in two sets.

2011 to 2017

In 2011 , Anagnastopol celebrated only his third appearance on the Challenger Tour in doubles, his greatest success. With Florin Mergea he played his way to the final of the tournament in Brașov without losing a set . They also prevailed there in two sets against the duo Dušan Lojda and Benoît Paire and Anagnastopopl celebrated his only title on the Challenger Tour. Due to further successes on the Future Tour, he made it into the top 300 in doubles and with 295th place his best career placement. In the individual, he was in the same year with 469th place on his career high. In the 2013 season he also played for SC Uttenreuth in the 2nd tennis Bundesliga , but did not play a professional tournament in 2013 and 2014 and was no longer in the world rankings.

In 2015 Anagnastopol returned to the professional tour and played tournaments of the Future Tour again. While he only survived the first round twice in singles, he won seven more titles in doubles, which put him in the top 400 in the world again at the end of 2016. For SC Uttenreuth he played again in the 2nd tennis Bundesliga this year . In Sibiu he moved into the quarterfinals after beating the seeded pairing Maximilian Neuchrist and David Pel , but lost this encounter. He played his last tournament in Romania in August 2017, since then he has been listed as inactive by the ATP.

successes

Legend (number of victories)
Grand Slam
ATP World Tour Finals
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
ATP World Tour 500
ATP World Tour 250
ATP Challenger Tour (1)

Double

Tournament victories

No. date competition Topping partner Final opponent Result
1. September 10, 2011 RomaniaRomania Brașov sand RomaniaRomania Florin Mergea Czech RepublicCzech Republic Dušan Lojda Benoît Paire
FranceFrance 
6: 2, 6: 3

Web links