Mario Ančić (; born 30 March 1984) is a Croatian former professional tennis player who currently works as a private equity vice president in New York City. He won three singles titles and five doubles titles on the ATP Tour. Ančić's career-high singles ranking came in 2006, when he reached world No. 7. Ančić helped Croatia to win the 2005 Davis Cup and claimed a bronze medal for the country at the 2004 Athens Olympics, in men's doubles partnering Ivan Ljubičić.
As a teenager making his major debut at the 2002 Wimbledon Championships, he defeated seventh-seeded Roger Federer. His best performance at the majors came at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships, when he reached the semifinals. During 2007 and 2008, infectious mononucleosis and minor injuries forced him to miss many major events, and his ranking dropped from No. 9 in January 2007 to No. 135 in January 2008.
Personal life
Ančić was born in Split, Croatia to Stipe and Nilda Ančić. His father owns a supermarket chain, and his mother is a financial adviser. His older brother Ivica and younger sister Sanja were also professional tennis players. Ančić was raised in a Catholic family and states that his faith is very important to him. He is very close to his uncle who is a priest and former missionary.
Legal and business career
From 2002 to 2008, Ančić was a law student at the University of Split; he graduated from its law school on 14 April 2008. His thesis described the legal foundation and organisation of the ATP Tour.
Infectious mononucleosis forced Ančić to be off courts in much of the 2009 tennis season, and he started his residency in the law office of Turudić in Zagreb; but he announced he would freeze his residency for some time due to his tennis career. After attending Harvard Law, he graduated with an LLM from Columbia Law School. He became an investment banking associate at Credit Suisse; as of 2019 he is an Associate at One Equity Partners in New York City. The highlight of his Grand Slam debut at the 2002 Wimbledon Championships was the major upset of his first round defeat of Roger Federer, the seventh seed, 6–3, 7–6<sup>(2)</sup>, 6–3 in just under two hours. He finished the 2002 season in the top 100 in singles.
thumb|left|[[Goran Ivanišević and Mario Ančić playing doubles during the 2004 Queen's Club Championships]]
At the ATP Indesit Milano Indoor in February 2004, Ančić made it into his first singles ATP final, defeating sixth seed Rafael Nadal and third seed Tommy Robredo. At the 2004 Wimbledon Championships, Ančić had his best Grand Slam result, reaching the semi-finals. In reaching the Grand Slam semi-finals, he jumped 36 places on the ATP singles ranking to No. 27. In doubles, he teamed up with Ivan Ljubičić, and represented Croatia at the 2004 Summer Olympics. They won a bronze medal, losing to González and Nicolás Massú in the semi-final. He won his first ATP singles title at the Ordina Open. His 2005 highlights also include the final at the Japan Open Tennis Championships, losing to Wesley Moodie.
Career apex (2006)
Ančić started on the 2006 ATP Tour with strong note in his second tournament of the year in Auckland, where he defeated top seed Fernando González on his way to the final. In February, he also reached the final in Marseille, losing to Arnaud Clément. He made in the quarter-finals at two Masters and two Grand Slams tournaments. Ančić was defeated by David Nalbandian at Miami and Rome and by Roger Federer at the French Open and Wimbledon. He also reached his career high at Master Series event, reaching the semi-finals at Hamburg Masters. Ančić successfully defended his 2005 title at 's-Hertogenbosch. After Wimbledon, Ančić reached No. 7, his career high in singles.
At the 2006 French Open, he had a shoving incident with Paul Capdeville at the end of his second-round match. Ančić was bothered by the Chilean's repeated complaints to the chair umpire, including just before the post-match handshake. Both of them were fined $3,000. He reached the quarter-finals before losing to Federer.
Ančić missed the U.S. hard-court season due to a knee injury received in a jet skiing accident. In September, in the first event after the summer injuries, he reached the final at the China Open, losing to Marcos Baghdatis. In October, he won his third singles title at the St. Petersburg Open. At the Paris Masters, Ančić lost to Nikolay Davydenko in the quarterfinals.
Mononucleosis, and return to the Tour (2007–2010)
He entered the 2007 Australian Open as the ninth seed, and advanced to a fourth round.
In Marseille, Ančić retired in the first round and was diagnosed with infectious mononucleosis (mono). Later, he confessed that he was playing sick a week before in a match against Germany in the Davis Cup, and the virus had started to affect him at the Australian Open. Due to his illness, Ančić spent most of the next 10 weeks in bed and missed six months from the tour.
Ančić started training in June with his Swedish coach Fredrik Rosengren. His first 2008 event was in Marseille in February, where he eventually lost in the final to Andy Murray. At the Indian Wells Masters and Miami Masters, Ančić entered the main draw by receiving wild cards, where he beat three seeded players.
Having lost in an opening round at the Canada Masters, and having skipped the Cincinnati Masters as the fatigue intensified and the weight loss mounted, Ančić withdrew from the 2008 Summer Olympics, and later the US Open, due to a recurrence of mononucleosis. Ančić returned in September, playing for the Davis Cup. After a good start at the beginning of the 2009 season, Ančić announced in May that he would pull out of the French Open, Wimbledon, and the Davis Cup semifinal match, again because recurrence of mononucleosis.
Ančić returned to the main tour level at the 2010 BNP Paribas Open, where he made it to the third round. He played Challengers without success.
Retirement
On 21 February 2011, Ančić announced his retirement from professional tennis due to recurring mononucleosis. He ended his career with three titles, 208 wins and 135 losses. On 23 February 2011, Ančić held a press conference at the Firule tennis club, where he officially retired from professional tennis. He stated that; "[My] heart wanted, but [my] body couldn't, this is the toughest moment of my life. I have never run away from responsibility. I always strived for perfection, and when I realized that my body cannot provide the kind of tennis I can play, there was no other solution".
Significant finals
Olympics medal matches
Doubles: 1 (1 bronze medal)
{| class="sortable wikitable"
!style="width:40px"|Result
!style="width:40px"|Year
!style="width:150px"|Tournament
!style="width:55px"|Surface
!style="width:150px"|Partner
!style="width:150px"|Opponents
!style="width:140px" class="unsortable"|Score
|- bgcolor=FFEA5C
| bgcolor="cc9966" |Bronze
|2004
|Athens, Greece
|Hard
| Ivan Ljubičić
| Mahesh Bhupathi<br> Leander Paes
|7–6<sup>(7–5)</sup>, 4–6, 16–14
|}
ATP career finals
Singles: 11 (3 titles, 8 runner-ups)
{|
|-valign=top
|
{|class=wikitable
!Legend
|-style=background:#f3e6d7
|Grand Slam tournaments (0–0)
|-style=background:#ffffcc
|ATP World Tour finals (0–0)
|-style=background:#e9e9e9
|ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (0–0)
|-style=background:#d4f1c5
|ATP World Tour 500 Series (0–1)
|-
|ATP World Tour 250 Series (3–7)
|}
|
{|class=wikitable
!Titles by surface
|-
|Hard (0–7)
|-
|Clay (0–0)
|-
|Grass (2–0)
|-
|Carpet (1–1)
|}
|
{|class=wikitable
!Titles by setting
|-
|Outdoor (2–3)
|-
|Indoor (1–5)
|}
|}
{|class="sortable wikitable"
!Result
!class=unsortable|W–L
!Date
!Tournament
!Tier
!Surface
!Opponent
!class=unsortable|Score
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>0–1</small>
|2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor – Singles|
|Milan, Italy
|International Series
|Carpet
| Antony Dupuis
|4–6, 7–6<sup>(14–12)</sup>, 6–7<sup>(5–7)</sup>
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>0–2</small>
|2005 Tennis Channel Open – Singles|
|Scottsdale, United States
|International Series
|Hard
| Wayne Arthurs
|5–7, 3–6
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>1–2</small>
|2005 Ordina Open – Men's singles|
|'s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
|International Series
|Grass
| Michaël Llodra
|7–5, 6–4
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–3</small>
|2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships – Men's singles|
|style=background:#d4f1c5|Tokyo, Japan
|style=background:#d4f1c5|International Gold
|Hard
| Wesley Moodie
|6–1, 6–7<sup>(7–9)</sup>, 4–6
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–4</small>
|2006 Heineken Open – Singles|
|Auckland, New Zealand
|International Series
|Hard
| Jarkko Nieminen
|2–6, 2–6
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–5</small>
|2006 Open 13 – Singles|
|Marseille, France
|International Series
|Hard
| Arnaud Clément
|4–6, 2–6
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>2–5</small>
|2006 Ordina Open – Men's singles|
|'s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
|International Series
|Grass
| Jan Hernych
|6–0, 5–7, 7–5
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>2–6</small>
|2006 China Open – Men's singles|
|Beijing, China
|International Series
|Hard
| Marcos Baghdatis
|4–6, 0–6
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>3–6</small>
|2006 St. Petersburg Open – Singles|
|St. Petersburg, Russia
|International Series
|Carpet
| Thomas Johansson
|7–5, 7–6<sup>(7–2)</sup>
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>3–7</small>
|2008 Open 13 – Singles|
|Marseille, France
|International Series
|Hard
| Andy Murray
|3–6, 4–6
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>3–8</small>
|2009 PBZ Zagreb Indoors – Singles|
|Zagreb, Croatia
|250 Series
|Hard
| Marin Čilić
|3–6, 4–6
|}
Doubles: 5 (5 titles)
{|
|- valign="top"
|
{|class="wikitable"
|-
!Legend
|- style="background:#f3e6d7;"
|Grand Slam tournaments (0–0)
|- style="background:#ffc;"
|ATP World Tour finals (0–0)
|- style="background:#e9e9e9;"
|ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (0–0)
|- style="background:#d4f1c5;"
|ATP World Tour 500 Series (0–0)
|-
|ATP World Tour 250 Series (5–0)
|}
|
{|class="wikitable"
|-
!Titles by surface
|-
|Hard (3–0)
|-
|Clay (1–0)
|-
|Grass (1–0)
|-
|Carpet (0–0)
|}
|
{|class="wikitable"
|-
!Titles by setting
|-
|Outdoor (5–0)
|-
|Indoor (0–0)
|}
|}
{|class="sortable wikitable"
|-
!Result
!class="unsortable"|W–L
!Date
!Tournament
!Tier
!Surface
!Partner
!Opponents
!class="unsortable"|Score
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>1–0</small>
|2003 RCA Championships – Doubles|
|Indianapolis, United States
|International Series
|Hard
| Andy Ram
| Diego Ayala<br> Robby Ginepri
|2–6, 7–6<sup>(7–3)</sup>, 7–5
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>2–0</small>
|2005 BMW Open – Doubles|
|Munich, Germany
|International Series
|Clay
| Julian Knowle
| Florian Mayer<br> Alexander Waske
|6–3, 1–6, 6–3
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>3–0</small>
|2006 China Open – Men's doubles|
|Beijing, China
|International Series
|Hard
| Mahesh Bhupathi
| Michael Berrer<br> Kenneth Carlsen
|6–4, 6–3
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>4–0</small>
|2006 Kingfisher Airlines Tennis Open – Doubles|
|Mumbai, India
|International Series
|Hard
| Mahesh Bhupathi
| Rohan Bopanna<br> Mustafa Ghouse
|6–4, 6–7<sup>(6–8)</sup>, [10–8]
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>5–0</small>
|2008 Ordina Open – Men's doubles|
|'s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
|International Series
|Grass
| Jürgen Melzer
| Mahesh Bhupathi<br> Leander Paes
|7–6<sup>(7–5)</sup>, 6–3
|}
ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals
Singles: 10 (5–5)
{|
|-valign=top
|
{|class=wikitable style=font-size:97%
!Legend
|-bgcolor=moccasin
|ATP Challenger (4–2)
|-bgcolor=cffcff
|ITF Futures (1–3)
|}
|
{|class=wikitable style=font-size:97%
!Finals by surface
|-
|Hard (2–4)
|-
|Clay (0–0)
|-
|Grass (0–0)
|-
|Carpet (3–1)
|}
|}
{|class="sortable wikitable"
!Result
!class="unsortable"|W–L
!Date
!Tournament
!Tier
!Surface
!Opponent
!class="unsortable"|Score
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>1–0</small>
|
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Croatia F2, Zagreb
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Futures
|Hard
| Ivo Karlović
|7–6<sup>(16–14)</sup>, 6–4
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–1</small>
|
|style="background:#cffcff;"|China F2, Kunming City
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Futures
|Hard
| Yves Allegro
|4–6, 6–7<sup>(4–7)</sup>
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–2</small>
|
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Canada F3, Lachine
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Futures
|Hard
| Benjamin Cassaigne
|6–7<sup>(3–7)</sup>, 5–7
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>2–2</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Belgrade, Yugoslavia
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Carpet
| Nenad Zimonjić
|6–2, 6–3
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>2–3</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Hard
| Takao Suzuki
|4–6, 3–6
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>2–4</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Kyoto, Japan
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Carpet
| Takao Suzuki
|7–6<sup>(7–4)</sup>, 2–6, 2–6
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>3–4</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Prague, Czech Republic
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Hard
| Jérôme Golmard
|6–1, 6–1
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>4–4</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Milan, Italy
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Carpet
| Gregory Carraz
|4–6, 6–3, 7–6<sup>(10–8)</sup>
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>5–4</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Hamburg, Germany
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Carpet
| Rafael Nadal
|6–2, 6–3
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>5–5</small>
|
|style="background:#cffcff;"|USA F7, McAllen
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Futures
|Hard
| Artem Sitak
|1–6, 4–6
|}
Doubles: 7 (3–4)
{|
|-valign=top
|
{|class=wikitable style=font-size:97%
!Legend
|-bgcolor=moccasin
|ATP Challenger (2–3)
|-bgcolor=cffcff
|ITF Futures (1–1)
|}
|
{|class=wikitable style=font-size:97%
!Finals by surface
|-
|Hard (2–3)
|-
|Clay (1–0)
|-
|Grass (0–0)
|-
|Carpet (0–1)
|}
|}
{|class="sortable wikitable"
!Result
!class="unsortable"|W–L
!Date
!Tournament
!Tier
!Surface
!Partner
!Opponents
!class="unsortable"|Score
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>1–0</small>
|
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Croatia F1, Zagreb
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Futures
|Hard
| Ivica Ančić
| Roko Karanušić <br> Zeljko Krajan
|6–4, 5–7, 7–5
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–1</small>
|
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Japan F5, Fukuoka
|style="background:#cffcff;"|Futures
|Hard
| Ivica Ančić
| Yaoki Ishii <br> Takahiro Terachi
|4–6, 3–6
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>1–2</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Kyoto, Japan
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Carpet
| Lovro Zovko
| Tuomas Ketola <br> Alexander Waske
|4–6, 4–6
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>2–2</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Helsinki, Finland
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Hard
| Lovro Zovko
| Aleksandar Kitinov <br> Jim Thomas
|7–6<sup>(8–6)</sup>, 4–6, 6–3
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>2–3</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Bratislava, Slovakia
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Hard
| Martin Garcia
| Harel Levy<br> Jonathan Erlich
|6–7<sup>(7–9)</sup>, 3–6
|-
|bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss
|<small>2–4</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Heilbronn, Germany
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Hard
| Lovro Zovko
| Sonchat Ratiwatana<br> Sanchai Ratiwatana
|4–6, 5–7
|-
|bgcolor=98FB98|Win
|<small>3–4</small>
|
|style="background:moccasin;"|Rome, Italy
|style="background:moccasin;"|Challenger
|Clay
| Ivan Dodig
| Juan Pablo Brzezicki<br> Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo
|4–6, 7–6<sup>(10–8)</sup>, [10–4]
|}
Junior Grand Slam finals
Singles: 2 (2 runner-ups)
{|class="sortable wikitable"
!style="width:40px;"|Result
!style="width:30px;"|Year
!style="width:150px;"|Tournament
!style="width:50px;"|Surface
!style="width:150px;"|Opponent
!style="width:125px;" class="unsortable"|Score
|- style="background:#ffffcc;"
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss||2000||Australian Open||Hard|| Andy Roddick||6–7<sup>(2–7)</sup>, 3–6
|- style="background:#ccffcc;"
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss||2000||Wimbledon||Grass|| Nicolas Mahut||6–3, 3–6, 5–7
|}
Performance timelines
Singles
{|class=wikitable style=text-align:center
|-
!Tournament!!2002!!2003!!2004!!2005!!2006!!2007!!2008!!2009!!2010!!SR!!W–L!!Win %
|-
|colspan=25 style=text-align:left|Grand Slam tournaments
|-
|align=left|Australian Open
|A
|style=background:#afeeee|4R
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|style=background:#afeeee|4R
|A
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|A
!0 / 6
!14–6
!
|-
|align=left|French Open
|style=background:#ecf2ff|Q1
|style=background:#afeeee|2R
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|style=background:#ffebcd|QF
|A
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|A
|A
!0 / 5
!11–5
!
|-
|align=left|Wimbledon
|style=background:#afeeee|2R
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|style=background:yellow|SF
|style=background:#afeeee|4R
|style=background:#ffebcd|QF
|A
|style=background:#ffebcd|QF
|A
|A
!0 / 6
!17–6
!
|-
|align=left|US Open
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|style=background:#afeeee|2R
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 4
!1–4
!
|-style=font-weight:bold;background:#efefef
|style=text-align:left|Win–loss
!1–2
!4–4
!9–4
!8–4
!10–3
!3–1
!6–2
!2–1
!0–0
!0 / 21
!43–21
!
|-
|colspan=17 align=left|Olympic Games
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Summer Olympics
|colspan=2 style=color:#cccccc|not held
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|colspan=3 style=color:#cccccc|not held
|A
|colspan=2 style=color:#cccccc|not held
!0 / 1
!0–1
!
|-
|colspan=25 style=text-align:left|ATP Tour Masters 1000
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Indian Wells Masters
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=afeeee|4R
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|3R
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=afeeee|3R
!0 / 7
!7–7
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Miami Open
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=ecf2ff|Q1
|bgcolor=afeeee|4R
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|4R
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
!0 / 6
!8–6
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Monte Carlo
|A
|bgcolor=ecf2ff|Q1
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|A
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|A
|A
!0 / 2
!2–2
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Rome
|A
|bgcolor=ecf2ff|Q1
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|A
|A
!0 / 4
!4–4
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Madrid Masters
|A
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 4
!3–4
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Hamburg
|A
|bgcolor=ecf2ff|Q1
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|3R
|bgcolor=yellow|SF
|A
|A
|align="center" colspan="2" style="color:#cccccc;"|NMS
!0 / 2
!6–2
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Canada Masters
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|3R
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|A
|A
!0 / 4
!3–4
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Cincinnati Masters
|A
|bgcolor=ecf2ff|Q1
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|3R
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 2
!3–2
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Paris Masters
|A
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|bgcolor=afeeee|2R
|A
|A
!0 / 5
!4–5
!
|-
|colspan=25 style=text-align:left|Career statistics
|-style=background:#EFEFEF
|align=left|Year
!2002!!2003!!2004!!2005!!2006!!2007!!2008!!2009!!2010
|rowspan=7|
!W–L!!Win %
|-
!style=text-align:left|Titles–finals
!0–0
!0–0
!0–1
!1–2
!2–3
!0–0
!0–1
!0–1
!0–0
!3–8
!
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Hard win–loss
|2–6
|9–13
|6–10
|25–15
|25–12
|12–10
|18–7
|13–6
|2–2
!111–80
!
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Clay win–loss
|0–0
|3–4
|6–6
|6–5
|13–5
|0–0
|6–5
|0–1
|0–1
!35–26
!
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Grass win–loss
|1–1
|2–3
|10–3
|9–2
|9–1
|0–0
|8–3
|0–0
|0–0
!40–13
!
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Carpet win–loss
|0–0
|1–1
|5–5
|4–5
|7–1
|1–1
|0–0
|0–0
|0–0
!21–14
!
|-bgcolor=#efefef
!style=text-align:left|Overall win–loss
!3–7
!15–21
!27–24
!44–27
!54–19
!13–11
!32–15
!13–7
!2–3
!208–135
!
|-
|-bgcolor=#efefef
|align=left|Tournaments
|7
|18
|22
|24
|20
|10
|16
|7
|3
|align="center" colspan="3"|Career Total: 127
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Year-end ranking
|89
|74
|29
|21
|style=background:#EEE8AA|9
|85
|36
|95
|478
|align="center" colspan="3"|Prize Money: $4,024,686
|}
- NMS – from 2009, Hamburg Masters is not Masters Series event
- Davis Cup and World Team Cup matches are included in the statistics.
- 1 – before 2002, he had 4–1 (Carpet: 3–1, Grass: 1–0) score in Davis Cup matches.
Doubles
{|class=wikitable style=text-align:center
|-
!Tournament!!2003!!2004!!2005!!2006!!2007!!2008!!2009!!2010!!SR!!W–L!!Win %
|-
|colspan=25 style=text-align:left|Grand Slam tournaments
|-
|align=left|Australian Open
|A
|style=background:#afeeee|2R
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 2
!1–2
!
|-
|align=left|French Open
|A
|style=background:#afeeee|3R
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 1
!2–1
!
|-
|align=left|Wimbledon
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 1
!0–1
!
|-
|align=left|US Open
|style=background:#ffebcd|QF
|style=background:#afeeee|1R
|style=background:#afeeee|2R
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 3
!4–3
!
|-style=font-weight:bold;background:#efefef
|style=text-align:left|Win–loss
!3–2
!3–3
!1–2
!0–0
!0–0
!0–0
!0–0
!0–0
!0 / 7
!7–7
!
|-
|colspan=17 align=left|Olympic Games
|-
|style=background:#EFEFEF align=left|Summer Olympics
|colspan=1 style=color:#cccccc|NH
|style=background:#cc9966|3rd
|colspan=3 style=color:#cccccc|not held
|A
|colspan=2 style=color:#cccccc|not held
!0 / 1
!4–1
!
|-
|colspan=25 style=text-align:left|ATP Tour Masters 1000
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Indian Wells Masters
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|A
|A
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
!0 / 4
!0–4
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Miami Open
|A
|A
|A
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 1
!2–1
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Miami Open
|A
|A
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 1
!2–1
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Hamburg
|A
|A
|bgcolor=yellow|SF
|A
|A
|A
|align="center" colspan="2" style="color:#cccccc;"|NMS
!0 / 1
!3–1
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Canada Masters
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
|bgcolor=ffebcd|QF
|A
|A
!0 / 1
!2–1
!
|-
|bgcolor=efefef align=left|Cincinnati Masters
|A
|A
|bgcolor=afeeee|1R
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
!0 / 1
!0–1
!
|-
|-style=font-weight:bold;background:#efefef
|style=text-align:left|Win–loss
!0–1
!0–0
!5–4
!2–2
!0–0
!2–1
!0–0
!0–1
!0 / 9
!9–9
!
|}
ATP Tour career earnings
<!--When moving on to the next year, the reference must be switched to stevegtennis.com reference, so that the atptennis current pdf file ranking can be used for the following year, and so on. Otherwise the old reference will be from the current year-->
{| class="sortable wikitable" width=50%
|- bgcolor="#eeeeee"
! Year !! Majors !! ATP wins !! Total wins !! Earnings (US$) !! Money list rank
|-
|align="center"|2002
|align="center"|0
|align="center"|0
|align="center"|0
|align="right"|101,122
|align="center"|165
|align="center"|79
|align="center"|38
|align="center"|27
|align="center" style="background:#F0DC82;"|9
|align="center"|146
|align="center"|44
|align="center"|133
|align="center"|284
