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{{short description|British tennis player}} {{Use British English|date=August 2011}} {{Use dmy dates|date=December 2014}} {{Infobox tennis biography | name = Tim Henman<br /> <small>[[Order of the British Empire|OBE]]</small> | image = Tim Henman 2006 Australian Open.JPG | country = {{flagu|Great Britain}} | residence = [[Aston Tirrold]], [[Oxfordshire]], England | full_name = Timothy Henry Henman | birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=y|1974|9|6}} | birth_place = [[Oxford]], England | height = {{height|ft=6|in=1}} | turnedpro = 1993<small> (amateur tour from 1992)</small> | retired = 2007 | coach = [[David Felgate (tennis)|David Felgate]] (1992โ2001)<br />[[Larry Stefanki]] (2001โ2003)<br />[[Paul Annacone]] (2003โ2007) | plays = Right-handed (one-handed backhand) | careerprizemoney = [[US$|$]]11,635,542 | singlesrecord = {{tennis record|won=496|lost=274}} | singlestitles = 11 | highestsinglesranking = No. 4 (8 July 2002) | AustralianOpenresult = 4R ([[2000 Australian Open โ Men's singles|2000]], [[2001 Australian Open โ Men's singles|2001]], [[2002 Australian Open โ Men's singles|2002]]) | FrenchOpenresult = SF ([[2004 French Open โ Men's singles|2004]]) | Wimbledonresult = SF ([[1998 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|1998]], [[1999 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|1999]], [[2001 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|2001]], [[2002 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|2002]]) | USOpenresult = SF ([[2004 US Open โ Men's singles|2004]]) | Othertournaments = yes | MastersCupresult = SF ([[1998 ATP Tour World Championships โ Singles|1998]]) | GrandSlamCupresult = SF ([[Grand Slam Cup#1996|1996]]) | Olympicsresult = 2R ([[Tennis at the 1996 Summer Olympics โ Men's singles|1996]]) | doublesrecord = 89โ81 | doublestitles = 4 | highestdoublesranking = No. 62 (21 February 2000) | AustralianOpenDoublesresult = 1R ([[1996 Australian Open โ Men's doubles|1996]], [[1997 Australian Open โ Men's doubles|1997]], [[1998 Australian Open โ Men's doubles|1998]]) | FrenchOpenDoublesresult = 3R ([[1996 French Open โ Men's doubles|1996]]) | WimbledonDoublesresult = 2R ([[1994 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's doubles|1994]]) | USOpenDoublesresult = 2R ([[1996 US Open โ Men's doubles|1996]]) | OthertournamentsDoubles = yes | OlympicsDoublesresult = | medals-expand = yes | medals = {{MedalCountry | {{GBR2}} }} {{MedalCompetition | [[Olympic Games]] }} {{MedalSilver | [[1996 Summer Olympics|1996 Atlanta]] | [[Tennis at the 1996 Summer Olympics โ Men's doubles|Doubles]] }} }} '''Timothy Henry Henman''' {{post-nominals|country=GBR|size=100%|OBE}} (born 6 September 1974) is a British<!--Tim Henman represented the UK as a tennis player, so per WP:Tennis consensus he is introduced as British. Do not change this to English--> former professional [[tennis]] player. He was ranked world No. 4 in men's singles by the [[Association of Tennis Professionals]] (ATP) during the early 2000s. Henman won 15 career [[ATP Tour]] titles (eleven in singles and four in doubles), including the [[2003 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|2003 Paris Masters]]. A [[serve-and-volley]] player, he was the first British man to reach the singles semifinals of [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] since [[Roger Taylor (tennis)|Roger Taylor]] in the 1970s. Henman reached six [[Grand Slam (tennis)#Tournaments|major]] semifinals, and earned a 40โ14 win-loss record with the [[Great Britain Davis Cup team]]. Henman was the British No. 1 player in 1996 and again from 1999 to 2005.<ref>{{cite web |title=Tim Henman: Player Profile |url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx |publisher=atpworldtour.com |access-date=13 June 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140612031325/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx |archive-date=12 June 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> He is one of the most successful British players of the [[Open Era]], winning $11,635,542 prize money. In the [[2004 New Year Honours]], he was appointed an [[Officer of the Order of the British Empire|OBE]].<ref name="OBE">{{London Gazette |issue=57155 |date=31 December 2003 |page=11 |supp=y }}</ref> Henman started playing tennis before the age of three, and began systematic training in the Slater Squad at eleven. After suffering a serious injury which affected him for the better part of two years, he began touring internationally as a junior and achieved some successes. He rose quickly up the ATP rankings, and by 1996 had reached the quarterfinals of [[1996 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon]]. For most of his career, Henman was considered a [[grass court]] specialist, reaching four Wimbledon semifinals in the five years between 1998 and 2002. He also achieved considerable success on [[hard court]]s early in his career, with his first title on the top tier ATP tour won in Sydney with a straight sets win over [[Carlos Moya]]. He became comfortable on [[Clay court|clay]] only later in his career, when in 2004 he reached the semifinals of the [[2004 French Open โ Men's singles|French Open]]. Henman retired from professional tennis in late 2007, but remains active on the [[ATP Champions Tour]] (a tour for former professional tennis players). == Early life == Henman was born in [[Oxford]], [[Oxfordshire]], as the youngest of a family of three boys. Henman's father Anthony, a solicitor, was accomplished at various sports, including tennis, [[Field hockey|hockey]] and [[Squash (sport)|squash]]. His mother Jane, a dress designer, played Junior Wimbledon and introduced Tim and his elder brothers, Michael and Richard, to tennis as soon as they could walk on the family's grass tennis court. His great-grandfather played at Wimbledon.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=3โ4}} His maternal grandfather, [[Henry Billington]], played at Wimbledon between 1948 and 1951, and he represented Britain in the [[Davis Cup]] in 1948, 1950 and 1951.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=1โ3}} In 1901 his maternal great-grandmother, Ellen Stanwell-Brown, was reputedly the first woman to serve overarm at Wimbledon. His maternal grandmother, Susan Billington, appeared regularly at Wimbledon in the 1950s, playing mixed doubles on [[Centre Court]] with her husband Henry, reaching the third round of the ladies' doubles in 1951, 1955 and 1956.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=2โ3}} Henman grew up in [[Weston-on-the-Green]], [[Oxfordshire]], a village between Oxford and [[Bicester]] with a population of around 500. At home, the family owned a grass tennis court in their back garden.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=4}} Henman began playing tennis before the age of three with a shortened squash racket. At this stage, he was already teaching himself how to [[Serve (tennis)|serve]] and [[Volley (tennis)|volley]].{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=5}} At an early stage in his life, Henman decided if he did not succeed in tennis, he would become a golfer instead.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=6}} Henman attended the Longbridge School for boys between the ages of five and seven, and was enrolled in the private [[Dragon School]] in [[Oxford]] from seven to 11. He excelled in all sports but was always best at tennis. But Henman was small for his age, a factor which would bode against him in the future. In 1985, he was appointed the school's captain of tennis and led the school's tennis team to win 21 out of 27 matches. He remains to this day the only pupil who has won both the school's junior and senior tennis tournaments in the same year.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=8}} From the age of eight until his introduction to the Slater Squad, Henman received coaching from the [[David Lloyd (tennis)|David Lloyd]] Tennis Centre, where he was given personal lessons by former professional player [[Onny Parun]] from New Zealand. In retrospect, Parun stated that Henman's greatest strength "had always been his head."{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=9}} David Lloyd noticed the same mental toughness and was impressed.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=9}} He left the Dragon School after he attained a scholarship for [[Reed's School]] in [[Cobham, Surrey]]. Henman received the scholarship after a physical test: to run until you dropped. Henman, along with Marc Moreso and David Loosemore, did not drop, and was given a scholarship. At this point in his life, Lloyd persuaded Henman's parents to allow him to pursue a tennis career.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=10}} In retrospect, Lloyd notes, Henman's parents understood what many don't: "you can always go back to higher education at 22 or 23 but that that is far too late to start a serious tennis career."{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=10}} Henman was picked up by the Slater Squad, a group funded by financier [[Jim Slater (accountant)|Jim Slater]], at the age of 11. The main goal of the Slater Squad was to pick and coach young players from the ages of nine or ten, instead of 11 and 12 as the [[Lawn Tennis Association]] (LTA) did.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=13โ16}} The original intake for the squad was eight players between the ages of eight and 11. In addition to Tim, the squad consisted of [[Jamie Delgado]], Gary Le Pla, Paul Jessop, James Bailey, Adrian Blackman, [[James Davidson (tennis)|James Davidson]] and Marc Moreso. In the squad, Henman worked on tennis three hours a day: two hours playing tennis and receiving advice from Donald Watt, and the last hour on gymnastics and learning about the game.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=17}} In contrast to popular belief, Henman was not considered the best of the bunch, and [[Sue Barker]], the British [[1976 French Open โ Women's singles|1976 French Open Women's champion]], judged that there was "nothing particularly special in his game in those days".{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=19}} She notes, however, that while Henman did not have the natural skills of a tennis player, he was "a hard worker".{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=19}} None of his fellow players in the Slater Squad saw Henman as a potential British number one, with most believing Marc Moreso to be the group's brightest hope.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=19โ20}} Not long after becoming a member of the Slater Squad, Henman was diagnosed with [[osteochondritis]], a bone disease. He was unable to play tennis for six months, and it was two years before he could return to tournaments. Luckily for Henman, Slater kept funding him while he was recuperating, because of insistence from Lloyd who believed in Henman's tennis abilities.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=24}} At Reed's School he passed ten [[GCSE]] exams, but failed chemistry. Outside of school, he worked in Anji's emporium in order to save money for a new racquet. As Henman notes in retrospect, "I passed the others with a few As, a few Bs and a few Cs. It was nothing dazzling by any means, but I got by."{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=26}} At the age of 16, Henman told his mother that it was impossible for him to retain his good grades while keeping up in the tennis world. In 1990 he dropped out of school altogether and focused on becoming a singles player, though Lloyd and the leadership of the Slater Squad had confidence in him as a doubles player, not singles.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=26โ27}} On the statistics that were available to them, Henman had managed to win five doubles tournaments but only two singles tournaments. But Henman disagreed with the Slater Squad leadership and began playing for the LTA in 1991. At the age of 17, Henman toured South America for eight weeks.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=27}} == Personal life == On 11 December 1999, Henman married his longtime girlfriend, TV producer Lucy Heald, in [[Hampshire]]. They have three daughters, Rose Elizabeth (born 19 October 2002), Olivia Susan (born 15 December 2004), and Grace (born 14 September 2007). Having lived in Barnes, southwest London, the family moved in 2003 to a [[Grade 2 listed]] property in [[Aston Tirrold]], south Oxfordshire.<ref name="ATPprofil">{{cite web |url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx |title=Tim Henman |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | access-date=4 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120619210631/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx |archive-date=19 June 2012 |url-status=live}}</ref> Henman occasionally smoked cigarettes during his tennis career.<ref>{{cite news |last=Hodgkinson |first=Mark |title=Court & Social: Smokin' Henman admits he did inhale |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/wimbledon/2381677/Court-and-Social-Smokin-Henman-admits-he-did-inhale.html |access-date=6 December 2014 |work=The Daily Telegraph |location=London |date=24 June 2004 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141213001951/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/tennis/wimbledon/2381677/Court-and-Social-Smokin-Henman-admits-he-did-inhale.html |archive-date=13 December 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> He is a supporter of [[Oxford United F.C.|Oxford United]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2009-06-18 |title=Small Talk: Tim Henman |url=http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2009/jun/19/tim-henman-small-talk-interview |access-date=2023-01-21 |website=the Guardian }}</ref> His father died on 3 May 2024 from blood cancer. == Tennis career == === Junior tour === During his first tour year in 1991, Henman fared badly. He won the first round in the New South Wales Championship against Andrew Turner, 6โ1, 6โ3, but lost in the second round to [[Corrado Borroni]] 5โ7, 1โ6. He was defeated by Australian [[Michael Hill (tennis)|Michael Hill]] in the first round of the 1991 Australian Open junior class, 7โ5, 3โ6, 5โ7. At the National Championships the same year, he reached the third round, but was defeated 6โ1, 6โ2 by [[Andrew Richardson (tennis)|Andrew Richardson]]. His performance in doubles matches was markedly better. Henman reached the quarter-finals in the New South Wales Championship with Richardson, and won the Midland Bank Junior Championship in doubles with [[Jamie Delgado]], an associate from the Slater Squad days.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=28}} 1992 began well, with Henman reaching the finals in Nottingham after defeating Delgado in straight sets in the semi-final. But Henman was defeated in the final by top-seed [[Mark Schofield]], and in the junior French Open by [[Bjรถrn Jacob]] in three sets, 6โ7, 6โ1, 9โ7. He was defeated in the first round of the Wimbledon junior by Mexican clay specialist Enrique Abaroa in straight sets; 6โ2, 6โ1. However, things improved dramatically from then on, and in the National Junior Championships he reached the semi-finals without dropping a single set. In the semi-finals Henman met Schofield, and defeated him in four sets; 2โ6, 6โ3, 7โ6, 6โ2. Henman met Nick Baglin in the final, and won the match 3โ6, 7โ5, 6โ4, 6โ4. In 1992 he turned 18, and Henman began his tennis career in the senior satellite tournaments.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=28โ29}} === Professional career === ==== 1993โ1995: early years ==== From July 1992 to July 1993, Henman grew six inches to six feet one, and went from seven stones to nine stones in weight. This would prove important for his career, as he acknowledged: "As a junior I had pretty good technique. Now I've got the strength and reach, and on the serve that has helped tremendously."{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=31}} Henman was ranked 774th in the world at the beginning of 1993, but by July he had come close to the top 600. In July, Henman received a [[Glossary of tennis terms|wildcard]] to participate in the [[ATP Challenger Tour|ATP Challenger]] tournament in Bristol, England. In the first round, he defeated Colombian [[Miguel Tobรณn]], ranked 257th, in straight sets, 6โ0, 6โ3. In the second round he met the Frenchman [[รric Winogradsky]] and defeated him also in straight sets, 7โ6, 6โ3. Henman was defeated in the quarter-final by British player [[Chris Bailey (tennis)|Chris Bailey]], 6โ2, 6โ1. By November Henman's rank had increased to 415th. Henman's next tournament was the Volkswagen National Championships in [[Telford]], England; he reached the quarter-final but lost to top-ranked British male player [[Jeremy Bates (tennis)|Jeremy Bates]], 7โ5, 7โ6. As 1993 drew to a close, Henman played one last tournament in Israel, which he won.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=32โ33}} He started the 1994 season with the four-legged Indian satellite circuit; there he won 18 singles matches in a row. Henman was fairly successful at the British Satellite Masters in Croydon, and by the end of the tournament he was ranked 222nd in the world.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=33}} Encouraged by his success in the satellite circuit, Henman tried his luck at the ATP tour. Henman travelled to the Far East with Bates, and qualified for his first ATP tournament in April, at the [[1994 Japan Open Tennis Championships|Japan Tennis Championship]]. In his first round he defeated [[Kelly Jones (tennis)|Kelly Jones]], 6โ2, 6โ3, in the second round he defeated [[Darren Cahill]], 6โ2, 7โ5 and in the third round Henman was defeated by [[Pete Sampras]], 6โ1, 6โ2. From this performance Henman increased his ranking to 184th.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=34โ35}} His success in the Japan Open was followed by a failure to qualify at the [[Hong Kong Open (tennis)|Hong Kong Open]]. Because of this failure, he ended the Far East tour by entering a number of satellite tournaments. Henman entered the Nagoya Open, and defeated eighth seed [[Eyal Ran]] in the first round, but lost in the second round to [[Gouichi Motomura]]. At the Manila Open, another satellite tournament, Henman reached the final but was defeated by fifth seed [[Michael Tebbutt]], 2โ6, 2โ6. After Manila he returned to Europe. In his first Grand Slam bid, Henman failed to qualify in the [[1994 French Open]], losing the first qualifier round to Australian [[Wayne Arthurs (tennis)|Wayne Arthurs]]. His next tournament was the Annenheim Open in Austria, where he lost in the first round to Canadian [[Sรฉbastien Lareau]] in straight sets, 6โ3, 6โ2. However, not all was bad, and Henman, ranked 161st at the time, received a wildcard to qualify for the [[1994 Stella Artois Championships โ Singles|Stella Artois Championship]]. In the first round Henman defeated Swedish [[Peter Lundgren]], 7โ5, 7โ6, but in the second round he succumbed to the eventual champion American [[Todd Martin]], 6โ4, 6โ4.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=36}} Henman received a wildcard for the [[Manchester Open]], where he lost in the first round to American [[Alex O'Brien]], and the [[1994 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon Championship]], the first Grand Slam he had ever played (he failed to qualify to Wimbledon in 1993).{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=37}} At Wimbledon, Henman lost in the first round to German [[David Prinosil]] in four sets, 6โ4, 3โ6, 2โ6, 2โ6. His early defeat in Wimbledon forced Henman into short period of obscurity in the satellite circuit. Henman reached the semi-finals at the Bristol Open and the fourth round at the Winnetka Open (in [[Illinois]]).{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=39}} By September Henman was ranked 146th, and in the same month he returned to the Far East. His first tournament in the Far East was the Seoul Open. Henman lost in the second round to Korean [[Kim Nam-hoon]], who was ranked outside the top 700.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=39}} At the Singapore Challenger, he reached the quarterfinals and lost to fellow Brit [[Chris Wilkinson]]. He was forced to retire in the third set against Wilkinson when he fell and received a blow to his leg. When he returned to England not long after the tournament, it was revealed that Henman had broken his ankle in three places and would not play another tournament until February 1995. In fact, he was not fully recovered until May. While injured, his ranking went from 146th to 272nd in the world.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=39โ40}} That year's grass season would prove highly successful for Henman; he reached the semi-finals at the Annenheim Open, later at the [[Queen's Club Championships]] he reached the second round after defeating German [[Martin Sinner]], and in Nottingham he reached the quarter-finals, his first quarter-final in the ATP tour. His success in these tournaments increased his ranking from 272nd to 219th. To make matters better for Henman, he won his first match ever in a Grand Slam event at the [[1995 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon Championship]] over Kenyan [[Paul Wekesa]] in straight sets, 7โ6, 6โ0, 6โ4.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=41โ42}} However, Henman's winning streak did not last long, and in the second round he met Sampras, and was defeated 6โ2, 6โ3, 7โ6.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=42โ43}} Two days later he partnered [[Jeremy Bates (tennis)|Jeremy Bates]] in the first round of the doubles at Wimbledon but the pair became the first players in the [[Open era]] to be defaulted at Wimbledon after Henman accidentally hit a [[ballgirl]] on the side of head with a ball, having lashed out with his racket in frustration after losing a point to a [[Glossary of tennis terms#dead net cord|net cord]] in the fourth set tie-break of their match against [[Jeff Tarango]] and [[Henrik Holm (tennis)|Henrik Holm]].<ref name="disqualified">{{cite web |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/henman-and-bates-are-disqualified-in-doubles-1588962.html |title=Henman and Bates are disqualified in doubles |last=Cusick |first=James |date=28 June 1995 |work=[[The Independent]] | access-date=1 August 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160819065726/http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/henman-and-bates-are-disqualified-in-doubles-1588962.html |archive-date=19 August 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref> Because he hit the ball in anger, the referee [[Alan Mills (tennis)|Alan Mills]] ruled that this was an automatic disqualification for unsportsmanlike conduct.<ref name="disqualified" /> He was very apologetic about the incident, presenting the girl with a bunch of flowers.<ref>[https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1995/06/30/ballgirl-takes-centre-court/9da5cfaa-c0a2-44a0-a525-b373df488608/?noredirect=on Ballgirl Takes Center Court] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190119121533/https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1995/06/30/ballgirl-takes-centre-court/9da5cfaa-c0a2-44a0-a525-b373df488608/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.66a57ee677ef |date=19 January 2019 }}, Washington Post, 30 June 1995</ref> The rest of the grass season was fairly successful for Henman, he appeared at the Manchester Open and reached the semi-final at the Newcastle Open. At the end of the grass season, Henman's rank had risen to 150th in the world.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=47}} After the grass season, Henman headed for the United States. He participated in the [[Atlanta Tennis Championships|RCA Championships]] and defeated 16th seed Frenchmen [[Cรฉdric Pioline]], the 1993 US Open finalist, in straight sets. He lost the following round, but was later able to qualify for the [[1995 US Open โ Men's singles|US Open]]. In the first round, Henman defeated Spanish [[Juan Albert Viloca]] in four sets, 6โ3, 4โ6, 6โ3, 6โ2. In the second round, Henman was defeated by American [[Jared Palmer]] in four sets, 4โ6, 7โ6, 3โ6, 1โ6. Henman's 1995 end-of-year ranking was 95.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|p=48}} ==== 1996โ2000: breakthrough ==== Henman climbed up the rankings very quickly. In 1994, he was among the top 200 players in the world; by 1995, among the top 100; and by 1996, he had made it into the top 30 and won a medal at the [[1996 Summer Olympics|Atlanta Olympics]]. He was the UK's highest-ranked player that year, and won the ''Most Improved Player'' trophy at the [[Association of Tennis Professionals|ATP]] awards. He was subsequently elected to the ATP Tour Player Council and went on to win his first championship in January 1997. In March of that year, he underwent surgery on his elbow which kept him out of action for two months. Henman came to the attention of the wider tennis world in 1996 when he came from match point down, saving two successive match points with aces when serving at 3โ5 and 15/40, and then breaking his opponent's serve twice in a row to win the final set 7โ5 and beat reigning French Open champion [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] in the first round at Wimbledon, going on to reach the quarter finals before losing to [[Todd Martin]]. A few weeks later he was to reach the men's doubles final at the [[1996 Summer Olympics]] in partnership with Neil Broad, losing to No. 1 seeds [[The Woodies|Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde]] to receive the silver medal. By the time he reached the last 16 at the US Open later in the year, he was firmly established as a top player. He won his first ATP Tour title in January 1997, beating [[Carlos Moyรก]] at the Sydney International event. He was seeded 14th at Wimbledon, and again reached the quarter-final, defeating reigning champion and 4th seed [[Richard Krajicek]] in the fourth round before falling to 1991 champion Michael Stich. In 1998 he went one better, reaching the semi-final for the first time, by which time he was ranked as one of the top 10 ATP players. Henman came close to reaching the final on a number of occasions, losing in the semi-finals to the eventual champion in 1998, 1999, 2001 and 2002. The first two of those semi-final losses were to [[Pete Sampras]]; in 2001 he lost to [[Goran Ivaniลกeviฤ]], a former two-time finalist; in 2002 he lost to [[Lleyton Hewitt]], ranked number one in the world at the time. In 2000 Henman reached the fourth round at Wimbledon; and in 1996, 1997, 2003 and 2004 he lost in the quarter-finals. One of the tournaments in which he has been most successful is [[Queen's Club]]. He reached the final in 1999, where he lost to [[Pete Sampras]], and went on to reach the final again in 2001 and 2002, where both times he lost to [[Lleyton Hewitt]]. Based on that success he was expected, at least within England, to be the first man since Fred Perry in 1936 to win a major for Britain โ which in the end he never managed, Wimbledon 2001 being the closest that he ever came to reaching a final. He became well known for the [https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2003/jun/24/wimbledon2003.tennis Henman fist], which would become his trademark on winning a point. ==== 2001โ2004: career peak ==== [[File:Tim Henman backhand volley Wimbledon 2004.jpg|thumb|Henman playing a backhand at Wimbledon, 2004]] Henman started the 2001 [[Association of Tennis Professionals|ATP]] season with a ranking of tenth in the world.<ref name="ATPranking">{{cite web |url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=rh |title=Tim Henman: Ranking History |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120201212810/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=rh |archive-date=1 February 2012 |url-status=live}}</ref> At the [[2001 AAPT Championships โ Singles|Adelaide International]] Henman lost in the semi-finals to [[Nicolรกs Massรบ]]. His next tournament was the [[2001 Australian Open โ Men's singles|Australian Open]]; Henman had wins over [[Hicham Arazi]], [[Nicolรกs Lapentti]], and [[Wayne Arthurs (tennis)|Wayne Arthurs]], but lost to [[Patrick Rafter]] in the fourth round in straight sets. He then won the [[2001 Copenhagen Open โ Singles|Copenhagen Open]], dispatching [[Andreas Vinciguerra]] in two sets. Henman then lost in the second round of the [[2001 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament โ Singles|Rotterdam Open]]. Rotterdam was followed by a defeat in the Scottsdale Open. In March, Henman reached the third round at [[2001 Indian Wells Masters โ Men's singles|Indian Wells]], where he lost to Nicolรกs Lapentti in straight sets. The [[hardcourt|hard court]] season wrapped up with the [[2011 Sony Ericsson Open โ Men's singles|Miami Masters]] where Henman lost in round two to [[Fabrice Santoro]].<ref name="ATPtour">{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2001&m=s&e=0# |title=2001 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131104163854/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2001&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 November 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref> By the beginning of the clay season in April, Henman's ranking had slipped from 10th to 12th in the world.<ref name="ATPranking" /> He reached the second round of the [[2001 Estoril Open โ Men's singles|Estoril Open]], the quarter-finals of [[2001 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|Monte-Carlo]], round two in [[2001 Italian Open โ Men's singles|Rome]], and lost in round one at the [[2001 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|Hamburg Masters]]. At the [[2001 French Open โ Men's singles|French Open]] Henman had wins over [[Tomas Behrend]] and [[Sjeng Schalken]], but lost to [[Guillermo Caรฑas]] in five sets in round three.<ref name="ATPranking" /> At the end of the clay season, Henman's ranking had risen back up to 11th.<ref name="ATPranking" /> On the grass at [[2001 Queen's Club Championships โ Singles|Queen's Club Championships]] Henman reached the final, where he was defeated in straight sets by Australian [[Lleyton Hewitt]].<ref name="ATPranking" /> Many commentators believed Henman had a chance to win that year's [[2001 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon]] with several top-seeds being defeated early in the tournament. Henman came through the first three rounds with ease, winning over [[Artem Derepasko]], [[Martin Lee (tennis)|Martin Lee]], and [[Sjeng Schalken]]. However, it took five sets to defeat the 22nd American seed [[Todd Martin]] in round four.{{sfn|Felstein|2005|pp=185โ186}} In the quarter-finals Henman beat a young [[Roger Federer]] in four tough sets, the latter having defeated Henman's longtime nemesis Sampras in the fourth round in the only tour match that Sampras and Federer would ever play. In his semi-final Henman met [[Glossary of tennis terms|wildcard]] entrant, [[Goran Ivaniลกeviฤ]] where Ivaniลกeviฤ eventually managed to win in five sets in a match that spanned 3 days because of numerous rain delays. Henman had come back from losing the first set and played some stunning tennis โ including crushing Ivaniลกeviฤ in the third set 6โ0 โ to take the lead by 2 sets to 1 before rain first stopped play. The players returned the following day but Henman couldn't recapture his form from the Friday and lost the fourth set in a tie break. Henman had got as close as 2 points from victory but serve was with his opponent and he was not able to hang on. Only 5 games into the deciding set, rain fell again and the players were forced to wait it out overnight to finish the epic encounter. When the pair finally returned on Sunday, Ivaniลกeviฤ was able to wrap up the final set and dash the English player's dream of reaching a Wimbledon final.<ref>{{cite news |title=Goran comeback shatters Henman |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/in_depth/2001/wimbledon_2001/1428065.stm |publisher=BBC Sport |date=8 July 2001 |access-date=16 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150713233053/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/in_depth/2001/wimbledon_2001/1428065.stm |archive-date=13 July 2015 |url-status=live}}</ref> In August, Henman only reached the second round in the [[2001 Canada Masters โ Singles|Canada Masters]] but bounced back and made it to the semi-finals of the [[2001 Cincinnati Masters โ Singles|Cincinnati Masters]]. There he lost to [[Gustavo Kuerten]] in three sets. His next tournament was nearly as successful, with Henman reaching the quarter-finals at the [[2001 RCA Championships โ Singles|RCA Championship]]. Henman lost in the quarter-finals, again to Kuerten in three sets. At the [[2001 US Open โ Men's singles|US Open]] he reached the third round; Henman defeated Vacek and [[Fernando Meligeni]], but was upset by [[Xavier Malisse]] in five sets. Near the end of the season, Henman won the [[Swiss Indoors]], by defeating the previous runner-up [[Roger Federer]] in straight sets.<ref name="ATPtour" /> In 2002, Henman reached the 4th round at the Australian Open and the semi-finals at Wimbledon for the last time in his career, losing this time to Lleyton Hewitt: for the fourth time, his conqueror in the semi-finals went on to win the tournament. He was defeated in the second round of the French Open, and the third round of the US Open. At the ATP tour, Henman was the runner-up at three finals; at one ATP Masters Series, at one ATP 500 Series and at one normal ATP tournament.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2002&m=s&e=0# |title=2002 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104203934/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2002&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 January 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> Henman did not participate in the [[2003 Australian Open โ Men's singles|2003 Australian Open]], reached the third round in the [[2003 French Open โ Men's singles|French Open]], his best so far, reached the quarter-finals at the [[2003 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon Championship]] and lost in the first round at the [[2003 US Open โ Men's singles|US Open]] to eventual champion [[Andy Roddick]]. He reached two ATP finals in 2003, one of them being the [[2003 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|Paris Masters]], winning both of themโhis victory at the 2003 Paris Masters would be his only victory at an ATP Masters tour event.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2003&m=s&e=0# |title=2003 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104204120/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2003&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 January 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> In 2004, Henman failed to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open and failed to reach the semi-finals at the Wimbledon Championships. However, he reached, to the surprise of commentators, the semi-finals of the French Open and later, the semi-finals of the US Open. His ATP tour was not as successful, but he managed to reach the finals of the Indian Wells, where he was defeated by world No. 1 [[Roger Federer]] in two sets, 3โ6, 3โ6. 2004 would be the last time Henman participated in the [[2004 Tennis Masters Cup โ Singles|Tennis Masters Cup]] (a tournament between the eight best players of the world). 2004 would prove Henman's last successful year as a tennis player; he failed to reach beyond the third round in any of the Grand Slams from 2005 until his retirement in 2007.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2004&m=s&e=0# |title=2004 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104203904/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2004&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 January 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> At the [[2004 Davis Cup World Group play-offs#Austria vs. Great Britain|Davis Cup World Group Play-off against Austria]], Henman and [[Greg Rusedski]] played all five rubbers on the Austrian clay, but were beaten 3โ2. Henman now decided to withdraw from the Davis Cup to concentrate on his own career.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/2355680/Bates-calls-up-rookie-to-replace-Henman.html |title=Bates calls up rookie to replace Henman |newspaper=The Daily Telegraph |date=21 February 2005 |access-date=3 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161009102020/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/2355680/Bates-calls-up-rookie-to-replace-Henman.html |archive-date=9 October 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref> ==== 2005โ2007: decline ==== [[File:Centre Court Wimbledon 1.jpg|thumb|Tim Henman playing at [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], 2005]] His first tournament in 2005 was the [[2005 Australian Open โ Men's singles|Australian Open]]. Henman defeated Frenchmen [[Cyril Saulnier]] in four sets, 6โ1, 6โ2, 4โ6, 6โ3, and defeated Romanian [[Victor Hฤnescu]] in three sets, 7โ5, 6โ1, 6โ4, but lost to the 28th seed Russian [[Nikolay Davydenko]] in straight sets; 4โ6, 2โ6, 2โ6. The next tournament was the [[2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament|Rotterdam Open]] where he reached the third round, being defeated by Croatian [[Mario Anฤiฤ]], 5โ7, 4โ6. He did not fare much better at the [[Dubai Tennis Championships|Dubai Open]], and lost in the third round to Croatian [[Ivan Ljubiฤiฤ]], 5โ7, 4โ6. Henman's next tournament was the first [[ATP Masters Series]] event of the year; at the [[2005 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|Indian Wells]] he reached the quarterfinals after receiving a [[bye (tennis)|bye]] (meaning he could skip the first round). He lost in the quarter-finals to Argentinian [[Guillermo Caรฑas]], 6โ7, 5โ7. At the [[2005 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles|Miami Masters]] Henman again lost in the quarter-finals, this time to Swiss world no. 1 [[Roger Federer]] in straight sets, 4โ6, 2โ6. At Henman's first clay tournament of 2005, the [[2005 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|Monte-Carlo Masters]], he lost in the first round to Argentinian [[Mariano Zabaleta]], 4โ6, 6โ4, 2โ6. Henman improved his clay record that year by reaching the third round at both the [[Italian Open (tennis)|Italian Open]] and the [[2005 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|Hamburg Masters]], but he disappointed his fans by being defeated by Peruvian [[Luis Horna]] in the second round of the [[2005 French Open โ Men's singles|French Open]] in four sets, 5โ7, 7โ6, 3โ6, 4โ6. In contrast to the clay season, the grass season began well, with Henman reaching the quarter-finals at the [[2005 Stella Artois Championships โ Singles|Queen's Club Championships]], losing to Swedish [[Thomas Johansson]], 4โ6, 4โ6. However, after defeating [[Jarkko Nieminen]] in the first round of the [[2005 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon Championship]], he lost in the second round to Russian [[Dmitry Tursunov]] in five sets, 6โ3, 2โ6, 6โ3, 3โ6, 6โ8. His hard court season was not much better; Henman was defeated in the first or second round in all the remaining tournaments he participated in that year. At the [[2005 US Open โ Men's singles|US Open]] he lost to Spaniard [[Fernando Verdasco]] in straight sets, 4โ6, 2โ6, 2โ6. At his last match of the year, Henman was beaten by Britain's rising tennis star [[Andy Murray]] in the first round in three sets, 3โ6, 7โ5, 7โ6.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2005&m=s&e=0# |title=2005 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104204027/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2005&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 January 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> [[File:Tim Henman Headshot.jpg|thumb|In 2006, Henman won 31, and lost 20 matches in total.<ref name="ATPtwooosix" />]] His opening tournament of 2006 was the [[2006 Qatar Open โ Singles|Qatar Open]], where he lost in the second round to [[Tommy Haas]] 2โ6, 6โ7 and 7โ5 in tie-break. In that year's [[2006 Australian Open โ Men's singles|Australian Open]] he was defeated in the first round by Russian [[Dmitry Tursunov]], 7โ5, 3โ6, 4โ6, 5โ7. His early defeat in the Australian Open was followed by success in the [[Zagreb Open]]; Henman reached the semi-finals, but was defeated by [[Stefan Koubek]], 3โ6, 6โ3, 2โ6. His success in Zagreb was met by failure at the [[2006 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament|Rotterdam Open]], where he was beaten in the second round by future world no. 1 [[Novak Djokovic]] in three sets, 7โ5, 3โ6, 4โ6. At the [[2006 Dubai Tennis Championships โ Men's singles|Dubai Open]] Henman reached the quarter-finals, but lost the match to the Spanish world no. 2 [[Rafael Nadal]] in straight sets; 6โ7 (1โ7 in tie break), 1โ6. Henman was defeated in the second round of [[2006 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|Indian Wells]] by up-and-comer [[Tomรกลก Berdych]] in two sets, 4โ6, 4โ6. Henman ended an eight-match losing streak against [[Lleyton Hewitt]] on 25 March 2006, with a 7โ6, 6โ3 victory at the [[2006 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles|Miami Masters tournament]], but lost in the third round to unseeded German [[Simon Greul]] in three sets; 6โ0, 1โ6, 5โ7. He was defeated in the first round of the [[2006 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|Monte-Carlo Masters]] by Argentinian world no. 8 [[Gastรณn Gaudio]], 1โ6, 3โ6. At the [[2006 Italian Open โ Men's singles|Italian Open]] Henman managed to reach the third round, but lost to Nadal, 2โ6, 2โ6. His success in the Italian Open was met with a defeat in the second round of the [[2007 French Open โ Men's singles|French Open]] by Dmitry Tursunov in four sets; 3โ6, 2โ6, 6โ4, 4โ6. His run at the [[2006 Queen's Club Championships โ Singles|Queen's Club Championships]] was far more successful, with Henman losing to Lleyton Hewitt 6โ3, 3โ6, 6โ2 in the semi-finals.<ref name="ATPtwooosix">{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2006&m=s&e=0# |title=2006 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131104163848/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2006&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 November 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref> Henman was unseeded at [[2006 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|Wimbledon in 2006]] for the first time in a number of years after his world ranking slipped down to number 62.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/2338909/Henman-cast-out-of-seeds.html |title=Henman cast out of seeds |access-date=5 June 2012 |date=21 June 2006 |work=[[The Daily Telegraph]] | location=London |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131218072405/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/2338909/Henman-cast-out-of-seeds.html |archive-date=18 December 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref> At that Wimbledon, he lost in the second round to eventual champion Federer, 6โ4, 6โ0, 6โ2, after a five-set victory over [[Robin Sรถderling]] of Sweden in the first round. At the [[2006 US Open โ Men's singles|US Open]], Henman reached the second round where he was defeated by Roger Federer, 3โ6, 4โ6, 5โ7. Following his failure at the US Open, Henman played two tournaments in the far east. Starting in [[PTT Bangkok Open|Bangkok]], Henman reached the quarter-finals where he lost to [[Paradorn Srichaphan]] 6โ7, 6โ4, 7โ6. Henman then reached his first final since 2004 at the [[Japan Open Tennis Championships|AIG Open]] in Tokyo, losing to [[Roger Federer]], 6โ3, 6โ3.<ref name="ATPtwooosix" /> Although Henman was scheduled to play in both Basel & Paris at the end of the 2006 season, he lost in the second round in Basel against the rising [[Switzerland|Swiss]] star [[Stanislas Wawrinka]] 2โ6, 7โ6, 6โ4. He twisted a knee; he did not retire but resorted to a less mobile game that saw Wawrinka win.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tennis-x.com/story/2006-10-27/d.php |title=Federer Bruising in Basel; Henman Injured, Waffling on Davis Cup |date=27 October 2006 |access-date=5 June 2012 |publisher=Tennis-x.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131104094333/http://www.tennis-x.com/story/2006-10-27/d.php |archive-date=4 November 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref> [[File:Tim Henman 2007.jpg|thumb|left|Henman in the first round of the 2007 Monte-Carlo Masters.]] On Henman's last practice session before departing for the [[2007 Australian Open|Australian Open]] at the start of 2007, having recovered from his knee injury, he injured his hamstring which forced him to withdraw from the tournament. He returned in time to enter Masters Series events in [[Indian Wells Open|Indian Wells]] and [[Miami Masters|Miami]] after withdrawing from [[ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament|Rotterdam]] and [[PBZ Zagreb Indoors|Zagreb]] but lost in the first round in both of them. Henman's poor luck with injury and form continued into the 2007 clay court season with first round losses to [[Juan Carlos Ferrero]], 5โ7, 2โ6 in [[2007 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|Monaco]], [[Nicolรกs Almagro]], 5โ7, 1โ6 in [[Rome Masters|Rome]] and a poor showing against 18-year-old grand slam debutant [[Ernests Gulbis]], 4โ6, 3โ6, 2โ6 in the [[2007 French Open โ Men's singles|French Open]]. Henman's clay-court season ended without a set won. His grass court season got underway on 12 June 2007 at Queens Club, but was put to an abrupt end by [[Croatian people|Croatian]] wildcard entry [[Marin ฤiliฤ]]. However, he ended the day with a doubles victory with partner [[Lleyton Hewitt]] over Australian [[Jordan Kerr]] and Austrian [[Alexander Peya]]. An early loss at a grass court event in [[Nottingham Open|Nottingham]] was followed up with a poor showing at [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], with Henman losing in the second round to [[Feliciano Lรณpez]] in five sets. Henman played three more tournaments before retiring; at his last Grand Slam appearance ever, he lost in the second round of the [[2007 US Open (tennis)|US Open]] to Frenchman [[Jo-Wilfried Tsonga]] in four sets; 6โ7, 6โ2, 5โ7, 4โ6.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=[[Association of Tennis Professionals]] | url=http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2007&m=s&e=0# |title=2007 Singles Activity |access-date=5 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104211052/http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/He/T/Tim-Henman.aspx?t=pa&y=2007&m=s&e=0 |archive-date=4 January 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> == Retirement and post-playing career== Henman announced at a press conference on 23 August 2007 that he would retire from tennis after playing in the [[2007 US Open โ Men's singles|US Open]] and Britain's [[Davis Cup]] tie against [[Croatia Davis Cup team|Croatia]] in September 2007.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.sky.com/|title=The Latest News from the UK and Around the World|date=3 April 2025|website=Sky News}}</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/tennis/6954442.stm Henman to retire after GB Cup tie] [[BBC News]]. Retrieved 23 August 2007</ref> Henman defeated his rival [[Dmitry Tursunov]] (who had won five of their six previous matches<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.orange.co.uk/sport/news/19981.htm?linkfrom=feed_sport&link=link_6&article=sport |title=Henman delight at Tursunov victory |publisher=Orange |date=31 August 2007 |access-date=24 October 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717004754/http://www.orange.co.uk/sport/news/19981.htm?linkfrom=feed_sport&link=link_6&article=sport |archive-date=17 July 2011 |url-status=live}}</ref>) in the first round of the US Open, 6โ4, 3โ6, 6โ3, 6โ4, in what many had assumed would be his final Grand Slam match. His actual final match was in the next round on 31 August 2007, losing to [[Jo-Wilfried Tsonga]], 6โ7(2โ7), 6โ2, 5โ7, 4โ6. Henman seemed sluggish compared to his first-round match, he served for the first set but could not close it out and lost the tiebreaker.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/tennis/6971620.stm ''Clinical Tsonga ends Henman era''] [[BBC News]]. Retrieved 1 September 2007</ref> Henman played his final match in the [[Davis Cup]] tie against Croatia on 22 September 2007. The doubles match with [[Jamie Murray]] was played on Court 1 at [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] which they won, 4โ6, 6โ4, 7โ6, 7โ5. The match put Great Britain in an unassailable 3โ0 lead and back in the World Group, with the doubles win being added to singles wins the previous day from Henman and [[Andy Murray]]. After the match Henman told Sue Barker in an interview on [[BBC]] Television and in front of the Court 1 crowd, "It's occasions like this and fans like this that I will miss so much". At the time of his retirement, Henman had already committed to playing a Charity Exhibition at London's [[Royal Albert Hall]] during the Seniors Tennis Event The Blackrock Masters in December 2007. Henman's opponent was veteran Swede and former Wimbledon Champion [[Stefan Edberg]], Tim won the pro-set 8โ4. Henman became part of the commentary team for the BBC coverage of the [[2008 Wimbledon Championships]] and has remained there since. Henman took part in a test event for the adoption of the centre court roof in May 2009, playing mixed doubles with [[Kim Clijsters]] against husband and wife team [[Andre Agassi]] and [[Steffi Graf]]. Finally he became a member of the AELTC board and became an important member of the Wimbledon organisation. He created his own foundation, called The Tim Henman Foundation, which is to help disadvantaged children.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ignitespaces.com/|title=Grafik Prediksi SDY! Angka Main SDY Hari Ini, Bocoran SDY Jitu Paito SDY Syair Sidney|website=ignitespaces.com}}</ref> He enjoys wine and his favourite film is wedding crashers.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.tennis.com/news/articles/the-tennis-conversation-tim-henman-wimbledon-wine-wedding-crashers|title=The Tennis Conversation: Tim Henman|website=Tennis.com}}</ref> Since retirement he has played mostly golf and is a member of various golf courses including; Huntercombe, Queenwood and Sunningdale. He has competed in the Dunhill Links Championship and has won the scratch medal at Huntercombe.<ref> {{Cite web |last=Bayly |first=Nick |date=2022-03-08 |title=TIM HENMAN - Golf News {{!}} Golf Magazine |url=https://golfnews.co.uk/news/tim-henman/#:~:text=I'm%20a%20member%20at%20Sunningdale%2C%20Queenwood%20and%20Huntercombe |access-date=2025-04-03 |website=Golf News |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.aerogolf.org.uk/index.php/latest-news/200-eddie-axten-wins-the-brabazon-trophy-at-huntercombe|title=Eddie Axten wins the Brabazon Trophy at Huntercombe|website=www.aerogolf.org.uk}}</ref> He states that he never confined himself to playing tennis, and enjoyed soccer, cricket, rugby and golf.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.timhenman.org/about-me/|title=TimHenman.org ยป About Me}}</ref> In March 2025, he was named the Vice Captain of Team Europe in the Laver Cup which is to be held in San Francisco in September 2025.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://lavercup.com/news/2025/03/25/tim-henman-named-vice-captain-of-team-europe-for-laver-cup|title=Tim Henman named Vice Captain of Team Europe|first=Laver|last=Cup|date=25 March 2025|website=Laver Cup}}</ref> == Equipment == Henman's clothing was manufactured by [[Adidas]] and he wore Adidas Equipment Barricade shoes.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2001/06/20010625/This-Weeks-Issue/What-Theyre-Wearing-And-Hitting-With-At-Wimbledon.aspx |title=What they're wearing (and hitting with) at Wimbledon |publisher=SportsBusiness Journal |date=25 June 2001 |access-date=10 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140910200138/http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2001/06/20010625/This-Weeks-Issue/What-Theyre-Wearing-And-Hitting-With-At-Wimbledon.aspx |archive-date=10 September 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> He used [[Slazenger]] Pro Braided racquets.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2000/08/20000828/No-Topic-Name/WHAT-THEYRE-WEARING-AND-HITTING-WITH-AT-THE-US-OPEN.aspx |title=WHAT THEY'RE WEARING (AND HITTING WITH) AT THE U.S. OPEN |publisher=SportsBusiness Journal |date=28 August 2000 |access-date=10 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140910204754/http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Journal/Issues/2000/08/20000828/No-Topic-Name/WHAT-THEYRE-WEARING-AND-HITTING-WITH-AT-THE-US-OPEN.aspx |archive-date=10 September 2014 |url-status=live}}</ref> ==Significant finals== ===Olympic finals=== ====Doubles: 1 (0โ1)==== {| class="sortable wikitable" !style="width:40px"|Result !style="width:60px"|Year !style="width:150px"|Tournament !style="width:50px"|Surface !style="width:140px"|Partner !style="width:140px"|Opponents !style="width:110px" class="unsortable"|Score |-style="background:#FFEA5C" | bgcolor=silver | Silver || [[Tennis at the 1996 Summer Olympics|1996]] || [[Tennis at the 1996 Summer Olympics โ Men's doubles|Atlanta, United States]] || Hard || {{flagicon|GBR}} [[Neil Broad]] || {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Todd Woodbridge]]<br />{{flagicon|AUS}} [[Mark Woodforde]] || 4โ6, 4โ6, 2โ6 |} ===Masters Series finals=== ====Singles: 4 (1โ3)==== {|class="sortable wikitable" !Result !Year !Tournament !Surface !Opponent !class=unsortable|Score |-bgcolor=ccccff |bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss||[[2000 Cincinnati Masters โ Singles|{{dts|2000}}]]||[[Cincinnati Masters]]||Hard||{{flagicon|SWE}} [[Thomas Enqvist]]||6โ7<sup>(5โ7)</sup>, 4โ6 |-bgcolor=ccccff |bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss||[[2002 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|{{dts|2002}}]]||[[Indian Wells Masters]]||Hard||{{flagicon|AUS}} Lleyton Hewitt||1โ6, 2โ6 |- style="background:thistle;" |bgcolor=98fb98|Win||[[2003 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|{{dts|2003}}]]||[[Paris Masters]]||Carpet (i)||{{flagicon|ROU}} [[Andrei Pavel]]||6โ2, 7โ6<sup>(8โ6)</sup>, 7โ6<sup>(7โ2)</sup> |-bgcolor=ccccff |bgcolor=FFA07A|Loss||[[2004 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|{{dts|2004}}]]||[[Indian Wells Masters]]||Hard||{{flagicon|SUI}} Roger Federer||3โ6, 3โ6 |} ====Doubles: 2 (2โ0)==== {|class="sortable wikitable" !Result !Year !Tournament !Surface !Partner !Opponents !class=unsortable|Score |-bgcolor=ebc2af |bgcolor=98fb98|Win||[[1999 Monte Carlo Open โ Doubles|1999]]||[[Monte-Carlo Masters]]||Clay||{{flagicon|FRA}} [[Olivier Delaรฎtre]]||{{flagicon|CZE}} [[Jiลรญ Novรกk]]<br />{{flagicon|CZE}} [[David Rikl]]||6โ2, 6โ3 |-bgcolor=ebc2af |bgcolor=98fb98|Win||[[2004 Monte Carlo Masters โ Doubles|2004]]||[[Monte-Carlo Masters]]||Clay||{{flagicon|SCG}} [[Nenad Zimonjiฤ]]||{{flagicon|ARG}} [[Gastรณn Etlis]]<br />{{flagicon|ARG}} [[Martรญn Rodrรญguez (tennis)|Martรญn Rodrรญguez]]||7โ5, 6โ2 |} == ATP career finals == === Singles: 28 (11 titles, 17 runners-up) === {| |-style="vertical-align:top" | {| class="wikitable" !Legend |-style="background:#F3E6D7;" | Grand Slam tournaments (0โ0) |-style="background:#FFFFCC;" | Tennis Masters Cup (0โ0) |-style="background:#E9E9E9;" | ATP Super 9 /<br />ATP Masters Series (1โ3) |-style="background:#D4F1C5;" | ATP Championship Series /<br />ATP International Series Gold (1โ5) |- | ATP World Series /<br />ATP International Series (9โ8) |} | {| class="wikitable" !Titles by surface |- | Hard (9โ12) |- | Clay (0โ0) |- | Grass (0โ3) |- | Carpet (2โ3) |} | {| class="wikitable" !Titles by setting |- | Outdoor (5โ12) |- | Indoor (6โ5) |} |} {| class="sortable wikitable" !Result !class="unsortable"|WโL !Date !Tournament !Tier !Surface !Opponent !class="unsortable"|Score |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>0โ1</small> | [[1997 Qatar Open โ Singles|{{dts|Jan 1997}}]] | [[ATP Qatar Open|Qatar Open]], Qatar | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jim Courier]] | 5โ7, 7โ6<sup>(7โ5)</sup>, 2โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>1โ1</small> | [[1997 Sydney International โ Men's singles|{{dts|Jan 1997}}]] | [[Sydney International]], Australia | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|ESP}} [[Carlos Moyรก]] | 6โ3, 6โ1 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>1โ2</small> | [[1997 European Community Championships โ Singles|{{dts|Feb 1997}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | [[ECC Antwerp]], Belgium | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Champ. Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Marc Rosset]] | 2โ6, 5โ7, 4โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>2โ2</small> | [[1997 President's Cup โ Singles|{{dts|Sep 1997}}]] | [[ATP Tashkent Open|President's Cup]], Uzbekistan | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|SUI}} Marc Rosset | 7โ6<sup>(7โ2)</sup>, 6โ4 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>2โ3</small> | [[1998 Sydney International โ Men's singles|{{dts|Jan 1998}}]] | Sydney International, Australia | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|SVK}} [[Karol Kuฤera]] | 5โ7, 4โ6 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>2โ4</small> | [[1998 Mercedes-Benz Cup โ Singles|{{dts|Aug 1998}}]] | [[Los Angeles Open (tennis)|Los Angeles Open]], US | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Andre Agassi]] | 4โ6, 4โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>3โ4</small> | [[1998 President's Cup โ Singles|{{dts|Sep 1998}}]] | President's Cup, Uzbekistan <small>(2)</small> | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | 7โ5, 6โ4 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>4โ4</small> | [[1998 Davidoff Swiss Indoors โ Singles|{{dts|Oct 1998}}]] | [[Swiss Indoors]], Switzerland | World Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|USA}} Andre Agassi | 6โ4, 6โ3, 3โ6, 6โ4 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>4โ5</small> | [[1999 Qatar Open โ Singles|{{dts|Jan 1999}}]] | Qatar Open, Qatar | World Series | Hard | {{flagicon|GER}} [[Rainer Schรผttler]] | 4โ6, 7โ5, 1โ6 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>4โ6</small> | [[1999 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament โ Singles|{{dts|Feb 1999}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | [[Rotterdam Open]], Netherlands | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Champ. Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|RUS}} Yevgeny Kafelnikov | 2โ6, 6โ7<sup>(3โ7)</sup> |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>4โ7</small> | [[1999 Stella Artois Championships โ Singles|{{dts|Jun 1999}}]] | [[Queen's Club Championships]], UK | World Series | Grass | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Pete Sampras]] | 7โ6<sup>(7โ1)</sup>, 4โ6, 6โ7<sup>(4โ7)</sup> |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>4โ8</small> | [[1999 Davidoff Swiss Indoors โ Singles|{{dts|Oct 1999}}]] | Swiss Indoors, Switzerland | World Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|SVK}} Karol Kuฤera | 4โ6, 6โ7<sup>(10โ12)</sup>, 6โ4, 6โ4, 6โ7<sup>(2โ7)</sup> |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>4โ9</small> | [[2000 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament โ Singles|{{dts|Feb 2000}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Rotterdam Open, Netherlands | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Intl. Gold | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|FRA}} [[Cรฉdric Pioline]] | 7โ6<sup>(7โ3)</sup>, 4โ6, 6โ7<sup>(4โ7)</sup> |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>{{nowrap|4โ10}}</small> | [[2000 Franklin Templeton Tennis Classic โ Singles|{{dts|Mar 2000}}]] | [[Tennis Channel Open|Scottsdale Open]], US | International | Hard | {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Lleyton Hewitt]] | 4โ6, 6โ7<sup>(2โ7)</sup> |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>4โ11</small> | [[2000 Cincinnati Masters โ Singles|{{dts|Aug 2000}}]] | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | [[Cincinnati Masters]], US | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Masters Series | Hard | {{flagicon|SWE}} [[Thomas Enqvist]] | 6โ7<sup>(5โ7)</sup>, 4โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>5โ11</small> | [[2000 CA-TennisTrophy โ Singles|{{dts|Oct 2000}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | [[Vienna Open]], Austria | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Intl. Gold | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|GER}} [[Tommy Haas]] | 6โ4, 6โ4, 6โ4 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>6โ11</small> | [[2000 Brighton International โ Singles|{{dts|Nov 2000}}]] | [[Brighton International]], UK | International | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|SVK}} [[Dominik Hrbatรฝ]] | 6โ2, 6โ2 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>7โ11</small> | [[2001 Copenhagen Open โ Singles|{{dts|Feb 2001}}]] | [[Copenhagen Open]], Denmark | International | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|SWE}} [[Andreas Vinciguerra]] | 6โ3, 6โ4 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>7โ12</small> | [[2001 Stella Artois Championships โ Singles|{{dts|Jun 2001}}]] | Queen's Club Championships, UK | International | Grass | {{flagicon|AUS}} Lleyton Hewitt | 6โ7<sup>(3โ7)</sup>, 6โ7<sup>(3โ7)</sup> |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>8โ12</small> | [[2001 Davidoff Swiss Indoors โ Singles|{{dts|Oct 2001}}]] | Swiss Indoors, Switzerland <small>(2)</small> | International | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Roger Federer]] | 6โ3, 6โ4, 6โ2 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>9โ12</small> | [[2002 AAPT Championships โ Singles|{{dts|Jan 2002}}]] | [[Brisbane International|Adelaide International]], Australia | International | Hard | {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Mark Philippoussis]] | 6โ4, 6โ7<sup>(6โ8)</sup>, 6โ3 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>9โ13</small> | [[2002 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament โ Singles|{{dts|Feb 2002}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Rotterdam Open, Netherlands | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Intl. Gold | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|FRA}} [[Nicolas Escudรฉ]] | 6โ3, 6โ7<sup>(7โ9)</sup>, 4โ6 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>9โ14</small> | [[2002 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|{{dts|Mar 2002}}]] | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | [[Indian Wells Masters]], US | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Masters Series | Hard | {{flagicon|AUS}} Lleyton Hewitt | 1โ6, 2โ6 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>9โ15</small> | [[2002 Stella Artois Championships โ Singles|{{dts|Jun 2002}}]] | Queen's Club Championships, UK | International | Grass | {{flagicon|AUS}} Lleyton Hewitt | 6โ4, 1โ6, 4โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>{{nowrap|10โ15}}</small> | [[2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic โ Singles|{{dts|Aug 2003}}]] | [[Washington Open (tennis)|Washington Open]], US | International | Hard | {{flagicon|CHI}} [[Fernando Gonzรกlez]] | 6โ3, 6โ4 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>11โ15</small> | [[2003 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|{{dts|Nov 2003}}]] | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | [[Paris Masters]], France | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Masters Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|ROU}} [[Andrei Pavel]] | 6โ2, 7โ6<sup>(8โ6)</sup>, 7โ6<sup>(7โ2)</sup> |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>11โ16</small> | [[2004 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|{{dts|Mar 2004}}]] | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Indian Wells Masters, US | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Masters Series | Hard | {{flagicon|SUI}} Roger Federer | 3โ6, 3โ6 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>11โ17</small> | [[2006 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships โ Men's singles|{{dts|Oct 2006}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | [[Japan Open (tennis)|Japan Open]], Japan | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Intl. Gold | Hard | {{flagicon|SUI}} Roger Federer | 3โ6, 3โ6 |} === Doubles: 6 (4 titles, 2 runners-up) === {| |-style="vertical-align:top" | {| class="wikitable" !Legend |-style="background:#F3E6D7;" | Grand Slam tournaments (0โ0) |-style="background:#FFFFCC;" | Tennis Masters Cup (0โ0) |-style="background:#E9E9E9;" | ATP Super 9 /<br />ATP Masters Series (2โ0) |-style="background:#FFEA5C;" | Olympic Games (0โ1) |-style="background:#D4F1C5;" |ATP Championship Series /<br />ATP International Series Gold (1โ1) |- | ATP World Series /<br />ATP International Series (1โ0) |} | {| class="wikitable" !Titles by surface |- | Hard (0โ2) |- | Clay (2โ0) |- | Grass (0โ0) |- | Carpet (2โ0) |} | {| class="wikitable" !Titles by setting |- | Outdoor (2โ1) |- | Indoor (2โ1) |} |} {| class="sortable wikitable" !Result !class="unsortable"|WโL !Date !Tournament !Tier !Surface !Partner !Opponents !class="unsortable"|Score |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>0โ1</small> | [[Tennis at the 1996 Summer Olympics โ Men's doubles|{{dts|Aug 1996}}]] | style="background:#FFEA5C;" | [[Tennis at the Summer Olympics|Olympic Games]], US | style="background:#FFEA5C;" | Olympics | Hard | {{flagicon|GBR}} [[Neil Broad]] | {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Todd Woodbridge]]<br />{{flagicon|AUS}} [[Mark Woodforde]] | 4โ6, 4โ6, 2โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>1โ1</small> | [[1997 Davidoff Swiss Indoors โ Doubles|{{dts|Oct 1997}}]] | [[Swiss Indoors]], Switzerland | World Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Marc Rosset]] | {{flagicon|GER}} [[Karsten Braasch]]<br />{{flagicon|USA}} [[Jim Grabb]] | 7โ6, 6โ7, 7โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>2โ1</small> | [[1999 Guardian Direct Cup โ Doubles|{{dts|Feb 1999}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | [[Milan Indoor|London Indoor]], UK | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Champ. Series | Carpet (i) | {{flagicon|GBR}} [[Greg Rusedski]] | {{flagicon|ZIM}} [[Byron Black]]<br />{{flagicon|RSA}} [[Wayne Ferreira]] | 6โ3, 7โ6<sup>(8โ6)</sup> |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>3โ1</small> | [[1999 Monte Carlo Open โ Doubles|{{dts|Apr 1999}}]] | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | [[Monte-Carlo Masters]], Monaco | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Super 9 | Clay | {{flagicon|FRA}} [[Olivier Delaรฎtre]] | {{flagicon|CZE}} [[Jiลรญ Novรกk]]<br />{{flagicon|CZE}} [[David Rikl]] | 6โ2, 6โ3 |- | style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss | <small>3โ2</small> | [[2000 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament โ Doubles|{{dts|Feb 2000}}]] | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | [[Rotterdam Open]], Netherlands | style="background:#D4F1C5;" | Intl. Gold | Hard (i) | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | {{flagicon|RSA}} [[David Adams (tennis)|David Adams]]<br />{{flagicon|RSA}} [[John-Laffnie de Jager]] | 7โ5, 2โ6, 3โ6 |- | style="background:#98fb98;"|Win | <small>4โ2</small> | [[2004 Monte Carlo Masters โ Doubles|{{dts|Apr 2004}}]] | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Monte-Carlo Masters, Monaco <small>(2)</small> | style="background:#E9E9E9;" | Masters Series | Clay | {{flagicon|SCG}} [[Nenad Zimonjiฤ]] | {{flagicon|ARG}} [[Gastรณn Etlis]]<br />{{flagicon|ARG}} [[Martรญn Rodrรญguez (tennis)|Martรญn Rodrรญguez]] | 7โ5, 6โ2 |} == Singles performance timeline == {{performance key|short=no|active=no}} {|class=wikitable style=text-align:center;font-size:97% !width=170|Tournament!!width=35|[[1992 ATP Tour|1992]]!!width=35|[[1993 ATP Tour|1993]]!!width=35|[[1994 ATP Tour|1994]]!!width=35|[[1995 ATP Tour|1995]]!!width=35|[[1996 ATP Tour|1996]]!!width=35|[[1997 ATP Tour|1997]]!!width=35|[[1998 ATP Tour|1998]]!!width=35|[[1999 ATP Tour|1999]]!!width=35|[[2000 ATP Tour|2000]]!!width=35|[[2001 ATP Tour|2001]]!!width=35|[[2002 ATP Tour|2002]]!!width=35|[[2003 ATP Tour|2003]]!!width=35|[[2004 ATP Tour|2004]]!!width=35|[[2005 ATP Tour|2005]]!!width=35|[[2006 ATP Tour|2006]]!!width=35|[[2007 ATP Tour|2007]]!!width=45|SR!!width=45|WโL!!width=45|Win % |- |colspan=23 align=left|[[Grand Slam (tennis)|'''Grand Slam tournaments''']] |- |align=left|[[Australian Open]] |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 8|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 8|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 6|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 5|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 4|4R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 7|4R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 7|4R]] |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 7|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 7|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Australian Open โ Men's singles#Section 6|1R]] |A |0 / 10 |18โ10 |{{tennis win percentage|won=18|lost=10|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[French Open]] |A |A |bgcolor=ecf2ff|[[1994 French Open โ Men's singles qualifying|Q1]] |bgcolor=ecf2ff|[[1995 French Open โ Men's singles qualifying|Q2]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 4|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 3|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 1|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 2|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 6|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 4|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 7|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 3|3R]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[2004 French Open โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 2|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 2|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 French Open โ Men's singles#Section 8|1R]] |0 / 12 |16โ12 |{{tennis win percentage|won=16|lost=12|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]] |bgcolor=ecf2ff|[[1992 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles qualifying|Q1]] |bgcolor=ecf2ff|[[1993 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles qualifying|Q2]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1994 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles#Section 6|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1995 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles#Section 8|2R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[1996 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[1997 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[1998 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[1999 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles#Section 7|4R]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[2001 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[2002 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2003 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2004 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles#Section 7|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles#Section 1|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Wimbledon Championships โ Men's singles#Section 4|2R]] |0 / 14 |43โ14 |{{tennis win percentage|won=43|lost=14|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[US Open (tennis)|US Open]] |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1995 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 1|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 4|4R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 5|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 6|4R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 5|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 4|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 5|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 5|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 6|1R]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[2004 US Open โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 4|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 1|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 US Open โ Men's singles#Section 8|2R]] |0 / 13 |21โ13 |{{tennis win percentage|won=21|lost=13|integer=yes}} |- !style=text-align:left|Winโloss !0โ0 !0โ0 !0โ1 !2โ2 !8โ4 !7โ4 !8โ4 !9โ4 !10โ4 !12โ4 !11โ4 !6โ3 !16โ4 !4โ4 !3โ4 !2โ3 !0 / 49 !98โ49 !{{tennis win percentage|won=98|lost=49|integer=yes}} |- |colspan=23 align=left|'''Year End Championships''' |- |align=left|[[ATP Finals|Tennis Masters Cup]] |colspan=5 |Did not qualify |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 ATP Tour World Championships|RR]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[1998 ATP Tour World Championships|SF]] |colspan=5 |Did not qualify |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Tennis Masters Cup#Blue group|RR]] |colspan=3 |Did not qualify !0 / 3 !4โ4 !{{tennis win percentage|won=4|lost=4|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Grand Slam Cup]] |colspan=4 |Did not qualify |bgcolor=yellow|[[Grand Slam Cup#1996|SF]] |DNQ |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Compaq Grand Slam Cup โ Men's singles|1R]] |DNQ |colspan=8 style=color:#767676|Not Held !0 / 2 !2โ2 !{{tennis win percentage|won=2|lost=2|integer=yes}} |- |colspan=23 align=left|'''[[ATP Masters Series]]''' |- |align=left|[[Indian Wells Masters]] |A |A |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Newsweek Champions Cup โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[1999 Newsweek Champions Cup โ Singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Indian Wells Masters โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Indian Wells Masters โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=thistle|[[2002 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|F]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=thistle|[[2004 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|F]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2005 Pacific Life Open โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Indian Wells Masters โ Men's singles#Section 7|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Indian Wells Masters โ Men's singles|1R]] |0 / 10 |20โ10 |{{tennis win percentage|won=20|lost=10|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Miami Masters]] |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 Lipton Championships โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 Lipton Championships โ Men's singles|1R]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[1998 Lipton Championships โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 Lipton Championships โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2000 Ericsson Open โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Ericsson Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles|4R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2005 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 NASDAQ-100 Open โ Men's singles#Section 3|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Miami Masters โ Men's singles|1R]] |0 / 12 |16โ12 |{{tennis win percentage|won=16|lost=12|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Monte-Carlo Masters]] |A |A |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Monte Carlo Open โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 Monte Carlo Open โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2001 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|QF]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[2002 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|SF]] |A |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2004 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles#Section 3|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Monte Carlo Masters|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Monte Carlo Masters โ Singles#Section 2|1R]] |0 / 9 |11โ9 |{{tennis win percentage|won=11|lost=9|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Rome Masters]] |A |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 Italian Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Italian Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 Italian Open โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Italian Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Italian Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 Italian Open โ Men's singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 Telecom Italia Masters โ Men's singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Telecom Italia Masters โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Italian Open โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Italian Open โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Italian Open โ Men's singles#Section 1|1R]] |0 / 11 |12โ11 |{{tennis win percentage|won=12|lost=11|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Hamburg Masters]] |A |A |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 ATP German Open โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[1999 ATP German Open โ Singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Hamburg Masters โ Singles|3R]] |A |A |0 / 8 |11โ8 |{{tennis win percentage|won=11|lost=8|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Canada Masters]] |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 du Maurier Open โ Men's singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 du Maurier Open โ Men's singles|1R]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[1998 du Maurier Open โ Men's singles|SF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 du Maurier Open โ Men's singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 du Maurier Open โ Men's singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Canada Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 Canada Masters โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 Canada Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Canada Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Rogers Cup โ Men's singles#Section 4|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Rogers Cup โ Men's singles#Section 3|2R]] |A |0 / 11 |10โ11 |{{tennis win percentage|won=10|lost=11|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Cincinnati Masters]] |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 Great American Insurance ATP Championships โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 Great American Insurance ATP Championships โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Great American Insurance ATP Championships โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[1999 Great American Insurance ATP Championships โ Singles|QF]] |bgcolor=thistle|[[2000 Cincinnati Masters โ Singles|F]] |bgcolor=yellow|[[2001 Cincinnati Masters โ Singles|SF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2007 Cincinnati Masters โ Men's singles#Section 1|1R]] |0 / 12 |16โ12 |{{tennis win percentage|won=16|lost=12|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Madrid Open (tennis)|Madrid Masters]]{{efn|[[Eurocard Open|Stuttgart]] from 1995 to 2001, and Madrid from 2002 onwards.}} |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 Eurocard Open โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 Eurocard Open โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Eurocard Open โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 Eurocard Open โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Stuttgart Masters โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=ffebcd|[[2001 Stuttgart Masters โ Singles|QF]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 Mutua Madrileรฑa Masters Madrid โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2003 Mutua Madrileรฑa Masters Madrid โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 Mutua Madrileรฑa Masters Madrid โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2005 Mutua Madrileรฑa Masters Madrid โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2006 Mutua Madrileรฑa Masters Madrid โ Singles|3R]] |A |0 / 11 |10โ11 |{{tennis win percentage|won=10|lost=11|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|[[Paris Masters]] |A |A |A |A |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1996 Paris Open โ Singles|1R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1997 Paris Open โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1998 Paris Open โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[1999 Paris Open โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2000 Paris Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2001 Paris Masters โ Singles|2R]] |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2002 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|3R]] |bgcolor=lime|'''[[2003 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|W]]''' |bgcolor=afeeee|[[2004 BNP Paribas Masters โ Singles|3R]] |A |A |A |1 / 9 |10โ8 |{{tennis win percentage|won=10|lost=8|integer=yes}} |- !style=text-align:left|Winโloss !0โ0 !0โ0 !0โ0 !0โ0 !3โ5 !4โ6 !11โ9 !10โ9 !14โ9 !13โ9 !16โ9 !10โ7 !16โ9 !12โ8 !8โ7 !0โ5 !1 / 93 !116โ92 !{{tennis win percentage|won=116|lost=92|integer=yes}} |- |colspan=23 align=left|'''Career Statistics''' |- !style=text-align:left|TitlesโFinals !0โ0 !0โ0 !0โ0 !0โ0 !0โ2 !2โ2 !2โ4 !0โ4 !2โ5 !3โ4 !0โ3 !2โ2 !0โ1 !0โ0 !0โ1 !0โ0 !11 / 28 !11โ17 !{{tennis win percentage|won=11|lost=17|integer=yes}} |- |align=left|'''Year-end ranking''' |778 |372 |167 |95 |29 |17 |bgcolor=eee8aa|7 |11 |bgcolor=eee8aa|10 |bgcolor=eee8aa|9 |bgcolor=eee8aa|8 |15 |bgcolor=eee8aa|6 |36 |39 |292 |colspan=3|'''$11,635,542''' |} == Top 10 wins == {| class="wikitable sortable" |- | Season || 1992 || 1993 || 1994 || 1995 || 1996 || 1997 || 1998 || 1999 || 2000 || 2001 || 2002 || 2003 || 2004 || 2005 || 2006 || 2007 || '''Total''' |-align="center" | Wins || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 2 || 5 || 9 || 2 || 6 || 0 || 3 || 4 || 3 || 0 || 1 || 0 || '''35''' |} {| class="wikitable sortable" !width="10" | # !width="150" | Player !width="10" | Rank !width="250" | Event !width="20" | Surface !width="10" | Rd !width="200" | Score |- !colspan="7" | [[1996 ATP Tour|1996]] |- | 1. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 5 | bgcolor=f3e6d7 | [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], London, United Kingdom | bgcolor=#cfc | Grass | bgcolor=afeeee | 1R | 7โ6<sup>(8โ6)</sup>, 6โ3, 6โ7<sup>(2โ7)</sup>, 4โ6, 7โ5 |- | 2. | {{flagicon|RSA}} [[Wayne Ferreira]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 7 | [[Ostrava Open|Ostrava]], Czech Republic | bgcolor=thistle | Carpet (i) | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 6โ4, 6โ3 |- !colspan="7" | [[1997 ATP Tour|1997]] |- | 3. | {{flagicon|CRO}} [[Goran Ivaniลกeviฤ]] | bgcolor=99ccff | 3 | [[Sydney International|Sydney]], Australia | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=yellow | SF | 4โ6, 7โ6<sup>(7โ1)</sup>, 6โ1 |- | 4. | {{flagicon|NED}} [[Richard Krajicek]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 5 | bgcolor=f3e6d7 | [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], London, United Kingdom | bgcolor=#cfc | Grass | bgcolor=afeeee | 4R | 7โ6<sup>(9โ7)</sup>, 6โ7<sup>(7โ9)</sup>, 7โ6<sup>(7โ5)</sup>, 6โ4 |- | 5. | {{flagicon|AUT}} [[Thomas Muster]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 5 | bgcolor=f3e6d7 | [[US Open (tennis)|US Open]], New York, United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | 1R | 6โ3, 7โ6<sup>(7โ3)</sup>, 4โ6, 6โ4 |- | 6. | {{flagicon|CRO}} [[Goran Ivaniลกeviฤ]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 4 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Eurocard Open|Stuttgart]], Germany | bgcolor=thistle | Carpet (i) | bgcolor=afeeee | 2R | 6โ3, 2โ0, ret. |- | 7. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 6 | bgcolor=ffffcc | {{nowrap|[[ATP Finals|ATP Tour World Championships]], Hanover, Germany}} | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=afeeee | RR | 6โ4, 6โ4 |- !colspan="7" | [[1998 ATP Tour|1998]] |- | 8. | {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Pat Rafter]] | bgcolor=thistle | 2 | [[Sydney International|Sydney]], Australia | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=yellow | SF | 7โ6<sup>(7โ5)</sup>, 7โ5 |- | 9. | {{flagicon|NED}} [[Richard Krajicek]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 10 | bgcolor=d4f1c5 | [[Milan Indoor|London]], United Kingdom | bgcolor=thistle | Carpet (i) | bgcolor=afeeee | 1R | 6โ7<sup>(5โ7)</sup>, 7โ6<sup>(7โ2)</sup>, 7โ5 |- | 10. | {{flagicon|CZE}} [[Petr Korda]] | bgcolor=thistle | 2 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Miami Open (tennis)|Miami]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | 4R | 6โ4, 6โ4 |- | 11. | {{flagicon|AUS}} [[Pat Rafter]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 6 | bgcolor=f3e6d7 | [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], London, United Kingdom | bgcolor=#cfc | Grass | bgcolor=afeeee | 4R | 6โ3, 6โ7<sup>(3โ7)</sup>, 6โ3, 6โ2 |- | 12. | {{flagicon|CZE}} [[Petr Korda]] | bgcolor=99ccff | 3 | bgcolor=f3e6d7 | [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], London, United Kingdom | bgcolor=#cfc | Grass | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 6โ3, 6โ4, 6โ2 |- | 13. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 10 | [[ATP Tashkent Open|Tashkent]], Uzbekistan | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=lime | F | 7โ5, 6โ4 |- | 14. | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Andre Agassi]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 8 | [[Swiss Indoors|Basel]], Switzerland | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=lime | F | 6โ4, 6โ3, 3โ6, 6โ4 |- | 15. | {{flagicon|CHI}} [[Marcelo Rรญos]] | bgcolor=thistle | 2 | bgcolor=ffffcc | {{nowrap|[[ATP Finals|ATP Tour World Championships]], Hanover, Germany}} | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=afeeee | RR | 7โ5, 6โ1 |- | 16. | {{flagicon|ESP}} [[รlex Corretja]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 6 | bgcolor=ffffcc | {{nowrap|[[ATP Finals|ATP Tour World Championships]], Hanover, Germany}} | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=afeeee | RR | 7โ6<sup>(7โ4)</sup>, 6โ7<sup>(4โ7)</sup>, 6โ2 |- !colspan="7" | [[1999 ATP Tour|1999]] |- | 17. | {{flagicon|GBR}} [[Greg Rusedski]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 10 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Indian Wells Open|Indian Wells]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | 3R | 6โ4, 2โ6, 6โ4 |- | 18. | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Todd Martin]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 8 | bgcolor=ECF2FF | [[Davis Cup]], Birmingham, United Kingdom | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=afeeee | RR | 4โ6, 7โ5, 6โ3, 7โ6<sup>(7โ4)</sup> |- !colspan="7" | [[2000 ATP Tour|2000]] |- | 19. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | bgcolor=thistle | 2 | bgcolor=d4f1c5 | [[Rotterdam Open|Rotterdam]], Netherlands | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=yellow | SF | 6โ3, 4โ6, 6โ3 |- | 20. | {{flagicon|ECU}} [[Nicolรกs Lapentti]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 8 | [[Tennis Channel Open|Scottsdale]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 6โ3, 6โ2 |- | 21. | {{flagicon|CHI}} [[Marcelo Rรญos]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 8 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Miami Open (tennis)|Miami]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | 4R | 6โ1, 1โ6, 7โ6<sup>(7โ4)</sup> |- | 22. | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Pete Sampras]] | bgcolor=thistle | 2 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Cincinnati Open|Cincinnati]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | 3R | 6โ3, 6โ4 |- | 23. | {{flagicon|BRA}} [[Gustavo Kuerten]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 4 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Cincinnati Open|Cincinnati]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=yellow | SF | 6โ7<sup>(11โ13)</sup>, 6โ3, 7โ6<sup>(7โ0)</sup> |- | 24. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 5 | bgcolor=d4f1c5 | [[Indianapolis Tennis Championships|Indianapolis]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 7โ6<sup>(7โ4)</sup>, 6โ2 |- !colspan="7" | [[2002 ATP Tour|2002]] |- | 25. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Marat Safin]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 8 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Indian Wells Open|Indian Wells]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | 3R | 7โ6<sup>(7โ3)</sup>, 6โ4 |- | 26. | {{flagicon|SWE}} [[Thomas Johansson]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 9 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Monte-Carlo Masters|Monte Carlo]], Monaco | bgcolor=#ebc2af | Clay | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 2โ6, 6โ4, 7โ6<sup>(7โ4)</sup> |- | 27. | {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Yevgeny Kafelnikov]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 5 | bgcolor=ECF2FF | [[World Team Cup]], Dรผsseldorf, Germany | bgcolor=#ebc2af | Clay | bgcolor=afeeee | RR | 6โ2, 7โ6<sup>(8โ6)</sup> |- !colspan="7" | [[2003 ATP Tour|2003]] |- | 28. | {{flagicon|ARG}} [[David Nalbandian]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 9 | bgcolor=f3e6d7 | [[Wimbledon Championships|Wimbledon]], London, United Kingdom | bgcolor=#cfc | Grass | bgcolor=afeeee | 4R | 6โ2, 6โ7<sup>(4โ7)</sup>, 7โ5, 6โ3 |- | 29. | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Andy Roddick]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 6 | [[Washington Open (tennis)|Washington, D.C.]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=yellow | SF | 1โ6, 6โ3, 7โ6<sup>(7โ1)</sup> |- | 30. | {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Roger Federer]] | bgcolor=99ccff | 3 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Paris Masters|Paris]], France | bgcolor=thistle | Carpet (i) | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 7โ6<sup>(7โ5)</sup>, 6โ1 |- | 31. | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Andy Roddick]] | bgcolor=thistle | 2 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Paris Masters|Paris]], France | bgcolor=thistle | Carpet (i) | bgcolor=yellow | SF | 7โ6<sup>(7โ4)</sup>, 7โ6<sup>(9โ7)</sup> |- !colspan="7" | [[2004 ATP Tour|2004]] |- | 32. | {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Roger Federer]] | bgcolor=lime | '''1''' | bgcolor=d4f1c5 | [[Rotterdam Open|Rotterdam]], Netherlands | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard (i) | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 6โ3, 7โ6<sup>(11โ9)</sup> |- | 33. | {{flagicon|USA}} [[Andy Roddick]] | bgcolor=99ccff | 3 | bgcolor=e9e9e9 | [[Indian Wells Open|Indian Wells]], United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 6โ7<sup>(6โ8)</sup>, 7โ6<sup>(7โ1)</sup>, 6โ3 |- | 34. | {{flagicon|ARG}} [[Guillermo Coria]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 6 | bgcolor=ffffcc | [[ATP Finals|Tennis Masters Cup]], Houston, United States | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=afeeee | RR | 6โ2, 6โ2 |- !colspan="7" | [[2006 ATP Tour|2006]] |- | 35. | {{flagicon|CRO}} [[Mario Anฤiฤ]] | bgcolor=EEE8AA | 10 | bgcolor=d4f1c5 | [[Japan Open (tennis)|Tokyo]], Japan | bgcolor=CCCCFF | Hard | bgcolor=ffebcd | QF | 6โ2, 6โ2 |} == Notes == {{notelist}} == References == {{Reflist|20em}} == Bibliography == {{Portal|Tennis}} * {{cite book |author=Felstein, Simon |ref=CITEREFFelstein2005 |title=Tim Henman: England's Finest |publisher=[[John Blake (journalist)|John Blake Publishing]] | year=2005 |isbn=978-1-84454-111-9}} == External links == {{Commons category|Tim Henman}} * {{ATP}} * {{ITF}} * {{Davis Cup player}} * {{IMDb name|id=1711540|name=Tim Henman}} {{S-start}} {{s-ach}} {{succession box | before = [[Thomas Enqvist]] | after = [[Patrick Rafter]] | title = [[ATP Awards|ATP Most Improved Player]] | years = 1996 }} {{S-end}} {{ATP Masters Series tournament winners}} {{ATP Masters Series tournament doubles winners}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Henman, Tim}} [[Category:1974 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:English male tennis players]] [[Category:British male tennis players]] [[Category:Officers of the Order of the British Empire]] [[Category:People educated at The Dragon School]] [[Category:People educated at Reed's School]] [[Category:People from Aston Tirrold]] [[Category:Sportspeople from Oxford]] [[Category:Olympic medalists in tennis]] [[Category:Olympic silver medallists for Great Britain]] [[Category:Olympic tennis players for Great Britain]] [[Category:Tennis players from Oxfordshire]] [[Category:Tennis commentators]] [[Category:Tennis players at the 1996 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Tennis players at the 2000 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Tennis players at the 2004 Summer Olympics]] [[Category:Medalists at the 1996 Summer Olympics]]
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