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Andy Roddick

Roddick at the 2000 US Open

Andrew "Andy" Stephen Roddick, nicknamed A-Rod (born August 30, 1982), is an American tennis player who currently is the best tennis player representing his country (#1 USA) and is also one of the top players in the world (#4 World). Roddick is known for his explosive serves, powerful forehands, and charming off-court celebrity.

Table of contents

Tennis career

Roddick turned professional in 2000 at the age of 18 and became the youngest tennis player to end the year in the ATP top 200 (A record later broken by 16-year-old French Richard Gasquet in 2002). In 2001, he became the youngest player to end the year in the ATP top 20.

Roddick won his first Grand Slam title in the 2003 US Open when he beat Juan Carlos Ferrero in straight sets. In the semifinals, Roddick rallied from two sets down to beat David Nalbandian. Roddick's summer hardcourt record in 2003 was outstanding, with his first Masters Event.

Also in 2003, he became the youngest American, aged 21, and 2nd youngest player behind Lleyton Hewitt (Australia, 20 years, 8 months) to finish no. 1 in history of ATP rankings since 1973. He also became the first American to finish no. 1 since Andre Agassi in 1999.

On August 31, 2004 he served the fastest serve in US Open history – 244 km/h (152 mph). Earlier that year Roddick set the world record for the fastest serve ever clocked, at 246.2 km/h (153.5 mph) during a straight-set victory over Thailand's Paradorn Srichaphan in the quarter-finals of the Queens Club grass-court tournament. Andy Roddick was unexpectedly knocked out of the US Open of 2004 in a spectacular 5 set quarterfinal match against the up and coming big server Joachim Johansson. He finished 2004 ranked as the world's number 2, the USA's number 1, and the player with the most aces served.

Roddick is also part of the United States Davis Cup team, along with fellow teammates Mardy Fish, and Bob and Mike Bryan. Roddick and Fish played singles, while the Bryan twins played doubles. The team reached the 2004 Davis Cup finals in Seville, Spain, but lost to the Spanish team. In 2005, Andre Agassi joined the team, and played as the number 2 player.

Roddick recently fired his coach of 18 months, Brad Gilbert. His new coach, Dean Goldfine, is the assistant coach to the US Davis Cup team.

Roddick's first tournament win in 2005 came in the SAP Open in San José, California, where he became the first to win the event in consecutive years since Mark Philippoussis in 1999 and 2000. The top-seeded Roddick breezed to a 6–0, 6–4 victory over Cyril Saulnier in 50 minutes to win the Open. The American star is the first to record a shutout set in the championship of this event since Arthur Ashe beat Guillermo Vilas in 1975.

On April 24, 2005, Roddick won the US Men's Claycourt Championships. This was Roddick's 5th consecutive appearence in the final. Roddick lost in 2004 against Tommy Hass and lost in 2003 to Andre Agassi. However, Roddick captured back to back titles in 2001 and 2002. He reclaimed the title in 2005.

In May 2005, in a act of sportsmanship, top-seeded Roddick lost a shot at entering the quarterfinals of the Rome Masters when he challenged a ruling that favored him at a triple match point. After Roddick's objections, his opponent Fernando Verdasco was awarded an ace instead of a double fault, saved two more match points, held serve, and broke Roddick's serve, ending up winning the match.

Personal

Roddick was born in Omaha, Nebraska. He resides in Austin, Texas, and before that he lived in Boca Raton, Florida.

Roddick's father, Jerry, is an investor, and mother, Blanche, is director of the Andy Roddick Foundation. Roddick's brother, John, was an All-American tennis player at University of Georgia (1996–98), and now operates a tennis academy in San Antonio. Their oldest brother, Lawrence, a chiropractor in San Antonio, was an accomplished spring board diver and a member of U.S. Senior National Team.

Roddick is considered a major sports celebrity in the United States. Following his 2003 US Open win, Roddick embarked on a 12-hour media tour hitting major outlets including the Today Show, MTV, CNN, and The Late Show with David Letterman, among others. He has been honored by throwing out the first pitch at several Major League Baseball games, most recently Game 2 of 2003 Oakland-Boston playoff series. After winning the tournament held by the NASDAQ, Roddick opened the stock market on August 20, 2003.

He hosted Saturday Night Live on November 8, 2003, becoming the second tennis player (Chris Evert) and only the 10th athlete in three decades to do so. He is also the winner of the 2004 ESPY award for best male tennis player. He was deemed Sexiest Athelete by People Magazine's December of 2003 issue of Sexiest Man Alive. Roddick has appeared in Vogue magazine too.

In 2004, Roddick won the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award of the Year because of his outstanding charity efforts. Roddick started the Andy Roddick Foundation to help at risk youth. Roddick was also involved in several tsunami relief events, including Serving for Tsunami Relief. He also auctioned off several rackets and autographs to raise money for UNICEF. Because of the success of Lance Armstrong's yellow band, Roddick started his own blue band inscribed "No Compromise" to fund his foundation.

In 2005, Roddick also appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, as well as VH1's 100 Most Wanted Bodies. Roddick was also on Punk'd after being tricked by Ashton Kutcher on his way to The Tonight Show.

In April of 2005, Reebok announced that it would end its contract with Roddick, who was endorsed by the company ever since he was 10. Roddick has now joined forces with Lacoste.

Titles (19)

Legend (Singles)
Grand Slam (1)
Tennis Masters Cup (0)
ATP Masters Series (3)
ATP Tour (13)

Singles (17)

No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score
1. Apr 23, 2001 Atlanta, USA Hard Xavier Malisse (Belgium) 6–2 6–4
2. Apr 30, 2001 Houston, USA Clay Hyung-Taik Lee (South Korea) 7–5 6–3
3. Aug 13, 2001 Washington, USA Hard Sjeng Schalken (Netherlands) 6–2 6–3
4. Feb 18, 2002 Memphis, USA Hard James Blake (USA) 6–4 3–6 7–5
5. Apr 22, 2002 Houston, USA Clay Pete Sampras (USA) 7–6 6–3
6. May 19, 2003 St. Pölten, Austria Clay Nikolay Davydenko (Russia) 6–3 6–2
7. Jun 9, 2003 London / Queen's Club, Great Britain Grass Sebastien Grosjean (France) 6–3 6–3
8. Jul 21, 2003 Indianapolis, USA Hard Paradorn Srichaphan (Thailand) 7–6 6–4
9. Aug 4, 2003 Montreal, Canada Hard David Nalbandian (Argentina) 6–1 6–3
10. Aug 11, 2003 Cincinnati, USA Hard Mardy Fish (USA) 4–6 7–6 7–6
11. Aug 25, 2003 US Open, USA Hard Juan Carlos Ferrero (Spain) 6–3 7–6 6–3
12. Feb 9, 2004 San José, USA Hard Mardy Fish (USA) 7–6 6–4
13. Mar 22, 2004 Miami, USA Hard Guillermo Coria (Argentina) 6–7 6–3 6–1 ret.
14. Jun 7, 2004 London / Queen's Club, Great Britain Grass Sebastien Grosjean (France) 7–6 6–4
15. Jul 19, 2004 Indianapolis, USA Hard Nicolas Kiefer (Germany) 6–2 6–3
16. Feb 7, 2005 San José, USA Hard Cyril Saulnier (France) 6–0 6–4
17. Apr 24, 2005 Houston, USA Clay Sebastien Grosjean (France) 6–2 6–2

Singles Finalist (8)

  • 2002: Delray Beach (lost to Davide Sanguinetti)
  • 2002: Toronto AMS (lost to Guillermo Canas)
  • 2003: Memphis (lost to Taylor Dent)
  • 2003: Houston (lost to Andre Agassi)
  • 2004: Houston (lost to Tommy Haas)
  • 2004: Wimbledon (lost to Roger Federer)
  • 2004: Toronto AMS (lost to Roger Federer)
  • 2004: Bangkok (lost to Roger Federer)

Performance timeline

Tournament 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 Career
Australian Open SF QF SF 2r - - 0
Roland Garros 2r 1r 1r 3r - 0
Wimbledon F SF 3r 3r - 0
US Open QF W QF QF 1r 1
Tennis Masters Cup SF SF - - - 0
Tournaments played 6 20 23 19 19 5 88
Finals reached 2 8 8 4 3 0 25
Tournaments Won 2 4 6 2 3 0 17
Hardcourt Win-Loss 18–4 57–11 44–10 34–11 23–10 4–5 173–48
Grass Win-Loss 0–0 11–1 10–1 4–2 5–3 0–0 30–7
Carpet Win-Loss 0–0 1–1 6–2 4–2 2–2 0–0 13–7
Clay Win-Loss 5–0 5–5 12–6 14–7 12–1 0–0 43–19
Overall Win-Loss 23–4 74–16 71–19 51–19 39–16 4–5 258–81
ATP Race points 193 731 907 409 303 18 N/A
Year End Ranking 2 1 10 16 160 N/A

Doubles (2)

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