Brendan Evans

Brendan Evans
Country (sports)  United States
Residence Wesley Chapel, Florida
Born (1986-04-08) April 8, 1986
Pontiac, Michigan
Height 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Turned pro 2004
Plays Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
Prize money $410,076
Singles
Career record 615 (at ATP Tour-level, Grand Slam-level, and in Davis Cup)
Career titles 0
Highest ranking No. 617 (October 12, 2009)
Grand Slam Singles results
Australian Open Q1 (2008, 2009, 2010)
French Open Q1 (2009)
Wimbledon 2R (2010)
US Open 1R (2008, 2009)
Doubles
Career record 15 (at ATP Tour-level, Grand Slam-level, and in Davis Cup)
Career titles 0
Highest ranking No. 119 (November 26, 2007)
Grand Slam Doubles results
Wimbledon 1R (2008)
US Open 1R (2004, 2009)
Last updated on: April 8, 2016.

Brendan Evans (born April 8, 1986 in Pontiac, Michigan) is an American professional tennis player. He is currently a retired professional tennis player and a student at The University of Virginia (UVA, class of 2015), studying finance.

Tennis career

Juniors

On the junior circuit, Evans reached as high as No. 2 in the combined junior world rankings in July 2004, when he won the Australian Open, Wimbledon and US Open boys' doubles titles alongside Scott Oudsema. During his junior career, Evans posted win/loss records of 94–55 in singles and 103–32 in doubles.

Junior Slam results - Singles:

Australian Open: QF (2003, 2004)
French Open: SF (2004)
Wimbledon: QF (2003, 2004)
US Open: 2R (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)

Junior Slam results - Doubles:

Australian Open: W (2004)
French Open: SF (2004)
Wimbledon: W (2004)
US Open: W (2004)

Nike Deal

In 2001, Evans signed a 5-year endorsement deal with Nike at the age of 15 for a reported $1.25 million. At the time, the deal was one of the largest endorsement contracts for any junior tennis player.[1]

Pro tour

After turning pro in 2004, Evans has competed on the ATP Challenger Tour and the ATP World Tour, both in singles and doubles. He reached his highest ATP singles ranking of World No. 117 in October 2009 and his highest ATP doubles ranking of World No. 119 in November 2007. Evans competed in tournament matches against top players Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Andy Roddick, Andy Murray and Mardy Fish. He secured wins over top players Juan Martin Del Potro, Kei Nishikori and John Isner. Evans is coached by former South African player Marcos Ondruska.[2][3][4]

Top Spin 2 on Xbox 360

In 2006, Evans was featured as a character in the Xbox 360 video game Top Spin 2, along with fellow pro tour players Roger Federer, Andy Roddick and James Blake.[5]

Career After Tennis

Evans is currently studying finance at The University of Virginia (UVA, class of 2015). Evans is expected to join top investment bank Goldman Sachs as an analyst in its Investment Banking Division after graduation.[6] Evans was named as one of the top tennis players in finance by Business Insider in 2014.[7]

Futures and Challenger finals: 29 (1118)

Singles: 10 (55)

Legend
Challengers (32)
Futures (23)
Outcome No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent in the final Score in the final
Winner 1. November 15, 2004 Honolulu, United States Hard United States Wayne Odesnik 67(5), 76(2), 76(4)
Runner-up 1. May 2, 2005 Vera Beach, United States Clay (Green) United States Ryan Newport 63, 76(6)
Runner-up 2. August 8, 2005 Kenosha, United States Hard United States Ryan Newport 26, 63, 63
Runner-up 3. February 20, 2006 Brownsville, United States Hard United States Michael Russell 62, 61
Winner 2. June 12, 2006 Rocklin, United States Hard United States David Martin 76(3), 75
Winner 3. October 22, 2007 Rimouski, Canada Carpet (i) Serbia Ilija Bozoljac 67(3), 64, 64
Runner-up 4. May 12, 2008 New Delhi, India Hard Chinese Taipei Yen-hsun Lu 75, 67(5), 36
Winner 4. January 5, 2009 Nouméa, France Hard Germany Florian Mayer 46, 63, 64
Runner-up 5. February 2, 2009 Dallas, United States Hard (i) United States Ryan Sweeting 64, 63
Winner 5. June 1, 2009 Nottingham, United Kingdom Grass Serbia Ilija Bozoljac 67(4), 64, 76(4)

Doubles: 19 (613)

Legend
Challengers (38)
Futures (35)
Outcome No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents in the final Score in final
Runner-up 1. May 12, 2003 Orange Park, United States Clay (Green) South Africa Marcos Ondruska United States Brian Baker
United States Philip Simmonds
46, 75, 64
Winner 1. August 27, 2004 Irvine, United States Hard United States Scott Oudsema United States Scott Lipsky
United States David Martin
76(7), 36, 64
Winner 2. November 8, 2004 Waikoloa, United States Hard United States Scott Oudsema United States Scoville Jenkins
United States Philip Simmonds
67(4), 76(2), 64
Runner-up 2. November 14, 2005 Honolulu, United States Hard United States Pete Stroer Italy Marco Crugnola
Italy Stefano Ianni
61, 36, 67(4)
Winner 3. February 27, 2006 Harlingen, United States Hard United States Tim Smyczek Sweden Johan Brunström
United States Phil Stolt
76(4), 63
Runner-up 3. March 20, 2006 Little Rock, United States Hard United States Scott Oudsema Colombia Michael Quintero
South Africa Wesley Whitehouse
64, 62
Runner-up 4. May 1, 2006 Vera Beach, United States Clay (Green) United States Troy Hahn United States Jonathan Chu
South Africa Izak van der Merwe
64, 76(0)
Winner 4. January 22, 2007 Waikoloa, United States Hard United States Scott Oudsema United States Scott Lipsky
United States David Martin
46, 63, [1210]
Runner-up 5. April 9, 2007 Mexico City, Mexico Hard United States Brian Wilson Mexico Miguel Gallardo-Valles
Mexico Carlos Palencia
63, 63
Runner-up 6. April 16, 2007 Little Rock, United States Hard United States Brian Wilson Japan Kei Nishikori
United States Donald Young
76(5), 64
Winner 5. July 23, 2007 Lexington, United States Hard United States Ryan Sweeting United Kingdom Ross Hutchins
United States Phillip Simmonds
64, 64
Runner-up 7. October 22, 2007 Rimouski, Canada Carpet (i) United States Alberto Francis New Zealand Daniel King-Turner
Australia Robert Smeets
75, 67(7), [107]
Runner-up 8. November 12, 2007 Champaign, United States Hard (i) United States Scott Lipsky Israel Harel Levy
United States Sam Warburg
64, 60
Runner-up 9. November 19, 2007 Knoxville, United States Hard (i) United Kingdom Jamie Baker Israel Harel Levy
United States Sam Warburg
36, 62, [106]
Runner-up 10. March 24, 2008 León, Mexico Hard United States Alex Kuznetsov United States Travis Parrott
Slovakia Filip Polášek
64, 61
Runner-up 11. May 19, 2008 New Delhi, India Hard India Mustafa Ghouse India Harsh Mankad
India Ashutosh Singh
75, 63
Winner 6. October 13, 2008 Kolding, Denmark Hard (i) South Africa Chris Haggard United Kingdom James Auckland
Australia Todd Perry
63, 75
Runner-up 12. November 17, 2008 Yokohama, Japan Hard Austria Martin Slanar Czech Republic Tomáš Cakl
Slovakia Marek Semjan
63, 76(1)
Runner-up 13. May 11, 2009 Zagreb, Croatia Clay (Red) United States Ryan Sweeting Australia Peter Luczak
Italy Alessandro Motti
64, 64

References

External links


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