David_Marrero

David Marrero

David Marrero

Spanish tennis player


David Marrero Santana (Spanish pronunciation: [daˈβið maˈreɾo sanˈtana]; born 8 April 1980) is a Spanish professional tennis player. Marrero won 14 doubles titles and reached a career-high doubles ranking of world No. 5 in November 2013.

Quick Facts Country (sports), Residence ...

Professional career

2000–2007

Marrero earned his first world ranking late in 2000 as a 20-year-old, but he spent only a few weeks inside the top-500 until early 2005. By late 2005, he had made it into the top-300, but faded over the next year to close out 2006 outside the top-400. In the middle of 2007, he again inched into the top-300, but faded again to close out 2007 at No. 362.

2008

As a qualifier, Marrero reached the final of a Challenger in Chile in January, losing to No. 132 Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo after upsetting No. 272 Sebastián Decoud, No. 187 Adrián García and No. 111 Nicolás Lapentti. This result brought him back into the top 300 at World No. 289. The very next week he gained revenge over Ramirez-Hidalgo to qualify into an ATP stop in Chile, where he again beat García before losing to No. 104 Fabio Fognini in the 2nd round. In February, Marrero scored another upset, defeating World No. 114 Máximo González.

2009–2013: ATP tour finals and World No. 5 in doubles

Marrero reached his career-high singles ranking of World No. 143 on 8 February 2010 and career-high ranking of World No. 5 in doubles on 11 November 2013 after winning the ATP World Tour Finals with Fernando Verdasco defeating the Bryan brothers.

2016: Match fixing controversy

In January 2016, Marrero was featured in a New York Times article about his suspected match-fixing at the Australian Open.[1]

2022: Retirement announcement

He announced his retirement at the 2022 Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell,[2] but continued to play on the ITF and Challenger circuits.

Significant finals

Year-end championships finals

Doubles: 1 (1 title)

More information Result, Year ...

Masters 1000 finals

Doubles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up)

More information Result, Year ...

ATP career finals

Doubles: 30 (14 titles, 16 runner-ups)

More information Legend, Titles by surface ...
More information Result, W–L ...

Challenger and Futures finals

Singles: 16 (8–8)

More information Legend (singles), Titles by surface ...
More information Result, W–L ...

Doubles: 60 (33–27)

More information Legend (doubles), Titles by surface ...
More information Result, W–L ...

Doubles performance timeline

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RR Q# DNQ A NH
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.
More information Tournament, SR ...

References

  1. Rothenberg, Ben; Glanz, James (24 January 2016). "Match-Fixing Suspicions Raised at Australian Open After Site Stops Bets on Match". The New York Times.

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