- Nicolás Pereira
-
Nicolás Pereira (born September 29, 1970 in Salto, Uruguay) is a former tennis player from Venezuela, who became International Tennis Federation Junior World Champion in 1988 after winning the French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open. Testing the pro ranks in the fall of 1988, Pereira registered wins in South Africa against respected top 25 ranked pros Brad Gilbert and Amos Mansdorf. However, he lost to several low ranked players, establishing a pattern that would continue throughout his career whereby he played well against highly ranked players, but often registered mediocre results against lesser players.
Contents
Professional career
He finished 1988 ranked No.151 in the world rankings.
In April 1989, Pereira reached the Quarterfinals of the Tokyo Japan Open, beating No.21 ranked Andrés Gómez among others, before losing to number one ranked Ivan Lendl. In June, he beat world number three Stefan Edberg in straight sets in the first round of the Queens Club grass court tournament.
A few weeks later, in the first round of Wimbledon, he took world number one ranked Ivan Lendl to five sets before losing. Later that summer, he reached the Quarterfinals of the Grand Prix event at Montreal, the Canadian Open. There he beat No.10 ranked Tim Mayotte, before losing in three sets to number No.14 ranked Jay Berger. Pereira, at only 19 years of age, seemed to be establishing himself on the World Tennis Tour and finished 1989ranked #121. However, for unknown reasons, Pereira's progress was stalled over the next three years. In 1990, he lost most of his matches in the first round of ATP level tournaments and finished the year ranked #238. In 1991 he did win the Lins and São Paulo-4 Challengers in back-to back weeks, and was ranked No.146 at year's end. He won the Guaruja, Brazil Challenger in September 1992 and was ranked No.138 at the end of the year. In 1993, Pereira began to compete more frequently at the ATP tour level. At the U.S Open, he lost in four sets to world number seven Michael Chang. Incredibly, this marked only the third time Pereira had reached the second round of a Grand Slam tournament. He ended the year by defeating No.45 Aaron Krickstein in the first round at the Bermuda Challenger, but lost in the second round.
At the end of 1993, Pereira was ranked #141.
1994 marked a resurgence for Pereira. In March, he won the San Luis Potosí Challenger. At Wimbledon, he reached the second round where he lost a thrilling five set match to No.18 Andre Agassi. In September, Pereira beat Mauricio Hadad at the ATP event at Bogotá to register his first ATP tournament win. He closed out 1994 ranked #110. 1995was a mixed bag for Pereira. In July, he annexed the Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Challenger title by defeating Joao Culna-Silva in straight sets.
The next week at New Haven, he defeated No.39 Malivai Washington in the second round, before bowing out top No.10 Mark Rosset.
At the U.S Open, Pereira reached the third round of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time, defeating No.57 Fabrice Santoro in a tight five setter in round one. He lost to Daniel Vacek in four sets in round three. At the end of the year, Nicolas was ranked #134. 1996 was another inconsistent year for Pereira. He started the year well in Doha by qualifying, then beating world number five Boris Becker 7–6 6–7 7–6 in a major upset in round two. He lost his next match. Pereira's somewhat baffling inconsistency was highlighted at the Qualifying tournament for the Australian Open, where he lost to unheralded Swede Patrik Fredriksson. Meanwhile, Becker, who had lost to Pereira only weeks earlier, won the Australian Open tournament. In March, Pereira again caused an upset when he beat world number one Thomas Muster in straight sets at the Masters Series tournament in Key Biscayne, Florida. However, he injured his knee during the match. Pereira lost in the third round to Stefan Edberg. After rehabilitating the knee, Nicolas returned at the French Open, in July, Pereira garnered his second career ATP title when he beat Grant Stafford on the grass courts at Newport, Rhode Island.
He reached his highest singles ATP-ranking on July 22on 1996, when he became the number 74 player in the world. He represented Venezuela at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, where he was defeated in the second round by India's Leander Paes. Pereira had mediocre results during the rest of 1996, and finished the year ranked #110. Nicolas, reportedly suffering from injuries, retired in September 1997 while ranked around world #400.
Singles Titles
- 1994-09-12 Bogotá, Colombia
- 1996-07-08 Newport, Rhode Island
Grand Slams
Tournament 1989 1990 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 Australian Open - 2r 1r - 2r - 1r French Open 2r 1r - - - 1r - Wimbledon 1r - 1r 2r 1r 2r 1r US Open 1r - 2r 1r 3r 1r - Year End Ranking See also
List of Grand Slam Boys' Singles champions
External links
French Open boys' singles champions 1968 Phil Dent · 1969 Antonio Muñoz · 1970 Juan Herrera · 1971 Corrado Barazzutti · 1972 Buster Mottram · 1973 Víctor Pecci · 1974 Christophe Casa · 1975 Christophe Roger-Vasselin · 1976 Heinz Günthardt · 1977 John McEnroe · 1978 Ivan Lendl · 1979 Ramesh Krishnan · 1980 Henri Leconte · 1981 Mats Wilander · 1982 Tarik Benhabiles · 1983 Stefan Edberg · 1984 Kent Carlsson · 1985 Jaime Yzaga · 1986 Guillermo Pérez-Roldán · 1987 Guillermo Pérez-Roldán · 1988 Nicolás Pereira · 1989 Fabrice Santoro · 1990 Andrea Gaudenzi · 1991 Andriy Medvedev · 1992 Andrei Pavel · 1993 Roberto Carretero · 1994 Jacobo Díaz · 1995 Mariano Zabaleta · 1996 Alberto Martín · 1997 Daniel Elsner · 1998 Fernando González · 1999 Guillermo Coria · 2000 Paul-Henri Mathieu · 2001 Carlos Cuadrado · 2002 Richard Gasquet · 2003 Stanislas Wawrinka · 2004 Gaël Monfils · 2005 Marin Čilić · 2006 Martin Kližan · 2007 Vladimir Ignatic · 2008 Yang Tsung-hua · 2009 Daniel Berta · 2010 Agustín Velotti · 2011 Bjorn Fratangelo
Wimbledon (Open Era) boys' singles champions 1968 John Alexander · 1969 Byron Bertram · 1970 Byron Bertram · 1971 Robert Kreiss · 1972 Björn Borg · 1973 Billy Martin · 1974 Billy Martin · 1975 Chris Lewis · 1976 Heinz Günthardt · 1977 Van Winitsky · 1978 Ivan Lendl · 1979 Ramesh Krishnan · 1980 Thierry Tulasne · 1981 Matt Anger · 1982 Pat Cash · 1983 Stefan Edberg · 1984 Mark Kratzmann · 1985 Leonardo Lavalle · 1986 Eduardo Vélez · 1987 Diego Nargiso · 1988 Nicolás Pereira · 1989 Nicklas Kulti · 1990 Leander Paes · 1991 Thomas Enqvist · 1992 David Škoch · 1993 Răzvan Sabău · 1994 Scott Humphries · 1995 Olivier Mutis · 1996 Vladimir Voltchkov · 1997 Wesley Whitehouse · 1998 Roger Federer · 1999 Jürgen Melzer · 2000 Nicolas Mahut · 2001 Roman Valent · 2002 Todd Reid · 2003 Florin Mergea · 2004 Gaël Monfils · 2005 Jérémy Chardy · 2006 Thiemo de Bakker · 2007 Donald Young · 2008 Grigor Dimitrov · 2009 Andrey Kuznetsov · 2010 Márton Fucsovics · 2011 Luke Saville
US Open boys' singles champions 1973 Billy Martin • 1974 Billy Martin • 1975 Howard Schoenfield • 1976 Ricardo Yzaga • 1977 Van Winitsky • 1978 Per Hjertquist • 1979 Scott Davis • 1980 Mike Falberg • 1981 Thomas Hogstedt • 1982 Pat Cash • 1983 Stefan Edberg • 1984 Mark Kratzmann • 1985 Tim Trigueiro • 1986 Javier Sánchez • 1987 David Wheaton • 1988 Nicolás Pereira • 1989 Jonathan Stark • 1990 Andrea Gaudenzi • 1991 Leander Paes • 1992 Brian Dunn • 1993 Marcelo Ríos • 1994 Sjeng Schalken • 1995 Nicolas Kiefer • 1996 Daniel Elsner • 1997 Arnaud Di Pasquale • 1998 David Nalbandian • 1999 Jarkko Nieminen • 2000 Andy Roddick • 2001 Gilles Müller • 2002 Richard Gasquet • 2003 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga • 2004 Andy Murray • 2005 Ryan Sweeting • 2006 Dušan Lojda • 2007 Ričardas Berankis • 2008 Grigor Dimitrov • 2009 Bernard Tomic • 2010 Jack Sock • 2011 Oliver Golding
Categories:- 1970 births
- Living people
- French Open junior champions
- Olympic tennis players of Venezuela
- People from Salto, Uruguay
- Tennis players at the 1996 Summer Olympics
- Venezuelan male tennis players
- United States Open junior tennis champions
- Wimbledon junior champions
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.