- Carlos Moyà
Infobox Tennis player
playername= Carlos Moyà
country=
residence=Geneva ,Switzerland
datebirth= birth date and age|1976|08|27
placebirth= Palma,Majorca
height= 190 cm (6 ft 3 in)
weight= 86 kg (190 lb)
turnedpro= 1995
plays= Right-handed; two-handed backhand
careerprizemoney= $13,308,710
singlesrecord= 569–308
singlestitles= 20
highestsinglesranking= No. 1 (March 15, 1999)
AustralianOpenresult= F (1997)
FrenchOpenresult= W (1998)
Wimbledonresult= 4R (2004)
USOpenresult= SF (1998)
doublesrecord= 22–47
doublestitles= 0
highestdoublesranking= No. 108 (October 29, 2001)
updated = October 6, 2008Carlos Moyà Llompart (born
August 27 1976 ), also known as Carles Moyà, Carlos Moyá and Carlos Moya, is a former world number onetennis player fromSpain . He wasFrench Open singles champion in 1998 and was singles finalist at the 1997Australian Open . In 2004 he helped his country win theDavis Cup . He currently resides inSwitzerland . Although he plays with his right hand he is naturally left-handed - the opposite of fellow MajorcanRafael Nadal Personal life
Moyà was born in Palma,
Spain . He began playing tennis at six years old. He turned professional in 1995 and won his first tour title later that year in Buenos Aires. He dated Italian WTA playerFlavia Pennetta but they broke up after Wimbledon 2007. He is currently dating actress Carolina Cerezuela fromSpain .He comes from a family of tennis players.Tennis career
In 1997, Moyà reached his first Grand Slam final at the Australian Open, where he lost in straight sets to
Pete Sampras 2–6, 3–6, 3–6.In 1998, Moyà won the French Open. He defeated fellow-Spaniard
Álex Corretja in the final in straight sets 6–3, 7–5, 6–3. He also won his firstTennis Masters Series that year at Monte Carlo. He concluded the year by finishing runner-up at the ATP World Championships (now known as theTennis Masters Cup ), where he lost in a five-set final to Corretja 6–3, 6–3, 5–7, 3–6, 5–7.In March 1999, after finishing runner-up at Indian Wells, Moyà reached the World No. 1 singles ranking. He held the top spot for two weeks. Later that year, he entered the French Open as defending champion, and lost in the fourth round to
Andre Agassi (who would go on to be that year's champion). At the US Open, Moyà withdrew in the second round with a back injury and only played in two tournaments for the rest of the year.In 2000, despite being hampered with a stress fracture in his lower back from the 1999 US Open through to the early part of 2000, Moyà still managed to finish in world Top 50 for the fifth straight year. He reached the fourth round of the US Open, where he held a match point in the fourth set but eventually lost to
Todd Martin in an epic five-set marathon 7–6, 7–6, 1–6, 6–7, 2–6. Moyà's best result rest of 2000 was winning at Estoril.In 2001, Moyà won the title at
Umag . He also finished runner-up atBarcelona , where he lost in a four-hour, nine-minute marathon final to countrymanJuan Carlos Ferrero 6–4, 5–7, 6–3, 3–6, 5–7.2002 saw Moyà win four titles from six finals. He captured his second career Tennis Masters Series title, and the biggest hardcourt title of his career, at Cincinnati, where he defeated the then-number-1
Lleyton Hewitt in the final 7–5, 7–6.Moyà captured threeclay court titles in 2003. He also helped Spain reach the final of the Davis Cup, compiling a 6–0 singles record. In the semi-finals, he won the deciding rubber againstGastón Gaudio as Spain beatArgentina 3–2. He beatMark Philippoussis on grass in the final. But that proved to be Spain's only point as they lost the final 1–3 toAustralia .In 2004, Moyà helped Spain go one better and win the Davis Cup. In the final, he won two critical singles rubbers against
Andy Roddick andMardy Fish , as Spain beat theUnited States 3–2. The year also saw Moyà capture his third career Masters Series title at Rome. He was the only player on the tour to win at least 20 matches on both clay courts andhardcourt s that year.In July 2004, Moyà's kind hearted gesture to hit with ballboy Sandeep Ponniah at the 2004 Tennis Masters Series Toronto event captured audiences during an injury timeout against opponent Nicholas Kiefer of Germany. To the crowd's surprise, Ponniah shuffled Moyà across the baseline and received an ovation for an overhead smash on a Moyà lob.
Moyà won his 18th career title in January 2005 at Chennai. He donated his prize money for the win to the
2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake victims.In January 2007, Moyà made it to the finals in the Medibank International Australia, and was beaten narrowly by defending champion
James Blake . Losing the first set, and down 0–4 in the second set, Moyà managed to come back and win the second. Blake proved victorious in the third and final set.In May 2007, at the Hamburg Masters, he scored good quality wins against
Mardy Fish , #12Tomas Berdych , #9James Blake , and #6Novak Đoković , a run which saw him reach his first Masters semifinal since 2004 Indian Wells. After reaching the semi-finals againstRoger Federer , Moyà lost, 6–4, 4–6, 2–6.Moyà lost against Nadal in straight sets in the quarter final of the
2007 French Open .During the
The Championships, Wimbledon , Moyà lost toTim Henman in a 5-set thriller, the fifth set stretching to 24 games (Henman won 13–11). Despite the loss, Moyà had no points to defend (he had not played a grass match in a few years), resulting in moving to #20, his first time inside the top 20 since June 13, 2005.In July 2007 Moyà won the Studena Croatia Open in
Umag ,Croatia , defeatingAndrei Pavel (6–4 6–2). The win brought him to #18 in the rankings, his highest rank since May 23, 2005, when he was #15.In August 2007, Moyà lost to
Marcos Baghdatis in the first round of theMontréal Masters . At Cincinnati, one week later and just two weeks shy of his 31st birthday, he beatDavid Nalbandian 7–6(4), 7–6(2), #3Novak Đoković 6–4 6–1, andJuan Martin Del Potro 7–5 3–6 7–5 (after being down an early break in the 3rd set) to set up a quarterfinal clash withLleyton Hewitt .In 2008 at the Cincinnati Masters, Moyà defeated Davydenko 7-6(8), 4-6, 6-2 which began on Wednesday and was held over until the next day because of rain. Hours after his match with Davydenko, Moyà beat
Igor Andreev 6-4, 7-6(2).Records
* He has won ATP Tour singles titles in 11 different countries: Argentina, Croatia, France, Italy, India, Mexico, Monaco, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and the United States.
Grand Slam record
*
Australian Open
**Singles finalist: 1997
**Singles quarter-finalist: 2001
**Doubles quarter-finalist: 2001*
French Open
**Singles champion: 1998
**Singles quarter-finalist: 2003, 2004, 2007*U.S. Open
**Singles semi-finalist: 1998
**Singles quarter-finalist: 2007Grand Slam singles finals
Win (1)
valign=top width=33% align=left
Team titles
2004 - Davis Cup winner with Spain
Performance timeline
*A = did not participate in the tournament
*SR = the ratio of the number of singles tournaments won to the number of those tournaments playedee also
*
List of Grand Slam Men's Singles champions External links
*
* [http://steveghelper.com/MatchResults.php?players=Moya&weeks=12 Moya Recent Match Results]
* [http://steveghelper.com/RankingHistory.php?player=Moya Moya World Ranking History]
* [http://www.daviscup.com/teams/player.asp?player=10007894 Davis Cup record]
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