Fernando Roese

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Country(sports) Brazil
Born (1965-08-24) 24 August 1965 (age 60)
Height1.91 m (6 ft 3 in)
Turnedpro1982
Fernando Roese
Country (sports) Brazil
Born (1965-08-24) 24 August 1965 (age 60)
Height1.91 m (6 ft 3 in)
Turned pro1982
PlaysRight-handed
Prize money$341,334
Singles
Career record22–46
Career titles0
2 Challenger, 0 Futures
Highest rankingNo. 92 (27 January 1992)
Grand Slam singles results
Australian Open1R (1992)
Wimbledon1R (1991, 1992)
Doubles
Career record30–58
Career titles1
5 Challenger, 0 Futures
Highest rankingNo. 81 (16 April 1990)
Grand Slam doubles results
Australian Open1R (1992)
French Open1R (1990, 1995)
Wimbledon2R (1989)
US Open2R (1990, 1991)
Last updated on: 10 December 2023.

Fernando Roese (born 24 August 1965) is a former professional tennis player from Brazil.

During his career Roese won one doubles title. He achieved a career-high singles ranking of No. 92 in 1992 and a career-high doubles ranking of No. 81 in 1990.[1]

Singles: 1 (1 runner-up)

Legend
Grand Slam Tournaments (0–0)
ATP World Tour Finals (0–0)
ATP World Tour Masters Series (0–0)
ATP Championship Series (0–0)
ATP World Series (0–1)
Finals by surface
Hard (0–1)
Clay (0–0)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
Finals by setting
Outdoors (0–1)
Indoors (0–0)
Result W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Opponent Score
Loss 0–1 Feb 1991 Guarujá, Brazil World Series Hard Germany Patrick Baur 2–6, 3–6

Doubles: 3 (1 title, 2 runner-ups)

Legend
Grand Slam Tournaments (0–0)
ATP World Tour Finals (0–0)
ATP World Tour Masters Series (0–0)
ATP Championship Series (0–0)
ATP World Series (1–2)
Finals by surface
Hard (1–0)
Clay (0–1)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–1)
Finals by setting
Outdoors (2–1)
Indoors (0–1)
Result W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 0–1 Jul 1984 Båstad, Sweden Grand Prix Clay Spain Juan Avendaño Sweden Jan Gunnarsson
Denmark Michael Mortensen
0–6, 0–6
Loss 0–2 Apr 1990 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil World Series Carpet Brazil Nelson Aerts United States Brian Garrow
United States Sven Salumaa
5–7, 3–6
Win 1–2 Nov 1990 Itaparica, Brazil World Series Hard Brazil Mauro Menezes Spain Tomás Carbonell
Spain Marcos Aurelio Gorriz
7–6, 7–5

ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals

References

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