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Peter Luczak
Australian tennis player

Peter Luczak

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Australian tennis player
Work field
Gender
Male
Star sign
VirgoVirgo
Birth
31 August 1979, Warsaw, Poland
Age
44 years
Residence
Melbourne, Australia
Stats
Height:
183 cm
Weight:
77 kg
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Peter Luczak (Polish: Łuczak, [ˈwuʈ͡ʂak]; born 31 August 1979) is a retired professional tennis player for Australia. His career-high ATP singles ranking was World No. 64, achieved in October 2009.

At the 2010 Commonwealth Games held in Delhi, Luczak won the Gold in the doubles.

Luczak came to Australia at 9 months of age, when his parents, Eva and Kris, left Warsaw in 1980, where they settled in Melbourne. Luczak started playing tennis at the age of 5, he was introduced to the game by his Polish born father Kris. He did not have major success at junior level and was not able to receive funding from Tennis Australia nor have a major sponsor. Luczak was able to gain a tennis scholarship at Fresno State University, which helped his tennis development and in the process getting a degree in finance without the financial burden.

During his time at Fresno, Luczak holds the record for most career singles wins. He went 27–0 in the senior season at Fresno State before being upset in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Tennis career

Luczak turned professional in 2000 and spent the year playing on the ATP Futures and ATP Challenger Series circuit during his break from university. In 2000 he made the Futures final in Clearwater losing to Dmitry Tursunov. Luczak won 4 Futures titles in 2001 and finished the year ranked at #280.

In 2002 Luczak played exclusively ATP Challenger Series circuit where he won his first title in Granby and lost to countryman Scott Draper at Binghamton in the final. He made his Grand Slam debut in 2003 at the Australian Open where he reached the 3rd round defeating Attila Sávolt and Renzo Furlan before losing to Mario Ančić.

Continuing to focus mostly on the Challengers in 2004, Luczak won two more Challenger events in Canberra and Košice which was on his favoured clay surface. Luczak made his Davis Cup debut for Australia in 2005 against Argentina on grass, where he lost a dead rubber to Guillermo Coria, in addition to this he reached his best ever performance at ATP level where reached the semi-finals as a qualifier beating Fernando González at the Brasil Open along the way before losing to Alberto Martín

Luczak equalled his best Australian Open performance by making the third round in 2006 losing in four sets to Tommy Haas indoors as the roof was closed due to the heat rule. He represented Australia against Switzerland in Davis Cup and defeating Michael Lammer to help Australia win that tie.

In 2007 Luczak finished the season in the top 100 for the first time. He based that on winning a career best four titles on the ATP Challenger Series circuit, all of these titles came on the clay. Luczak lost to Jonas Björkman at Roland Garros in the first round after leading 2 sets to 0 and also played against Serbia in the World Group promotion tie in Belgrade where he lost to Novak Djokovic and Boris Pašanski.

After reaching his career high ranking in 2008, Luczak was diagnosed with a stress fracture of the pelvis after his loss to Jürgen Melzer at Roland Garros and was out for 14 weeks before returning to play against Chile in Davis Cup. Luczak stayed on in South America and played the Copa Petrobras series of challengers on the clay, where he won Montevideo beating Pablo Cuevas 6–3, 7–6 in the semis before getting a walkover from Nicolás Massú in the final. He won the Copa Petrobras Masters event where the best performers in the series play off where he beat Thomaz Bellucci.

He was elected to the ATP Player Council, currently comprising Roger Federer (President), Rafael Nadal (Vice President), Novak Djokovic, Michael Berrer, Yves Allegro, Eric Butorac, David Martin & Martín García.

In 2009, Luczak did not receive a wild card to the Australian Open and he lost in the last round of qualification to Wayne Odesnik. He continued his comeback from the pelvis problem on the Challenger circuit, where he made the semis in Burnie and Meknes. After falling in the second round of the Roland Garros qualification to Alexander Flock after having 5 match points. Luczak defeated Flock in the last round of qualification for the Fürth Challenger where he won the event without dropping a set in the main draw. He made the semis in Lugano losing to Stanislas Wawrinka and qualified for Båstad defeating Alberto Martín and then losing to Tommy Robredo. Luczak won the challenger in Poznań and made the semis in San Marino losing to Potito Starace. He followed that result with another Challenger title in Cordenons where he defeated Christophe Rochus and Olivier Rochus in the semi final and the final. Luczak reached his career high ranking of # 64 on 12 October 2009.

In 2010, he competed at the Medibank International in Sydney. He defeated José Acasuso of Argentina in the first round and defeated the number 2 seed Tomáš Berdych in the second round. He faced Mardy Fish in the quarter finals and lost. He then lost to defending champion Rafael Nadal in the first round of the Australian Open. He followed up his Australian season by competing in the 2010 Movistar Open where he reached the quarter-finals before losing to Juan Mónaco.

In 2010 at Wimbledon, Luczak hit a 148 mph serve, tying the Wimbledon record for fastest serve.

Personal life

Luczak attended the High School Mazenod College in Mulgrave from 1995–2000. He is married to Swedish born nobility Anna Catarina Ericsdotter Queckfeldt, grand daughter of famous Swedish Olympic bronze medalist dressage rider, Countess Maud von Rosen. Together they have a son, Sebastian Oliver Luczak, born in Sweden on 4 June 2006 and a daughter Millie born in March 2009. They live on the Mornington Peninsula in Australia

Luczak supports the Essendon Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).

ATP Career Finals

Doubles: 2 (0–2)

Titles by Surface
Winner – Legend
Grand Slam tournaments (0–0)
ATP World Tour Finals (0–0)
ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (0–0)
ATP World Tour 500 Series (0–0)
ATP World Tour 250 Series (0–2)
Titles by Surface
Hard (0–0)
Clay (0–1)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
Grand Slam tournaments (0–0)
ATP World Tour Finals (0–0)
ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (0–0)
ATP World Tour 500 Series (0–0)
ATP World Tour 250 Series (0–2)
Hard (0–0)
Clay (0–1)
Grass (0–0)
Carpet (0–0)
OutcomeNo.DateTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentScore
Runner-up1.24 February 2008Buenos Aires, ArgentinaClay Werner Eschauer Agustín Calleri
Luis Horna
0–6, 7–6, [10–2]
Runner-up2.21 February 2010Buenos Aires, ArgentinaClay Simon Greul Sebastián Prieto
Horacio Zeballos
7–6, 6–3

Futures and Challenger Singles titles (16)

Legend (Singles)
Challengers (12)
Futures (4)
No.DateTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
1.18 June 2001ReddingHard Yaoki Ishii7–5, 2–6, 6–3
2.16 July 2001Kansas CityHard Matthew Breen6–2, 6–4
3.6 August 2001GodfreyHard Raven Klaasen6–3, 6–7, 7–5
4.12 November 2001BarmeraGrass Peter Clarke6–4, 1–6, 6–4
5.8 July 2002GranbyHard Alex Bogomolov Jr.6–3, 7–6
6.29 March 2004CanberraClay Juan Pablo Brzezicki6–2, 6–1
7.10 May 2004KošiceClay Janko Tipsarević7–5, 7–5
8.31 October 2005CaloundraHard Alun Jones7–5, 7–6
9.26 March 2007FesClay Yuri Schukin6–2, 6–7, 7–6
10.7 May 2007MaspalomasClay Santiago Ventura6–7, 6–3, 7–5
11.4 June 2007FurthClay Fabio Fognini4–6, 6–2, 6–2
12.11 June 2007BytomClay Simone Vagnozzi6–3, 6–3
13.13 October 2008MontevideoClay Nicolás MassúW/O
14.7 June 2009FurthClay Juan Pablo Brzezicki6–2, 6–0
15.26 July 2009PoznańClay Yuri Schukin3–6, 7–6, 7–6
16.9 August 2009CordenonsClay Olivier Rochus6–3, 3–6, 6–1

Grand Slam singles performance timeline

Tournament2003200420052006200720082009201020112012W–L
Australian Open3R10R10 R3R1R2RQ31R1RQ25–8
French OpenAA1RA1R1RQ21RQ1A0–4
WimbledonAAAAAAQ22RQ1A1–1
US OpenAA1RA1RA1R1RQ1A0–4
Win–Loss2–10–10–32–10–31–20–11–40–10–06–17
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 24 Mar 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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