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Andre Agassi

CountryUSA
Born1970-04-29
PlaysRight-handed
Height180 cm
Career Wโ€“L887โ€“279
Titles60
Career highNo. 1 (1995-04-10)
Weeks at No. 1100
Matches in database1166

2006

Andre Agassi competed on the ATP Tour during the 2006 season, finishing with a match record of ten wins and eight losses. He did not capture any titles during the year. One of the notable highlights of his season came at the US Open, where he defeated No. 8 ranked Marcos Baghdatis in the first round, marking his only victory over a top-ten opponent during the campaign. Despite that result, Agassi was unable to sustain consistent results throughout the season, and his overall performance reflected the challenges he faced during this period of his career. He concluded the 2006 season ranked No. 150 in the world, as recorded in the rankings dated December 25, 2006. The season represented a modest effort in terms of competitive results, with the win over Baghdatis standing as the clearest demonstration of his ability to compete against elite opposition during this final stretch of his professional career.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

2005

Andre Agassi's 2005 ATP season produced a match record of 38 wins and 13 losses, culminating in a year-end ranking of No. 7. He claimed one title, at Los Angeles on hard court, where he defeated Gilles Muller in the final 6-4, 7-5. Agassi also reached two additional finals, losing to Rafael Nadal at the Canada Masters 6-3, 4-6, 6-2, and falling to Roger Federer at the US Open 6-3, 2-6, 7-6(1), 6-1.

Among his notable victories were three wins over top-10 opponents. He defeated No. 5 Guillermo Coria in the fourth round at Indian Wells Masters and accounted for No. 8 Gaston Gaudio twice, first in the fourth round at the Miami Masters and again in the quarterfinals at the Canada Masters. The season demonstrated that Agassi remained a competitive force at the highest level of the tour.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

2004

Andre Agassi had a solid 2004 ATP season, finishing with a match record of 37 wins and 13 losses and ending the year ranked No. 8 in the world. His most significant achievement was capturing the Cincinnati Masters title on hard courts, where he defeated Carlos Moya in the quarterfinals, Andy Roddick in the semifinals, and Lleyton Hewitt in the final 6-3, 3-6, 6-2. His victories over Roddick, then ranked No. 2, and Moya, ranked No. 4, highlighted his ability to defeat top-ranked opponents. Additional wins over top-ten players included a quarterfinal victory over No. 4 Guillermo Coria at Indian Wells and a defeat of No. 10 Sebastien Grosjean at the Australian Open. Agassi also reached the final in Stockholm, where he fell to Thomas Johansson 3-6, 6-3, 7-6(4). The season demonstrated his continued competitiveness among the elite of the tour.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

2003

Andre Agassi enjoyed a strong 2003 season, finishing with a match record of 47 wins and 10 losses and a year-end ranking of No. 4. He captured four titles, beginning with the Australian Open, where he defeated Rainer Schuettler in the final 6-2, 6-2, 6-1. He followed that with titles at San Jose, defeating Davide Sanguinetti 6-3, 6-1 in the final, and at the Miami Masters, where he overcame Carlos Moya 6-3, 6-3. His fourth title came on clay at Houston, where he defeated Andy Roddick 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the final. Agassi reached the final of the Masters Cup but lost to Roger Federer 6-3, 6-0, 6-4. Throughout the season he recorded victories over seven top-10 opponents, including wins over Juan Carlos Ferrero, Guillermo Coria, David Nalbandian, Albert Costa, and multiple wins over Moya, Roddick, and Schuettler.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

2002

Andre Agassi enjoyed a highly productive 2002 season, compiling a match record of 54 wins and 12 losses and finishing the year ranked No. 2 in the world. He claimed five titles across hard and clay courts. On hard courts, he won in Scottsdale, Miami, Los Angeles, and Madrid, while his clay-court success came in Rome. His most notable final victories included a commanding win over Roger Federer at the Miami Masters and a dominant 6-3 6-3 6-0 dismissal of Tommy Haas at the Rome Masters. Agassi also reached two finals he did not win, losing to Lleyton Hewitt in San Jose and to Pete Sampras at the US Open. Among his most significant results was a victory over world No. 1 Hewitt in the US Open semifinals. He recorded six wins over top-10 opponents during the season, underlining his consistency against the highest-ranked players in the world.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

2001

Andre Agassi enjoyed a productive 2001 ATP season, compiling a match record of 46 wins and 15 losses while finishing the year ranked No. 3 in the world. He claimed four titles, all on hard courts. His most prestigious victory came at the Australian Open, where he defeated Arnaud Clement in the final 6-4, 6-2, 6-2. He also captured the Indian Wells Masters with a 7-6(5), 7-5, 6-1 victory over Pete Sampras, the Miami Masters by defeating Jan Michael Gambill 7-6(4), 6-1, 6-0, and the Los Angeles title with another win over Sampras, 6-4, 6-2. His only final loss came in San Jose, where Greg Rusedski defeated him 6-3, 6-4. Agassi recorded notable wins over several top-10 opponents, including No. 1 Gustavo Kuerten in Los Angeles, No. 5 Patrick Rafter at the Masters Cup, and No. 8 Lleyton Hewitt at Indian Wells.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

2000

Andre Agassi enjoyed a productive 2000 ATP season, finishing with a match record of 40 wins and 15 losses and a year-end ranking of No. 6. His standout achievement was capturing the Australian Open title on hard courts, defeating Yevgeny Kafelnikov in the final 3โ€“6, 6โ€“3, 6โ€“2, 6โ€“4. Along the way he also eliminated Pete Sampras in the semifinal. Agassi reached two additional finals during the year, falling to Alex Corretja 6โ€“2, 6โ€“3 in Washington and losing to Gustavo Kuerten 6โ€“4, 6โ€“4, 6โ€“4 at the Masters Cup. Despite those defeats, he compiled an impressive record against top-ten opposition throughout the season, recording victories over Marat Safin, Kafelnikov, Kuerten, Pete Sampras, Magnus Norman, and Tim Henman. His performances at the Masters Cup were particularly notable, as he defeated three top-five players in the round-robin stage before falling to Kuerten in the final.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1999

Andre Agassi enjoyed one of the finest seasons of his career in 1999, finishing the year ranked No. 1 with a match record of 63 wins and 14 losses. He claimed five titles across multiple surfaces, most notably at Roland Garros and the US Open, making him a standout performer on both clay and hard courts. His French Open victory came in a remarkable final against Andrei Medvedev, recovering from two sets down to win 1-6 2-6 6-4 6-3 6-4. He also captured titles in Hong Kong, Washington, and the Paris Masters. Agassi reached three additional finals, all of which he lost to Pete Sampras, at Wimbledon, Los Angeles, and the Tour Finals. Among his notable wins were victories over top-10 opponents including Patrick Rafter, Yevgeny Kafelnikov on multiple occasions, Gustavo Kuerten, Carlos Moya, and Pete Sampras himself during round-robin play at the Tour Finals.

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1998

Andre Agassi enjoyed a productive 1998 season, compiling a match record of 68 wins and 18 losses and finishing the year ranked No. 6 in the world. He claimed five titles, all on hard courts except one: San Jose, Scottsdale, Washington, Los Angeles, and Ostrava, the last coming on carpet. His most notable triumph was at San Jose, where he defeated the world No. 1 Pete Sampras in the final 6-2, 6-4. Agassi also beat Sampras again at the Canada Masters quarterfinals, and recorded further victories over top-10 opponents including Patrick Rafter, Petr Korda, Karol Kucera, Michael Chang, Jonas Bjorkman, and Alex Corretja. Despite his successes, Agassi fell in five finals. Marcelo Rios defeated him twice, at the Miami Masters and the Grand Slam Cup, while Thomas Enqvist, Alex Corretja, and Tim Henman also claimed final victories against him during the season.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1997

Andre Agassi endured a difficult 1997 season on the ATP Tour, finishing with a match record of 21 wins and 13 losses and ending the year ranked No. 110 in the world as of 29 December 1997.

Despite the overall struggles, Agassi captured one title during the year at the Burbank Challenger on hard courts, where he defeated Sargis Sargsian in the final by a commanding 6-2, 6-1 scoreline. He also reached one other Challenger final, at Las Vegas, where he was defeated by Christian Vinck 6-2, 7-5.

A notable highlight of his season came at Indianapolis, where Agassi defeated Alex Corretja, then ranked No. 5 in the world, in the third round. This result stood as his sole victory over a top-10 opponent during the year. Overall, 1997 represented a challenging period for Agassi, with his year-end ranking reflecting the difficulties he faced throughout the season.

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1996

Andre Agassi had a productive 1996 season on the ATP Tour, finishing with a match record of 38 wins and 14 losses and a year-end ranking of No. 8. He captured three titles, all on hard courts. At the Miami Masters he defeated Goran Ivanisevic in the final by retirement after winning the first three sets. He then claimed the gold medal at the Atlanta Olympics, routing Sergi Bruguera 6โ€“2, 6โ€“3, 6โ€“1 in the final. His third title came at the Cincinnati Masters, where he defeated Michael Chang 7โ€“6(4), 6โ€“4 in the final after beating No. 2 Thomas Muster and No. 4 Yevgeny Kafelnikov in earlier rounds. His lone final defeat came at San Jose, where Pete Sampras beat him 6โ€“2, 6โ€“3. Among his notable results, Agassi also defeated No. 2 Thomas Muster at the US Open and No. 8 Jim Courier at the Australian Open.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1995

Andre Agassi enjoyed one of the most successful seasons of his career in 1995, compiling a 73โ€“9 match record and finishing the year ranked No. 2 in the world. He captured seven titles, highlighted by the Australian Open, where he defeated Pete Sampras in the final 4โ€“6 6โ€“1 7โ€“6(6) 6โ€“4. Agassi also claimed three Masters titles at Miami, Canada, and Cincinnati, along with indoor hard-court titles at San Jose and New Haven. His campaign included notable wins over top-ranked Pete Sampras at the Australian Open, Miami, and Canada Masters finals, as well as victories over Boris Becker and Michael Chang in major semifinal and final matchups. Agassi reached four additional finals but could not convert them into titles, losing to Sampras at Indian Wells and the US Open, to Jim Courier in Tokyo, and to Michael Chang in Atlanta. All seven of his titles were won on hard courts.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1994

Andre Agassi enjoyed a highly productive 1994 ATP season, compiling a match record of 52 wins and 14 losses and finishing the year ranked No. 2 in the world. He claimed five titles across the campaign, beginning with Scottsdale, where he defeated Luiz Mattar in the final. He then captured the Canada Masters over Jason Stoltenberg, before winning his most prestigious title of the year at the US Open, defeating Michael Stich 6-1, 7-6(5), 7-5. He continued his strong form in Europe, taking the Vienna title against Stich once more and closing the indoor season with the Paris Masters title over Marc Rosset. His only runner-up finish came at the Miami Masters, where he lost to Pete Sampras. Agassi demonstrated his quality against elite opposition throughout the year, recording victories over top-ten opponents including Pete Sampras, Goran Ivanisevic, Stefan Edberg, Michael Stich, and Sergi Bruguera on multiple occasions.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1993

Andre Agassi had a moderate 1993 ATP season, finishing with a match record of 33 wins and 11 losses and ending the year ranked No. 24 in the world as of December 27, 1993.

Agassi claimed two titles during the season, both on hard courts. In San Francisco, he defeated Brad Gilbert in the final 6-2, 6-7(4), 6-2, and in Scottsdale he overcame Marcos Ondruska in the final 6-2, 3-6, 6-3. Both victories demonstrated his effectiveness on the hard-court surface.

The season also featured notable wins over top-ten opponents. Agassi defeated No. 6 Michael Stich at the Cincinnati Masters in the quarterfinals, and he eliminated No. 8 Michael Chang in the round of 16 at the Canada Masters. These results against elite competition offered highlights within an otherwise inconsistent campaign that concluded with Agassi positioned just outside the top twenty of the world rankings.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1992

Andre Agassi enjoyed a breakthrough 1992 season, compiling a match record of 42 wins and 15 losses and finishing the year ranked No. 9 in the world. He claimed three titles across different surfaces, demonstrating considerable versatility. He won the Atlanta title on clay, defeating Pete Sampras in the final 7-5, 6-4, and captured the Canada Masters on hard courts, overcoming Ivan Lendl in the final 3-6, 6-2, 6-0. His most prestigious achievement was the Wimbledon title, where he defeated Goran Ivanisevic in a five-set final 6-7(8), 6-4, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4. Throughout the season Agassi recorded several notable wins over top-10 opponents, including victories over No. 1 Stefan Edberg in Davis Cup play, No. 3 Sampras at both Atlanta and Roland Garros, No. 5 Boris Becker at Wimbledon, and No. 10 ranked Petr Korda and Carlos Costa in Davis Cup and US Open matches respectively.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1991

Andre Agassi had a solid 1991 ATP season, finishing with a match record of 39 wins and 17 losses and ending the year ranked No. 10 in the world. He claimed two titles, both on hard courts, defeating Derrick Rostagno in the Orlando final 6-2, 1-6, 6-3 and Petr Korda in the Washington final 6-3, 6-4. His deepest run at a Grand Slam came at Roland Garros, where he reached the final after defeating No. 2 Boris Becker in the semifinals, ultimately falling to Jim Courier 3-6, 6-4, 2-6, 6-1, 6-4. Agassi also demonstrated his quality against elite opposition on other occasions, defeating No. 3 Boris Becker and No. 4 Michael Stich at the Tour Finals, No. 5 Michael Stich during Davis Cup play, and No. 7 Guy Forget in Davis Cup action later in the year.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1990

Andre Agassi enjoyed a strong 1990 ATP season, compiling a match record of 45 wins and 12 losses and finishing the year ranked No. 4 in the world. He captured four titles across the campaign, beginning with San Francisco on carpet, where he defeated Todd Witsken in the final. He then claimed the Miami Masters on hard court, defeating Stefan Edberg in the final, before adding Washington on hard court with a final victory over Jim Grabb. He closed the year by winning the Tour Finals on carpet, defeating Edberg once more in the final. Agassi also reached three finals he did not win, falling to Edberg at Indian Wells Masters, to Andres Gomez at Roland Garros, and to Pete Sampras at the US Open. Among his notable victories were three wins over Boris Becker and two over Stefan Edberg, including a triumph over the world No. 1 Edberg at the Tour Finals.

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1989

Andre Agassi enjoyed a productive 1989 ATP season, compiling a match record of 41 wins and 19 losses and finishing the year ranked No. 7 in the world as of 18 December 1989.

His lone title of the season came at Orlando on hard courts, where he defeated No. 5 ranked Brad Gilbert in the final with a commanding 6โ€“2, 6โ€“1 scoreline. That victory over Gilbert also represented Agassi's only win against a top-10 opponent during the season.

Agassi also reached one other final during the year, at Rome on clay, where he faced Alberto Mancini in a five-set contest. Agassi was unable to convert, losing 6โ€“3, 4โ€“6, 2โ€“6, 7โ€“6, 6โ€“1 to Mancini in what proved to be a closely fought match through the middle sets before Mancini pulled away decisively in the fifth. The Rome final loss remained his sole runner-up finish of the season.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1988

Andre Agassi enjoyed a breakthrough 1988 ATP season, compiling a 63โ€“11 match record and finishing the year ranked No. 3 in the world. He captured six titles across hard courts and clay, beginning with Memphis, where he defeated Mikael Pernfors in the final 6โ€“4, 6โ€“4, 7โ€“5. On clay, he claimed Charleston over Jimmy Arias, Forest Hills over Slobodan Zivojinovic, and Stuttgart Outdoor over Andres Gomez. He added two further hard-court titles at Stratton Mountain, defeating Paul Annacone, and Livingston, defeating Jeff Tarango. His only final defeat came at Los Angeles, where Pernfors reversed their Memphis result with a 6โ€“2, 7โ€“5 victory. Among his notable victories over top-ranked opponents, Agassi defeated No. 6 Jimmy Connors at the US Open quarterfinals and No. 10 Tim Mayotte at the Masters round-robin stage, underscoring his growing ability to compete against the sport's established elite.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1987

Andre Agassi competed on the ATP Tour throughout the 1987 season, compiling a match record of 26 wins and 17 losses. He claimed one singles title, winning the tournament in Itaparica on hard courts, where he defeated Luiz Mattar in the final by a score of 7-6, 6-2. He also reached one additional final during the year, in Seoul on hard courts, where he fell to Jim Grabb 1-6, 6-4, 6-2.

Among the notable results of his season was a victory over Pat Cash, who was ranked No. 7 at the time, achieved in the third round at Stratton Mountain. That win over a top-10 opponent stood as one of the highlights of his year. Agassi closed the season ranked No. 25 in the world, as reflected in the rankings dated December 28, 1987, representing a foothold among the sport's emerging competitors.

AI-assisted (claude-sonnet-4-6)

1986

Andre Agassi competed on the ATP Tour during the 1986 season, posting a match record of 11 wins and 9 losses. Although he did not capture any titles during the year, he did advance to one final, appearing at the Schenectady Challenger on a hard court surface. In that final, he was defeated by Ramesh Krishnan by a decisive scoreline of 6โ€“2, 6โ€“3, falling short of claiming his first professional title. Despite the loss, the runner-up result represented a notable moment in what was otherwise a developing season for the young player. Agassi closed out 1986 ranked No. 91 in the world, as reflected in the rankings dated 29 December 1986. The season as a whole illustrated the early stages of a professional career still finding its footing on the tour, with the modest win-loss record and a single final appearance pointing to a player gradually building his presence at the professional level.

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Data: Jeff Sackmann / Tennis Abstract โ€” CC BY-NC-SA 4.0