Fernando Verdasco Pahima Carmona (born
November 15,
1983 in
Madrid) is a professional
tennis player from
Spain. He is currently one of the top Spanish tennis players, he performs well on all surfaces. Verdasco started playing tennis at four years of age and got a full-time coach when he was eight. Verdasco considers his forehand his best shot, plays left-handed and has a double-handed backhand.
Andy Roddick has said he considers Verdasco's forehand the biggest in the game today.
Career
Early years
He turned professional in 2001, finishing as world number 464. 2002 was a good year for him, as he won his first Futures category title in Spain F1 and was runner-up in Spain F3. He played his second career challenger in
Segovia, where he reached the final after beating
Belarusian Vladimir Voltchkov in the semifinals. He then reached two additional
Challenger semifinals in
Kiev and in
Eckental, finishing the year in the top 200, at 173.
2003
In 2003, Verdasco played his first
Masters Series tournament (
Miami Masters. He joined the main draw as a qualifier, and after defeating
Karol Kucera and
Max Mirnyi, Verdasco lost to countryman
Carlos Moyà in the third round. After this good performance, he had a poor season on
clay, and then he lost in the first round of
Wimbledon against
Finnish Jarkko Nieminen in five sets. Then, Verdasco played in
Cincinnati, where he lost to
Andy Roddick in straight sets. He reached the third round at the
U.S. Open, where he lost to
Thai Paradorn Srichaphan after defeating countryman
Tommy Robredo in the first round and
Italian Davide Sanguinetti in the second round.
2004
After finishing in 2003 as 109th in the world (with a 15-8 record in challengers), he had a breakthrough in 2004, when he won his first ATP title in
Valencia. He defeated defending champion
Juan Carlos Ferrero in the semifinal and
Albert Montañés in the final. He also reached the final in
Acapulco, losing to
Carlos Moya and the quarterfinals in
Halle and in
's-Hertogenbosch on
grass. He reached the third round in two
Masters Series: the
Hamburg Masters and the
Madrid Masters. He reached the quarterfinals in
Stockholm, the semifinals in
Kitzbühel and won a doubles title in Stockholm (with countryman
Feliciano López), ending the year 36th in the world.
2005
In 2005 he defeated
Andy Roddick twice, in
Miami and in
Rome. In Rome, the match was famous for Roddick being
matchpoint up on Verdasco's serve and having the match end with a double fault from Verdasco, but Roddick claimed that the serve wasn't out and the match went on, with Verdasco winning. He also reached the quarters of
Valencia (where he was defending the title), Rome and
New Haven; the semis of
Sankt Petersburg; and was finalist in Kitzbühel, where he lost to
Argentine Gastón Gaudio. But Verdasco reached his first
Grand Slam fourth round at the
U.S. Open, where he lost to
Jarkko Nieminen after defeating
Serb Novak Đoković. His year-end ranking improved slightly to No. 32 in the world.
2006
Fernando reached the fourth round of
Wimbledon after beating
Vince Spadea and
German Benjamin Becker and also upsetting 3rd seed and former runner-up
David Nalbandián in straight sets in the third round. Verdasco then lost to
Czech Radek Štěpánek in five sets. At the
U.S. Open, Fernando reached the third round, but lost to eventual runner-up
Andy Roddick in five sets. In previous rounds, Fernando defeated
Fabrice Santoro in four sets and
Thiago Alves in three. Fernando then lost in the quarters of
Palermo where he lost to
Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo and then he lost to Ramírez Hidalgo again the following week in the first round of
Metz. Verdasco didn't win any match in the rest of year, he lost to Italian Daniele Bracciali in
Moscow, and then in the last two
Masters Series tournaments of the year, he lost to
Tim Henman in
Madrid Masters and to
Michael Llodra in
Paris Masters. Verdasco finished the year ranked 35th on the ATP rankings.
2007
In 2007, he lost to Serb Novak Đoković in the 4th round of the French Open. In the previous rounds of Roland Garros he beat Jérôme Haehnel in the 1st round, Dmitry Tursunov in the 2nd round and David Ferrer in the 3rd round. Before reaching the 4th round in the French Open, he lost in the first round in the 3 Masters Series tournaments on clay. He lost to Frenchman Richard Gasquet in both Monte Carlo Masters and Rome Masters, and to Czech Tomáš Berdych in Hamburg Masters. In the grass season, he lost in the 1st round in Queen's and he reached the 3rd round in Wimbledon, where he lost to 3rd seed Andy Roddick after beating American Bobby Reynolds in the 1st round and Italian Andreas Seppi in the 2nd round. At the Madrid Masters Verdasco cruised through to the second round with a win over Albert Montañés, beating him in straight sets but in second round he faced third seed Novak Đoković and after winning the first set, the Serb player won the second and the third sets by the same score: 6–3. At the St. Petersburg Open, Verdasco played some brilliant tennis to reach the final without losing a single set. En route to this final, he defeated Marin Čilić, who defeated Nikolay Davydenko early on, in the semifinal. However, his quest to win the title ended with a 6–2, 6–3 defeat by Scot Andy Murray. Still, this soild performance raised Verdasco's position in the ATP rankings to 27 the next week.
2008
Fernando entered the
Australian Open as the 25th seed. He won his opening match with a strong performance against
Thierry Ascione 6–4,6–0,6–3. He lost his second round match in a close battle with
Serbian Janko Tipsarević, who later went on to take
Roger Federer to 5 sets. Fernando entered the
Dubai Tennis Championships with a possible second round opponent of either
Roger Federer or
Andy Murray, his opponent would be Murray after he beat Federer in three sets. Fernando managed to take Murray to three sets but after a good performance he lost the match 3–6, 6–3, 6–7 (5–7). In Berlin, Fernando and doubles partner
Feliciano Lopez clinched Spain's spot in the
Davis Cup semifinals after defeating Germany's
Philipp Kohlschreiber and
Philipp Petzschner in a four hour and 45 minute marathon match, 6-7(3), 7-6(1), 6-4, 2-6, 12-10. At the
Monte Carlo Masters in
Monaco Fernando lost to
Gael Monfils in straight sets in the first round. In Barcelona the following week he also lost his first round match in straight sets to
Nicolás Lapentti. His form improved dramatically for the
Rome Masters where he reached the third round, en-route he got the better of
Carlos Moya and Nicolás Lapentti (who had beaten him the week earlier) before losing in a thriller to
James Blake. Fernando continued his run of excellent form into the
Hamburg Masters where he beat
Mikhail Youzhny in the first round 6-2,6-3. In the second round he beat
Michael Llodra 6-2,6-0. Fernando then went on to record a remarkable win against compatriot
David Ferrer in straight sets, 7-6 (7-4), 6-2. His run ended when he met the world number 1
Roger Federer losing 6-3,6-3. At the
French Open Fernando was seeded No.22 and enjoyed a good run, ending when he lost to
Rafael Nadal in the last 16, winning just 3 games. On June 9th Fernando achieved his career high ranking of No.20, as a result of his run at the French Open. He reached the final of the
Nottingham Open raising his ranking to a career high of No.18. At
Wimbledon, he lost to
Mario Ancic in a five set thriller in which the last set lasted over 90 minutes and ended 13-11, in the fourth round. His performance at The Wimbledon Championships brought his world ranking to a career high of No. 13. His most recent ATP victory was in
Umag (Studena Croatian Open Umag),
Croatia when he battled with Igor Andreev in what was called the best final the tournament had seen. Afterwards, he again improved in the rankings to 11th place. Verdasco was the 13th seed at the
US Open in 2008. He lost to the 23rd seed
Igor Andreev in the 3rd round.
Playing Style
Fernando is a very aggressive baseliner who is widely considered consistent on all surfaces. Many players including
Andy Roddick consider Verdasco to have one of the hardest forehands on tour. His serve is characteristic of a left-handed player predominantly using slice to create a lot of swing. He is known for rivaling compatriot
Rafael Nadal with the amount of top spin he can put on a ball. Fernando is sometimes known for his brief inconsistency during play, especially when closing out sets and matches.
Titles (4)
Singles (5)
| Legend |
| Grand Slam (0) |
| Tennis Masters Cup (0) |
| ATP Masters Series (0) |
| ATP Tour (2) |
| Challengers (1) |
| Futures (1) |
| Satellites (1) |
|
| Titles by Surface |
| Hard (1) |
| Clay (4) |
| Grass (0) |
| Carpet (0) |
|
| No.
| Date
| Tournament
| Surface
| Opponent in the final
| Score |
| 1.
| 6 May, 2001
| Valencia, Spain
| Clay
| Eric Prodon
| 6–2, 6–2 |
| 2.
| 9 June, 2002
| Canary Islands, Spain
| Clay
| Tony Holzinger
| 6–1, 6–1 |
| 3.
| 12 April, 2004
| Valencia, Spain
| Clay
| Albert Montañés
| 7–6(5), 6–3 |
| 4.
| 5 August, 2007
| Segovia, Spain
| Hard
| Alun Jones
| 6–2, 6–4 |
| 5.
| 20 July, 2008
| Umag, Croatia
| Clay
| Igor Andreev
| 3–6, 6–4, 7–6(4) |
Detailed Titles
Valencia 2001
Canary Islands 2002
| Round
| Defeated
| Opponent's Rank
| Score |
| R32
| Tetushiro Yamamoto
| 1240
| 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 |
| R16
| Álvaro Izquierdo
| 975
| 6–1, 6-4 |
| QF
| Luis Antonio Pérez
| 1379
| 6–3, 7-5 |
| SF
| David Cors
| 958
| 6–4, 6–4 |
| Final
| Tony Holzinger
| 893
| 6-1, 6-1 |
Valencia 2004
Segovia 2007
Umag 2008
Singles finalist (5)
Singles (5)
| No.
| Date
| Tournament
| Surface
| Opponent in the final
| Score |
| 1.
| 4 August, 2002
| Segovia, Spain
| Hard
| Olivier Mutis
| 6-4, 6-2 |
| 2.
| 8 March, 2004
| Acapulco, Mexico
| Clay
| Carlos Moyà
| 6–3, 6-0 |
| 3.
| 2 August, 2005
| Kitzbühel, Austria
| Clay
| Gastón Gaudio
| 2-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 |
| 4.
| 30 October, 2007
| St. Petersburg, Russia
| Carpet (indoor)
| Andy Murray
| 6–2, 6-3 |
| 5.
| 21 June, 2008
| Nottingham, Great Britain
| Grass
| Ivo Karlovic
| 7-5, 6-7(4), 7-6(8) |
Detailed Finals
Segovia 2002
Acapulco 2004
Kitzbühel 2005
| Round
| Defeated
| Opponent's Rank
| Score |
| R64
| Andreas Seppi
| 69
| 6–2, 6–4 |
| R32
| Olivier Rochus
| 33
| 7–5, 6–3 |
| R16
| Jürgen Melzer
| 35
| 1–6, 6–2, 6–1 |
| QF
| Victor Hanescu
| 52
| 6–3, 6–3 |
| SF
| Nicolás Massú
| 36
| 3–6, 6–3, 7–5 |
| Final
| Gastón Gaudio
| 13
| 6–2, 2–6, 4–6, 4–6 |
St. Petersburg 2007
Nottingham 2008
Doubles (1)
Doubles finalist (1)
Performance timeline
To prevent confusion and double counting, information in this table is updated only after a tournament or the player's participation in the tournament has concluded. This table is current up to the end of the 2008 Monte Carlo Masters.
Trivia
External links