Diego Sebastián Schwartzman

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Diego Sebastián Schwartzman's Geni Profile

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Diego Sebastián Schwartzman

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Villa Crespo, Comuna 15, CABA, Argentina
Immediate Family:

Son of Private and Private
Brother of Private; Private and Private

Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
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Immediate Family

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      parent
    • Private
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    • Private
      sibling
    • Private
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About Diego Sebastián Schwartzman

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diego_Schwartzman

Diego Sebastián Schwartzman (Spanish pronunciation: [%CB%88dje%C9%A3o seβasˈtjan ˈʃwaɾdzman],[3][4][a] German: [%CB%88%CA%83va%CA%81tsman]; born 16 August 1992) is an Argentine professional tennis player competing on the ATP Tour. He has won three ATP singles titles, and reached his career-high singles ranking of world No. 11 in June 2018.[5] He is a clay court specialist, and is noted for his high-quality return game.[6][7][8]

Contents Personal life Schwartzman is Jewish,[9][10] and is the son of Ricardo and Silvana Schwartzman.[11] He was born and resides in Buenos Aires, Argentina.[11] His family emigrated from Germany to Argentina.[12] He has two brothers (one a computer programmer, the other a travel agent), and a sister, who is a lawyer.[13][14] He and his siblings all attended Hebrew school and celebrated their bar and bat mitzvahs.[15]

Schwartzman's nickname is El peque (an abbreviation of the word "pequeño", meaning "Shorty" in Spanish).[16][6] As a youth, he played tennis at Club Náutico Hacoaj, a Jewish sport club in Buenos Aires that was established by and for Jews who were not allowed to join other sports clubs in the city in the early 20th century.[17][18]

Career 2010–13 In 2010 at the age of 17 he won the Bolivia F3 Futures (CL), and in 2011 he won the Chile F14 Futures (CL).[19] In 2012, Schwartzman won titles at the Peru F2 Futures (CL), Argentina F11 Futures (CL), Argentina F14 Futures (CL), Argentina F20 Futures (CL), Argentina F21 Futures (CL), Argentina F22 Futures (CL), and Buenos Aires Challenger (CL).[20] At the 2013 Australian Open, he lost in the final round of qualifying.[21]

2014: four Challenger titles Schwartzman made his first appearance in the main draw of a Grand Slam event at the 2014 French Open; he came through qualifying before making it to the second round, where he lost to Roger Federer.[22] He lost in the first round of the 2014 US Open to Novak Djokovic.[21]

In the ATP Challenger Tour, he won four titles at Aix-en-Provence, Prague, Campinas, and San Juan. In the ATP Challenger Tour Finals, he won over João Souza, Simone Bolelli, and Guilherme Clezar to claim the title. At the end of 2014 he was ranked # 61 in the world.[19]

2015: Istanbul Open semifinals

Diego Schwartzman (2015) Schwartzman's best result of the season came at the 2015 Istanbul Open, where he reached the semifinals, beating former top-ten player Jürgen Melzer along the way. In the semis he faced tennis legend Roger Federer. Schwartzman won the first set decisively, before ultimately falling 7-5 in the final set.[21] He was also part of the Argentine Davis Cup Team, which reached the semifinals in 2015.[23]

2016: Istanbul Open championship

Diego Schwartzman (2016) Schwartzman won his first-ever singles title at the 2016 Istanbul Open - an outdoor 250 clay court event. He impressively defeated established top player Grigor Dimitrov in the final, coming back to win 6-0 in the final set after losing the first set in a tie-break. Later, Dimitrov apologized for his behavior during the match, after he smashed three rackets, which ultimately led to a warning, a point penalty, and then another point penalty. The second and final point penalty came with Dimitrov down 5-0 and gave the game, set, and match to Schwartzman.[24]

In October Schwartzman reached his second final at the 250 level, in Antwerp. He lost to Richard Gasquet 6-7, 1-6 in the final.[21]

2017: US Open quarterfinals Schwartzman reached the 3rd round at the 2017 French Open, where he faced Novak Djokovic. He had a 2-1 set lead, but eventually Djokovic won in five sets.[25]

In the 2017 Canadian Open the 25-year-old saved four match points to pull off a remarkable 4-6, 7-6(7), 7-5 upset of No. 3 seed Dominic Thiem (No. 7 in the world), his first-ever win over a top-10 player.[26] As of mid-August 2017, he was leading the ATP tour in winning percentage in return games at 36 per cent (192/532), with Nadal in second place and Djokovic in fourth place.[8]

On September 1, he defeated world No. 7, and 5th seed, Marin Cilic in the third round at the 2017 US Open to equal the biggest win of his career. On September 3, he beat world No. 20, and 16th seed, Lucas Pouille in the fourth round to reach his first career major quarterfinal. At 5' 7" (170 cm), Schwartzman was the shortest Grand Slam quarterfinalist since Jaime Yzaga (5' 7" at the 1994 US Open).[27] Schwartzman said: "It’s not just for the big guys here."[28]

Schwartzman’s 2017 season proved to be the best of his career to that point. He finished the year ranked world No. 25, in addition to making his first major quarterfinal; he also made two quarterfinals at the Masters 1000 level. He won 39 singles matches and earned $1,536,000 over the course of the season, easily besting his previous records of 17 match wins and $441,000 in the 2016 season.[29] Finally, he scored his first win over a top-10 player, and then just two weeks later he racked up a second top-10 win.

2018: Second ATP title, top-20 ranking & second Grand Slam quarterfinal In his first 17 Grand Slam tournaments, Schwartzman had only reached the 3rd round one time. However, at the 2018 Australian Open, he advanced to the 4th round, where he played world No. 1 Rafael Nadal. For the first time in his career, Schwartzman made the second week at a major for the second consecutive time, following his quarterfinal showing at the 2017 US Open. Despite going into the match with an 0-3 head-to-head record, 0-7 in sets, Schwartzman took the second set tiebreak 7-4 before eventually going down in 4 sets. By virtue of his performance, he reached a new career-high singles ranking of No. 24 on 29 January 2018.[30]

He then went on to capture the title at the 2018 Rio Open, a clay ATP 500 level tournament, defeating Fernando Verdasco 6-2, 6-3. The Rio Open marked the biggest title of Schwartzman's career thus far. He reached a new career-high singles ranking of No. 15 on April 2, 2018, and was the first Jewish male player to break into the singles top 20 since Brad Gilbert was fourth in 1990.[21][31][17] At the 2018 French Open, Schwartzman made it into his second Grand Slam quarterfinal. He didn't drop a set on his run to the 4th round where he faced 6th seed world #7 Kevin Anderson and managed to win in just under four hours, after coming back from two sets to love down for the first time in his career. In the quarterfinals he took the first set of Rafael Nadal, but it started raining and the next day Rafa won the next three sets.[32] His quarterfinal showing marked his 3rd consecutive grand slam where he made it to the second week of competition.

Schwartzman participated in only two grass court events in 2018 they included Eastbourne International and Wimbledon. Although Schwartzman was the #1 seed at Eastbourne, he fell in the first round to Mirza Bašić in three sets. At Wimbledon, Schwartzman got his first career grass win by defeating Mirza Bašić in straight sets before falling in the 2nd round to Jiří Veselý.

Schwartzman reached the quarter-finals of the 2018 German Open, but fell to eventual finalist Leonardo Mayer in three sets.

2019: Argentina Open Finals, First Masters 1000s Semifinals and Third ATP Title At the 2019 Australian Open Schwartzman defeated Rudolf Molleker in four sets and American Denis Kudla in a five-set thriller. He was knocked out in the third round by former Wimbledon finalist, Tomáš Berdych.[33]

Schwartzman then competed in the 2019 Cordoba Open, making the quarterfinals. Schwartzman went on to make the finals at the 2019 Argentina Open, a clay ATP 250 level tournament.[33] Along his way to the finals Schwartzman defeated world #8 Dominic Thiem, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6.[33] Schwartzman lost in straight sets to Italian Marco Cecchinato in the finals.[34] Schwartzman was unable to defend his title at the 2019 Rio Open, retiring in the second set with a right leg injury in the first round. Schwartzman defeated world #6 Kei Nishikori 6-4, 6-2 in the quarterfinals of the 2019 Italian Open, before being defeated by Djokovic in three sets.[33]

Schwartzman then captured the title at the 2019 Los Cabos Open, defeating Taylor Fritz in the final, 7–6(8–6), 6–3, marking his first-ever title at a hard court tournament, and third ATP title.[33][35]

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Diego Sebastián Schwartzman's Timeline

1992
August 16, 1992
Villa Crespo, Comuna 15, CABA, Argentina