Goran Ivanišević (; born 13 September 1971) is a Croatian former professional tennis player and current tennis coach.
He is the only man to win the singles title at Wimbledon as a wildcard.
He achieved this in 2001 while being ranked 125th, having previously been runner-up at Wimbledon in 1992, 1994 and 1998.
Ivanišević's career-high singles ranking was world No. 2 (behind Pete Sampras) in 1994.
He coached Marin Čilić from September 2013 to July 2016, leading Čilić to his only Grand Slam title to date, at the 2014 US Open.
Ivanišević was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2020.
Career
Goran is the son of Srđan and Gorana (née Škaričić).
As a boy, he was trained by Jelena Genčić.
He turned professional in 1988 and, later that year, with Rüdiger Haas, won his first career doubles title in Frankfurt.
Although he focused mostly on his singles career, he also had some success in doubles, winning nine titles and reaching a career-high ranking of 20.
In 1989, as a qualifier he made the quarterfinals of the Australian Open.
Ivanišević made his first significant impact on the tour in 1990, knocking Boris Becker out of the first round of the French Open men's singles; he went on to reach the quarterfinals.
He was also, with Petr Korda, the runner-up in the French Open men's doubles.
At that year's Wimbledon, Ivanišević reached the semifinals, where he lost to Becker in four sets.
Ivanišević also won his first tour singles title in 1990 at Stuttgart and helped Yugoslavia win the World Team Cup.
He played in eight ties for Yugoslavia in the Davis Cup before quitting the team after the Croatian declaration of independence in 1991.TENNIS; With Minds on Homeland at War, New York Times Yugoslavia lost its subsequent tie against France 5–0.
Ivanišević quickly became known on the tour for his strong, attacking style of play and for an extremely powerful serve.
For several years, he had more aces than anyone else on the tour.
He was also known for occasional on-court temper tantrums—usually directed towards himself—and the volatility of the standard of his play.
Ivanišević received death threats at the 1992 Australian Men's Hardcourt Championships.A Fighter on Home Ground Ivanisevic, His Fans, His Family, and the War, The New York Times.
20 February 1993.
He went on to win the tournament.
In 1992, Ivanišević surged his way into his first Wimbledon singles final, having defeated Ivan Lendl, Stefan Edberg, and Pete Sampras in succession.
Ivanišević's 6–7, 7–6, 6–4, 6–2 semifinal victory over Sampras was particularly impressive, with Ivanišević serving 36 aces and not even facing a break point in the entire match.
In the final, Ivanišević faced Andre Agassi and was heavily favored to win; with both players attempting to win their first Grand Slam title.
Agassi eventually won 6–7, 6–4, 6–4, 1–6, 6–4.
In the fifth set, Ivanišević had a break point on Agassi's serve at 3–3, but failed to convert it.
In the final game of the match, Ivanišević served 2 double faults to start the game, even though he had only served 5 double faults in the entire match before that.
Ivanišević's ace count for the tournament (206) was the highest in Wimbledon history at the time, until Ivanišević beat his own record in 2001 with 213 aces.
Ivanišević served 37 aces in the 1992 Wimbledon final against Agassi, while Agassi had 37 aces in the entire tournament.
It was a tough loss, but as Ivanišević was only 20 years old, a bright future was predicted.
Later that summer at the Olympic Games in Barcelona, Ivanišević won bronze medals in both singles and doubles representing Croatia, a state that had only recently declared independence; he also served as flagbearer for the Croatian team at the opening ceremony.
In order to earn his single bronze medal, he won 4 consecutive 5-sets matches, a unique feat in the open era.
He also won four singles titles that year.
Ivanišević reached the Wimbledon final for the second time in 1994, where he was defeated by defending-champion Pete Sampras 7–6, 7–6, 6–0.
Ivanišević reached his career-high singles ranking of world No. 2 in July that year.
In 1995, Ivanišević won the Grand Slam Cup, beating Todd Martin in the final 7–6, 6–3, 6–4.
At Wimbledon, Ivanišević lost in the semifinals to Sampras 6–7, 6–4, 3–6, 6–4, 3–6.
In 1996, Ivanišević won a career-best five singles titles in a calendar year.
He reached the Grand Slam Cup final again, but this time lost to Becker in straight sets.
Ivanišević also teamed with Iva Majoli to win the 1996 Hopman Cup for Croatia.
That year Ivanišević also defeated Stefan Edberg to reach the semifinals of the U.S. Open, his first Grand Slam semifinal away from Wimbledon; the match was the last Grand Slam match of Edberg's career.
In the semifinals, Ivanišević fell again to Sampras, in four sets; Sampras would go on to defeat Michael Chang to win his fourth U.S. Open championship.
In April 1997, Ivanišević became the only player to defeat the "king of clay", Thomas Muster, in a Davis Cup singles match on clay.
Ivanišević defeated Muster, 6–7, 7–5, 6–7, 6–2, 7–5, despite Muster having won 112 of his previous 117 matches on clay going into the match.
During 1997, Ivanišević also got back up to his career high ranking of world No. 2, although his ranking fell down to No. 15 by the end of the year.
In 1998, Ivanišević reached his third Wimbledon final, facing Sampras once again.
Ivanišević started the match well, but failed to take set points which would have given him a 2 set lead, and Ivanišević eventually lost to Sampras in five sets, 7–6, 6–7, 4–6, 6–3, 2–6.
Ivanišević finished runner-up in the French Open men's doubles in 1999 (with Jeff Tarango).
However, for much of 1999, 2000, and 2001, he struggled with a shoulder injury and his performance and world ranking began to slide steadily.
During his second round match at the 2000 Brighton International, Ivanišević was defaulted after he smashed all three of his rackets and had none available to complete the match.
He told the Associated Press, "At least when I've finished playing tennis, they'll remember me for something...They'll say, 'There's that guy who never won Wimbledon, but he smashed all his rackets.'"
By the summer of 2001, Ivanišević was ranked the world No. 125.
This was not sufficient to earn him an automatic place in the main draw at Wimbledon but, given his past record as a three-time runner-up, he was awarded a wildcard for entry into the singles draw.
He defeated former and future world No. 1 players Carlos Moyá, Andy Roddick and Marat Safin as well as Fredrik Jonsson and Greg Rusedski to reach the semifinal, beating home favourite Tim Henman in a five set, rain-affected semifinal, setting up a match with the previous year's runner-up and former US Open champion Patrick Rafter.
It was Ivanišević's first singles final since 1998.
In a match lasting just over three hours, Ivanišević defeated Rafter 6–3, 3–6, 6–3, 2–6, 9–7.
Two months shy of his 30th birthday, Ivanišević became the lowest-ranked player and the first wildcard entry to win Wimbledon.
To date, he is the only male entrant to have won a Grand Slam singles title as a wildcard.
His Wimbledon success was rated sixteenth at the list of 100 Greatest Sporting Moments by a British television programme.
On 10 July 2001, Ivanišević received a hero's welcome in his home city of Split where a crowd of over 150,000 led by local and state dignitaries greeted him at the central harbor, with a parade of boats and fireworks, topped off by Ivanišević himself taking off his clothes and jumping into the sea.
Later that year he received the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality Award.
The 2001 Wimbledon title was the last of Ivanišević's career.
He temporarily retired in 2002 due to shoulder surgery.
He returned to tennis sparingly in the following years but, in 2004, retired after a third-round loss to Lleyton Hewitt at Wimbledon, held on the Centre Court, the scene of his greatest triumph.
Football
Ivanišević played football for the Croatian team Hajduk Split in 2001.
Goran supports English team West Bromwich Albion.
He became a fan after the Midland club's escape from Premiership relegation in 2005.
He wore an Albion shirt whilst warming up prior to the 2006 BlackRock Masters final and finally watched his first match in December 2011, as West Bromwich Albion played Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road.
Ivanišević also participated in an exhibition match of the Croatian national team of 1998 versus the International football stars on 7 October 2002 in Zagreb.
It was the last career match of Croatian midfielder and team captain Zvonimir Boban.
Ivanišević scored the goal for 1–1 (the game ended 2–1 for the International stars).
Playing style
Ivanisevic was a serve and volleyer and played a fast, aggressive game suited to grass courts.
He was known for his powerful and accurate left-handed serve, particularly his first serve that was clutch, and is widely considered one of the most dominant servers in the history of tennis.
He often won entire games without the ball being returned.
Like many serve-and-volleyers, Ivanisevic's return game and defence was weaker due to his powerful but inconsistent groundstrokes.
On the backhand side, he would often use the slice instead of hitting with top-spin and use the chip-and-charge tactic to come to the net.
Grand Slam finals
Singles: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-up)
Doubles: 2
Other significant finals
Grand Slam Cup
Singles: 2 (1–1)
ATP Super 9 finals
Singles: 7 (2–5)
ATP career finals
Singles: 49 (22 titles, 27 runners-up)
Doubles (9–10)
Team titles (3)
1990 – World Team Cup winner with Yugoslavia
1996 – Hopman Cup winner with Croatia
2005 – Davis Cup winner with Croatia
Performance timelines
Singles
Doubles
Head-to-head record vs. Top 10 ranked players
Ivanišević's record against players who held a top 10 ranking, with those who reached No. 1 in bold.
The first number is Ivanišević's wins, the second refers to his opponent.
Marc Rosset 10–4
Yevgeny Kafelnikov 10–5
Stefan Edberg 10–9
Greg Rusedski 9–1
Richard Krajicek 9–3
Boris Becker 9–10
Magnus Larsson 7–2
Guy Forget 7–3
Petr Korda 7–4
Todd Martin 7–5
Cédric Pioline 6–2
Pete Sampras 6–12
Alberto Berasategui 5–1
Andriy Medvedev 5–3
Sergi Bruguera 5–4
Jakob Hlasek 5–4
Michael Chang 5–6
John McEnroe 4–2
Wayne Ferreira 4–3
Jonas Björkman 3–0
Nicolas Kiefer 3–1
Jonas Svensson 3–1
Carlos Costa 3–2
Jiří Novák 3–2
Mark Philippoussis 3–2
Thomas Muster 3–3
Andre Agassi 3–4
Thomas Enqvist 3–5
Magnus Gustafsson 3–5
Jim Courier 3–8
Kevin Curren 2–0
Thomas Johansson 2–0
Nicolás Lapentti 2–0
Karel Nováček 2–0
Mikhail Youzhny 2–0
Andrei Chesnokov 2–1
Henri Leconte 2–1
Alberto Mancini 2–1
Magnus Norman 2–1
Àlex Corretja 2–2
Pat Rafter 2–2
Arnaud Clément 2–4
Michael Stich 2–5
Gustavo Kuerten 2–6
Kent Carlsson 1–0
Brad Gilbert 1–0
Sébastien Grosjean 1–0
Martín Jaite 1–0
Nicolás Massú 1–0
Joakim Nyström 1–0
Mikael Pernfors 1–0
Andy Roddick 1–0
Emilio Sánchez 1–0
Jimmy Arias 1–1
Marat Safin 1–1
Anders Järryd 1–2
Aaron Krickstein 1–2
Félix Mantilla 1–2
Rainer Schüttler 1–2
Carlos Moyá 1–3
Albert Costa 1–4
Tim Henman 1–4
Karol Kučera 1–4
Ivan Lendl 1–5
Guillermo Cañas 0–1
Juan Carlos Ferrero 0–1
Ivan Ljubičić 0–1
Miloslav Mečíř 0–1
Marcelo Ríos 0–1
Tommy Robredo 0–1
Mats Wilander 0–1
Juan Aguilera 0–2
Jay Berger 0–2
Roger Federer 0–2
Andrés Gómez 0–2
Rafael Nadal 0–2
Radek Štěpánek 0–2
Lleyton Hewitt 0–3
Top 10 wins
Post-playing
Senior tennis tour and other engagements
Right after retiring from the ATP Tour in 2004, Ivanišević started playing on the ATP Champions Tour (seniors' circuit).
In 2005, he was a member of the Croatian team for the Davis Cup final against Slovakia in Bratislava, although he did not play.
Croatia won the final 3–2.
Ivanišević received a winner's medal and his name was engraved on the trophy along with Mario Ančić, Ivo Karlović, Ivan Ljubičić and team captain Nikola Pilić.
In June 2006, he performed in the Calderstones Park tournament in Liverpool.
In November of the same year, Ivanišević won the Merrill Lynch Tour of Champions tournament in Frankfurt, defeating John McEnroe 7–6(12), 7–6(1).
In 2007, Roger Federer, seeking his 5th consecutive Wimbledon title against Rafael Nadal in the final, practiced with Ivanišević.
Federer said the practice session helped him against Nadal.
As of 2019, Ivanišević still takes part in tournaments on the seniors' circuit, and he is currently coaching Novak Djokovic.
On 17 July, Ivanišević faced Rafter once again in an exhibition match on 2019 Croatia Open Umag.
The match was held to celebrate 18th "birthday" of the famous 2001 Wimbledon final in which Ivanišević won.
Ivanišević won once again 6–4, 6-4.
The Croatian Open Centre Court has also been renamed in Ivanišević's honour.
Investments
Retiring in 2004 also allowed thirty-three-year-old Ivanišević to devote more attention to investing in the real estate and construction industries, which he had already been involved with since 1998, conducting his business through the Croatia-registered limited liability company called Sport Line (based out of his hometown Split).
Since Ivanišević was still an active tennis player when the venture got established, most of the company's initial day-to-day business was handled by his father Srdjan.
Their main activity was an ambitious undertaking – construction of "Lazarica 2", a 65-unit luxury apartment building in the Split neighbourhood of Firule, which was supposed to start in November 1998 and finish by late 2000.POSLOVNO-STAMBENA ZGRADA LAZARICA 2 U SPLITU;Gradjevinar, 2003 After many delays,Srđan Ivanišević zbog "Lazarice" prijavio tri splitska "poglavara";Slobodna Dalmacija, 13 February 2003 the project finally completed in 2003, but dragged the company into debt due to many unsold units.GORAN IVANIŠEVIĆ U FINANCIJSKIM PROBLEMIMA Njegova tvrtka pred stečajem;Jutarnji list, 19 March 2013
News of Ivanišević's financial problems first appeared in the summer of 2005 after he talked about it in an interview with Globus newsmagazine, admitting Lazarica 2 was a "failed project",I'm broke, says Ivanisevic;June 2005My investments sunk like Titanic says 'ruined' Ivanisevic;AFP, 10 June 2005 as well as later that year when he talked to the Daily Telegraph about losing substantial amount of money in some of his investments.Ivanisevic the joker still has some aces left;The Daily Telegraph, 20 October 2005
After much speculation throughout spring 2006,Goran Ivanišević ulazi u vlasnicku strukturu Karlovačke banke;index.hr, 5 June 2006Ivanišević zasad ne kupuje Karlovačku banku, štediše mogu odahnuti ;Business.hr, 7 June 2006 Ivanišević joined with AC Milan footballer Dario Šimić, former basketball player Ivica Žurić as well as businessmen Marijan Šarić, Mate Šarić, and Batheja Pramod in September 2006 to jointly invest HRK93 million (~€12.5 million) for the purposes of added market capitalization of Karlovačka banka.Ivanišević, Šimić i Žurić dioničari Karlovačke banke;Poslovni.hr, 21 September 2006 Ivanišević, Šimić, and Žurić each invested HRK19 million (~€2.5 million), thus each obtaining 9% ownership stake in the bank.Misterij iznenadnog poklona: Ivanišević darovao svojoj ženi 1,9 milijuna kn dionica Karlovačke banke;Jutarnji list, 6 April 2012
Ivanišević's finances became the subject of news reports again in August 2010 when it was reported that his Sunseeker Predator 72 motor yacht got repossessed by Hypo Leasing Kroatien, a subsidiary of Hypo Alpe Adria Bank after reportedly a full year of Ivanišević failing to meet his monthly lease payments of €12,000.Goranu Ivaniševiću zaplijenili ljubimicu - jahtu Amber;Vecernji list, 4 August 2010 Ivanišević would deny this, saying that the yacht was returned due to mechanical defect.'
Nisam ja hrvatski Tyson, a jahtu sam vratio sam';24 sata, 5 August 2010
On 31 January 2013, Ivanišević's company Sport Line filed papers for bankruptcy settlement proceedings before the Croatian Trade Court after accumulating debts of HRK5.7 million.
Among the list of entities the company reportedly owed money to is the Croatian government in the amount of HRK1.1 million.Ivaniševićeva tvrtka na putu u stečaj;tportal.hr, 19 March 2013 Sports administration
In August 2005 Ivanišević got voted to be one of four vice-presidents of the Croatian Olympic Committee (HOO) working under president Zlatko Mateša.Goran Ivanišević dopredsjednik Hrvatskog olimpijskog odbora;index.hr, 17 August 2005 Coaching
In 2013 Ivanišević began coaching compatriot Marin Čilić who won the 2014 US Open under his guidance.Cilic defeats Haas to win Zagreb Indoors , Yahoo!7 Sport, 10 February 2014 He split with Čilić after 2016 Wimbledon.
On 8 August 2016, Tomáš Berdych announced via social media that Ivanišević will begin coaching him, starting at 2016 Western & Southern Open.
As of 2019, he was coaching Milos Raonic until just before the Indian Wells Masters, when Raonic announced that he would be getting a new coach Fabrice Santoro."
Milos Raonic splits Goran Ivanisevic" Tennis.com
On 30 June 2019, Novak Djokovic confirmed that he had added Ivanišević to his coaching team.
See also
List of Grand Slam Men's Singles champions
Filmography and television
Film
Television
Music videos
Video
Wimbledon 2001 Final: Rafter Vs Ivanišević Standing Room Only, DVD Release Date: 30 October 2007, Run Time: 195 minutes, ASIN: B000V02CT6.
References
External links
Category:1971 births Category:Living people Category:Croatian male tennis players Category:Croatian expatriates in Monaco Category:Franjo Bučar Award winners Category:Hopman Cup competitors Category:Laureus World Sports Awards winners Category:Olympic bronze medalists for Croatia Category:Olympic medalists in tennis Category:Sportspeople from Split, Croatia Category:Tennis players at the 1992 Summer Olympics Category:Tennis players at the 1996 Summer Olympics Category:Tennis players at the 2000 Summer Olympics Category:US Open (tennis) junior champions Category:Wimbledon champions Category:Yugoslav male tennis players Category:Olympic tennis players of Croatia Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in men's singles Category:Medalists at the 1992 Summer Olympics Category:Novak Djokovic coaches Category:Croatian tennis coaches Category:Grand Slam (tennis) champions in boys' doubles
