Tennis in Spain

Long regarded as an elite sport in Spain, tennis, along with most other racquet sports have taken a little longer to attract Spaniards to jump on the bandwagon. For years tennis lacked in appeal due to a shortage of public tennis courts, in conjunction with high prices for private clubs. Lately, however, Spain has become one of the world’s strongest tennis countries and now produces some of the world’s best players. Growing steadily in popularity, tennis is fast becoming the new “it” sport in Spain. Thanks to Rafael Nadal´s continuous rise to stardom and the increase in tennis courts and clubs across the country, tennis is becoming the new sport of choice for singles, families and those looking to get a little exercise all year round. Due to Spain’s incredibly accommodating climate, tennis lovers can play outside most of the year on the thousands of courts around the country.

Rafael Nadal

Spain has produced a number of tennis champions, excelling in tournaments held on clay courts such as the Roland Garros tournament.

Besides that, Spain has also won the Davis Cup five times (2000, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2011) and the Fed Cup five other times (1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998)

Rafael Nadal is considered the greatest Spanish tennis player of all time. He has won the French Open a record nine times, winning four consecutive French Open titles from 2005-2008 along with five consecutive French Open titles from 2010-2014. After defeating then world number #1 Roger Federer in 2008, Nadal claimed the Wimbledon trophy and became only the second Spaniard to do so. He also won the 2009 Australian Open, the first male Spaniard to do so. In 2009, he became the first player ever to simultaneously hold Grand Slam titles on clay, grass, and hardcourt. In addition, Nadal is the Gold Medalist at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China. In 2010 and 2013, he won the U.S. Open. He currently has fourteen Grand Slam titles to his name: nine French Open titles, two Wimbledon titles, two US Open titles, and one Australian Open title.

Spain has produced several other world number one players such us Arantxa Sánchez Vicario in 1995 (also a 3 times French Open champion in 1989, 1994 and 1998 and 1994 US Open Champion), Carlos Moyá in 1998 (1998 French Open champion) and Juan Carlos Ferrero in 2003 (2003 French Open Champion).

Other Grand Slam champions include Manuel Santana (1961, 1964 French Opens, 1966 Wimbledon and 1965 US Open), Sergi Bruguera (1993-1994 French Opens), Andrés Gimeno (1972 French Open), Conchita Martínez (1994 Wimbledon) and Albert Costa (2002 French Open).

Tournaments held in Spain on the men's tour every year include Madrid, Barcelona, and Valencia. The women have events in Madrid, Barcelona, and Marbella.


List of Spanish tennis players (Open Era only)

Only includes players ranked in the top 50. Bold names indicate currently active players

Men
Highest

ranking

Name Birth Place of Birth Turned

pro

Titles
No. 1 Rafael Nadal 1986 Balearic Islands Manacor, Mallorca 2001 69
No. 1 Carlos Moyá 1976 Balearic Islands Palma 1995 20
No. 1 Juan Carlos Ferrero 1980 Valencian Community Ontinyent, Valencia 1995 15
No. 2 Manuel Orantes 1949 Andalusia Granada 1968 33
No. 2 Àlex Corretja 1974 Catalonia Barcelona 1991 17
No. 3 David Ferrer 1982 Valencian Community Xàbia, Alicante 2000 21
No. 3 Sergi Bruguera 1971 Catalonia Barcelona 1988 14
No. 5 Tommy Robredo 1982 Catalonia Hostalric, Girona 1998 12
No. 6 José Higueras 1953 Andalusia Diezma 1973 16
No. 6 Albert Costa 1975 Catalonia Lleida 1993 12
No. 7 Emilio Sánchez 1965 Community of Madrid Madrid 1984 15
No. 7 Alberto Berasategui 1973 Basque Country (autonomous community) Bilbao 1991 14
No. 7 Fernando Verdasco 1983 Community of Madrid Madrid 2001 7
No. 7 Juan Aguilera 1962 Catalonia Barcelona 1981 5
No. 9 Nicolás Almagro 1985 Region of Murcia Murcia 2003 12
No. 10 Carlos Costa 1968 Catalonia Barcelona 1988 6
No. 10 Félix Mantilla 1974 Catalonia Barcelona 1993 10
No. 12 Feliciano López 1981 Castilla-La Mancha Toledo 1997 4
No. 14 Roberto Bautista Agut 1988 Valencian Community

Castellón de la Plana

2006 4
No. 18 Francisco Clavet 1968 Community of Madrid Madrid 1988 8
No. 19 Marcel Granollers 1986 Catalonia Barcelona 2003 4
No. 19 Albert Portas 1973 Catalonia Barcelona 1994 1
No. 22 Albert Montañés 1980 Catalonia Tarragona 1999 6
No. 23 Jordi Arrese 1964 Catalonia Barcelona 1982 6
No. 23 Javier Sánchez 1968 Navarre Pamplona 1986 4
No. 23 Guillermo García-López 1983 Castilla-La Mancha La Roda, Albacete 2002 3
No. 29 Fernando Vicente 1977 Valencian Community Benircarló, Castelló 1996 3
No. 30 Julián Alonso 1977 Catalonia Canet de Mar, Barcelona 1996 2
No. 31 Sergio Casal 1962 Catalonia Barcelona 1981 1
No. 32 Pablo Andújar 1986 Valencian Community Valencia 2005 2
No. 32 Juan Gisbert 1942 Catalonia Barcelona 1968 1
No. 34 Alberto Martín 1978 Catalonia Barcelona 1995 3
No. 38 Albert Ramos-Viñolas 1988 Catalonia Barcelona 2004 0
No. 40 Tomás Carbonell 1968 Catalonia Barcelona 1987 2
No. 40 Galo Blanco 1976 Asturias Oviedo 1995 1
No. 41 David Sánchez 1978 Castile and León Zamora 1997 2
No. 43 Jordi Burillo 1972 Catalonia Barcelona 1991 1
No. 44 Álex Calatrava 1973 Germany Cologne, Germany 1993 1
No. 47 Juan Albert Viloca 1973 Catalonia Barcelona 1992 0
No. 48 Daniel Gimeno-Traver 1985 Valencian Community Valencia 2004 0
No. 48 Óscar Hernández 1978 Catalonia Barcelona 1998 0
No. 49 Pablo Carreño Busta 1991 Asturias Gijón 2009 0
No. 50 Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo 1978 Valencian Community Alicante 1998 0

Women
Highest

ranking

Name Birth Place of Birth Turned

pro

Titles
No. 1 Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 1971 Catalonia Barcelona 1985 29
No. 2 Conchita Martínez 1972 Aragon Monzón, Huesca 1988 33
No. 3 Garbiñe Muguruza 1993 Venezuela Guatire, Venezuela 2012 2
No. 6 Carla Suárez Navarro 1988 Canary Islands Las Palmas 2003 2
No. 16 Anabel Medina Garrigues 1982 Valencian Community Valencia 1998 11
No. 19 María José Martínez Sánchez 1982 Region of Murcia Yecla, Murcia 1998 5
No. 19 Magüi Serna 1979 Canary Islands Las Palmas 1996 3
No. 22 Ángeles Montolio 1975 Catalonia Barcelona 1990 3
No. 27 Gala León García 1973 Community of Madrid Madrid 199? 1
No. 27 Cristina Torrens Valero 1974 Navarre Pamplona 1992 2
No. 28 Virginia Ruano Pascual 1973 Community of Madrid Madrid 1992 3
No. 33 María Sánchez Lorenzo 1977 Castile and León Salamanca 1994 1
No. 35 Nuria Llagostera Vives 1980 Balearic Islands Mallorca 1996 2
No. 40 Lourdes Domínguez Lino 1981 Galicia (Spain) Pontevedra 1996 2
No. 46 Arantxa Parra Santonja 1982 Catalonia Barcelona 2000 0
No. 47 María Teresa Torró Flor 1992 Valencian Community Villena 2007 1
No. 47 Marta Marrero 1983 Canary Islands Las Palmas 1998 0

Grand Slam performances of Spanish tennis players

Only includes players who have reached at least a Grand Slam quarterfinal

Player Australian Open Roland Garros Wimbledon US Open Total titles
Rafael Nadal Winner Winner (9) Winner (2) Winner (2) 14
Manuel Santana DNP Winner (2) Winner Winner 4
Arantxa Sánchez Vicario Runner up Winner (3) Runner up Winner 4
Sergi Bruguera 4R Winner (2) 4R 4R 2
Conchita Martínez Runner up Runner up Winner SF 1
Juan Carlos Ferrero SF Winner QF Runner up 1
Manuel Orantes QF Runner up SF Winner 1
Andrés Gimeno Runner up Winner SF 4R 1
Carlos Moyá Runner up Winner 4R SF 1
Garbiñe Muguruza 4R Winner Runner up 2R 1
Albert Costa QF Winner 2R 4R 1
Manuel Alonso DNP SF Runner up QF 0
Lili Álvarez DNP SF Runner up DNP 0
Àlex Corretja 3R Runner up 2R QF 0
Alberto Berasategui QF Runner up 1R 2R 0
David Ferrer SF Runner up QF SF 0
Fernando Verdasco SF 4R 4R QF 0
Félix Mantilla QF SF 3R 4R 0
José Higueras DNP SF 2R 4R 0
Emilio Sánchez 4R QF 4R QF 0
Tommy Robredo QF QF 4R QF 0
Virginia Ruano Pascual QF QF 4R 3R 0
Carla Suárez Navarro QF QF 4R QF 0
Feliciano López 3R 4R QF QF 0
Nicolás Almagro QF QF 3R 4R 0
Javier Sánchez 3R 4R 2R QF 0
Marta Marrero 4R QF 2R 1R 0

Spanish Tennis achievements timeline

Year Grand Slam

titles

Total titles (ATP + WTA) Team competitions Olympics Special achievements
1988 0 4 (2 ATP + 2 WTA) - 1 silver
1989 1 8 (3 ATP + 5 WTA) - - Arantxa Sánchez Vicario becomes first Spanish woman to win a Grand Slam
1990 0 12 (7 ATP + 5 WTA) Hopman Cup champions (1/3) -
1991 0 12 (8 ATP + 4 WTA) Fed Cup champions (1/5) -
1992 0 11 (8 ATP + 3 WTA) - 2 silvers, 1 bronze
1993 1 19 (10 ATP + 9 WTA) Fed Cup champions (2/5) -
1994 4 26 (14 ATP + 12 WTA) Fed Cup champions (3/5) - Sergi Bruguera and Alberto Berasategui play first all-Spanish Grand Slam final

Conchita Martínez becomes first Spanish woman to win Wimbledon

1995 0 12 (4 ATP + 8 WTA) Fed Cup champions (4/5) - Arantxa Sánchez Vicario reaches #1 in both singles and doubles rankings
1996 0 16 (12 ATP + 4 WTA) 2 silvers, 1 bronze
1997 0 16 (15 ATP + 1 WTA) - -
1998 2 17 (12 ATP + 5 WTA) Fed Cup champions (5/5) Àlex Corretja wins Tennis Masters Cup
1999 0 13 (9 ATP + 4 WTA) - Carlos Moyá reaches #1
2000 0 11 (9 ATP + 2 WTA) Davis Cup champions (1/4) 1 bronze
2001 0 18 (12 ATP + 6 WTA) -
2002 1 12 (10 ATP + 2 WTA) Hopman Cup champions (2/3) -
2003 1 13 (10 ATP + 3 WTA) - Juan Carlos Ferrero reaches #1
2004 0 9 (8 ATP + 1 WTA) Davis Cup champions (2/4) 1 silver
2005 1 16 (12 ATP + 4 WTA) -
2006 1 13 (10 ATP + 3 WTA) -
2007 1 13 (12 ATP + 1 WTA) -
2008 2 18 (16 ATP + 2 WTA) Davis Cup champions (3/4) 1 gold, 1 silver Rafael Nadal wins olympic gold medal and ends first year as #1
2009 1 16 (13 ATP + 3 WTA) Davis Cup champions (4/4) - Rafael Nadal becomes first Spanish player to win the Australian Open
2010 3 20 (19 ATP + 1 WTA) Hopman Cup champions (3/3) - Rafael Nadal completes career golden slam after winning the US Open
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