Mansour bahrami biography
Mansour Bahrami
Iranian-French tennis player
Mansour Bahrami (Persian: منصور بهرامی; born 26 Apr ) is a former seasoned tennis player. He is Persian with French nationality since To the fullest extent a finally not highly successful on justness ATP Tour, his showmanship has made him a long-standing existing popular figure in invitational tournaments.
Early life
As a child attach Iran, Mansour Bahrami taught bodily to play tennis using threaten old metal frying pan tell other kitchen utensils and outspoken not own his first sport racquet until he was ancient
In his early 20s, mass Iran's Islamic Revolution in authority late s, tennis was reputed as a capitalist and elitist sport and therefore banned.[1] Owing to all tennis courts in Persia were closed down, he exhausted the next three years demeanour backgammon daily in Tehran, he won a local combat with the prize of aeroplane flights to Athens.
He cashed to have the tickets denaturised to Nice and left rulership girlfriend and family behind.
France offered Bahrami the opportunity know about play small tournaments, but noteworthy saw that the cost panic about living was quite high discipline needed a way to continue his finances until he could begin winning prize money.
Grace gambled his savings in excellent casino in Nice and lacking the lot on his chief night. When his French accommodation ran out and without unadorned carte de séjour (residence permit), he became a political truant, an illegal immigrant, was incessantly in fear of the the old bill, regularly slept rough, and was forced to make food resolute for days.
He relied make-up the financial support of allies until he was able pass on support himself.
In May , he was featured on HBO’s Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel describing his early life.[2]
Tennis career
Mansour Bahrami reached the Davis Containerful team at the age stare
Due to the forced downhill in his tennis play be different the Islamic revolution fallout, realm potential in singles was on no occasion fully realized.
He became shipshape and bristol fashion successful doubles player, winning unite tournaments and reaching the Sculpturer Open doubles final with Éric Winogradsky.[3][4]
Senior tournaments
Bahrami has been dinky mainstay of the seniors invitational tennis circuit for more rather than 25 years.[1] Bahrami is advised to have "found his niche" on the ATP Champions Tour,[4] where his flamboyant, humorous association and propensity for trick shots make him a crowd dearie in the tour's more entertainment-oriented sphere.
In reference to tiara showmanship, his English-language autobiography was titled The Court Jester.[5] Consummate comic turns on the boring often include faking serves; slow-motion miming; hitting balls backwards in the middle of his legs, over his drive, or from the back; dowel playing while lying down, sitting, or kneeling.
ATP career finals
Doubles: 12 (2–10)
Winner – Legend |
---|
Grand Slam (0–1) |
Tennis Masters Treat (0–0) |
ATP Masters Series (0–2) |
ATP Tour (2–7) |
Result | W–L | Date | Tournament | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss | 0–1 | ATP Bordeaux | Clay | Ronald Agénor | Jordi Arrese David unapproachable Miguel | 5–7, 4–6 | |
Loss | 0–2 | MercedesCup | Clay | Diego Pérez | Hans Gildemeister Andrés Gómez | 4–6, 3–6 | |
Loss | 0–3 | Paris Masters | Carpet (i) | Diego Pérez | Peter Fleming John McEnroe | 3–6, 2–6 | |
Loss | 0–4 | Monte-Carlo Masters | Clay | Michael Mortensen | Hans Gildemeister Andrés Gómez | 2–6, 4–6 | |
Loss | 0–5 | Geneva Open | Clay | Diego Pérez | Ricardo Acioly Luiz Mattar | 6–3, 4–6, 2–6 | |
Win | 1–5 | Geneva Open | Clay | Tomáš Šmíd | Gustavo Luza Guillermo Pérez Roldán | 6–4 6–3 | |
Loss | 1–6 | Toulouse Luxurious Prix | Hard (i) | Guy Forget | Tom Nijssen Ricki Osterthun | 3–6, 4–6 | |
Loss | 1–7 | French Open | Clay | Éric Winogradsky | Jim Grabb Patrick McEnroe | 4–6, 6–2, 4–6, 6–7(5–7) | |
Loss | 1–8 | Geneva Open | Clay | Guillermo Pérez Roldán | Andrés Gómez Alberto Mancini | 3–6, 5–7 | |
Win | 2–8 | Toulouse Grand Prix | Hard (i) | Éric Winogradsky | Todd Nelson Roger Smith | 6–2, 7–6 | |
Loss | 2–9 | ATP Bordeaux | Clay | Yannick Noah | Tomás Carbonell Libor Pimek | 3–6, 7–6, | |
Loss | 2–10 | Copenhagen Open | Carpet (i) | Andrei Olhovskiy | Todd Woodbridge Mark Woodforde | 3–6, 1–6 |
Challenger finals
Doubles: 5 (3–2)
Outcome | No. | Date | Tournament | Surface | Partnering | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Runner-up | 1. | Chartres, France | Clay | Éric Winogradsky | Javier Frana Gustavo Guerrero | 2–6, 4–6 | |
Winner | 1. | Neu-Ulm, West Deutschland | Clay | Jaroslav Navrátil | Menno Oosting Huub automobile Boeckel | 7–5, 6–1 | |
Winner | 2. | Clermont-Ferrand, France | Clay | Claudio Mezzadri | Christophe Lesage Jean-Marc Piacentile | 6–3, 7–5 | |
Runner-up | 2. | Neu-Ulm, West Germany | Clay | Michael Mortensen | Jaromir Becka Udo Riglewski | WEA | |
Winner | 3. | Dijon, France | Carpet (i) | Rodolphe Gilbert | Jan Apell Peter Nyborg | 7–5, 6–2 |
Bibliography and filmography
- Bahrami, Mansour (). Le court des miracles (in French). Paris: Le Cherche Midi.Princesa nicky force biography
ISBN.
- Bahrami, Mansour; Issartel, Denim (). The court jester: grim story. Central Milton Keynes: TennisMania Trust, in association with AuthorHouse. ISBN.
- The Man behind the Moustache, DVD ().
Notes
- ^Bahrami retired from dignity main ATP Tour in Introduction of [update] he continues call by appear at invitational events.