Mark Nielsen (born 8 October 1977) is a former professional tennis player from New Zealand.[1]
Country (sports) | New Zealand |
---|---|
Born | Auckland | 8 October 1977
Height | 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) |
Turned pro | 1997 |
Plays | Right-handed |
Prize money | $166,271 |
Singles | |
Career record | 22–21 |
Career titles | 0 |
Highest ranking | No. 172 (15 May 2000) |
Doubles | |
Career record | 8–11 |
Career titles | 0 |
Highest ranking | No. 171 (15 Sep 2003) |
Career
editNielsen had a highest junior ranking of 16th and during his early career on the juniors circuit had wins over Dominik Hrbatý, Mark Philippoussis and Paradorn Srichaphan.[2][3] At the 1994 Australian Open, Nielsen and partner Jean-Noel Grinda Jr made the boys' doubles semi-finals.[2] The following year he and countryman Teo Susnjak won doubles titles at the Australian Hardcourt Junior Championships and Philippines Junior Championships.[2]
In 1997, Nielsen began playing Davis Cup tennis for New Zealand.[4] He took part in a World Group play-off tie against Spain in 1999, which the New Zealanders lost without winning a match.[4] Nielsen lost both of his singles rubbers, to Félix Mantilla and Francisco Clavet, but did take the former into a fifth set.[4]
Nielsen was a wildcard entrant at the 1998 Heineken Open and in front of his home crowd defeated Brazilian Fernando Meligeni in the opening round, before being eliminated by Marcelo Ríos.[5] He competed in the Heineken Open a further seven times and also reached the second round in 2002, with a win over seventh seed and world number 33 Andreas Vinciguerra.[5] With partner James Shortall, Nielsen also made the quarter-finals of the doubles that year.[5] He was a doubles quarter-finalist again at the Heineken Open in 2003 and 2004.[5]
At Islamabad in 2004, Nielsen played the longest match in New Zealand's Davis Cup history, against Pakistan's Aisam Qureshi. The five set match lasted for five hours and 20 minutes.[6]
In 2006, a sample that Nielsen had provided while playing the qualifying stages at the Australian Open, tested positive for finasteride, which can be used as a masking agent.[7] An independent Anti-Doping Tribunal accepted Nielsen's claim that he took the product containing the positive substance to treat hair-loss, but found that by failing to check whether the hair-loss product contained such a substance indicated a "serious dereliction of duty on the part of any player who participates in a sport governed by the WADA Code".[7] He was given a two-year suspension by the International Tennis Federation.[7]
The ban effectively ended his career, but once the suspension ended he did briefly return to compete on the Futures circuit and he played a Davis Cup tie in Kuwait. That would be his 20th and final Davis Cup tie, a tally bettered only by Onny Parun. He finished with 25 Davis Cup wins to his name, from 43 rubbers.[4] His 20 wins for New Zealand in singles also has him second all-time, to Onny Parun.[4]
Challenger titles
editDoubles: (3)
editNo. | Year | Tournament | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | 2000 | Weiden, Germany | Clay | Andrei Stoliarov | Daniel Elsner Andy Fahlke |
7–5, 6–3 |
2. | 2002 | Seoul, South Korea | Hard | Jaymon Crabb | Federico Browne Rogier Wassen |
W/O |
3. | 2005 | Tolyatti, Russia | Hard | Scott Lipsky | Flavio Cipolla Massimo Ocera |
6–2, 6–3 |
References
edit- ^ ITF Pro Circuit Profile
- ^ a b c ITF Junior Profile
- ^ The New Zealand Herald, "Nielsen's fall from grace", 20 August 2006, Leah Haines
- ^ a b c d e Davis Cup Profile
- ^ a b c d ATP World Tour Profile
- ^ The New Zealand Herald, "Tennis: Rea - I'm still sick in stomach", 2 October 2004, Terry Maddaford
- ^ a b c ITF Press Release: Decision in the case of Mark Nielsen