Ajeet Rai
Ajeet Rai (born 18 January 1999) is a New Zealand tennis player.
Country (sports) | |
---|---|
Residence | New Plymouth |
Born | New Plymouth, New Zealand | 18 January 1999
Height | 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) |
Plays | Right-handed (two-handed backhand) |
Coach | Rakesh Rai |
Prize money | $21,138 |
Singles | |
Career record | 1–2 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup) |
Career titles | 1 ITF |
Highest ranking | No. 694 (19 November 2018) |
Current ranking | No. 925 (16 March 2020) |
Doubles | |
Career record | 1–2 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup) |
Career titles | 1 ITF |
Highest ranking | No. 821 (10 February 2020) |
Current ranking | No. 846 (16 March 2020) |
Team competitions | |
Davis Cup | 2–1 (Singles 1-1, Doubles 1-0) |
Last updated on: 5 May 2020. |
Rai has a career high ATP singles ranking of 694, achieved on 19 November 2018, and a best doubles ranking of 821, reached on 10 February 2020.
Tennis career
2018
Rai's first experience of professional tennis was being given a wild card into qualifying for the 2018 ASB Classic in Auckland, where he was well-beaten by Taro Daniel in the first round. He played his first senior ITF tournament in Kampala, Uganda, in May, qualifying for the main draw in singles, where he reached the second round. The following week, at the same venue, he was given a wild card into both doubles and the main draw for singles, and reached the quarter-finals of both.
He reached his first doubles semi-final in China in July, but the highlight of his year to that date would come in September, when he made his Davis Cup debut for New Zealand, partnering Artem Sitak to win their doubles rubber against South Korea, giving Rai a perfect start to his senior international representative career. His first ITF doubles final came in Hua Hin, Thailand, in October, where he and Karunuday Singh lost in a match tie-break to the top seeds, Francis Casey Alcantara and Sonchat Ratiwatana. In singles at the same tournament, he progressed past the quarter-finals for the first time, going all the way to take the title over Manish Sureshkumar in three sets. His season finished with a couple of quarter-final losses in Futures events in Tây Ninh, Vietnam.
2019
Again given a wild card into qualifying in Auckland, Rai was a game away from defeating Roberto Marcora in the first round before eventually losing in three sets. He and New Zealand junior champion George Stoupe were given a wild card into the doubles, where they lost in the first round to Artem Sitak and Austin Krajicek.
In Uganda on the anniversary of his ITF debut, Rai injured his back severely enough in his second event to need three months' rehabilitation before he returned to the tour in South-East Asia. Well-beaten in his first match, he steadily improved through a series of tournaments to reach another doubles final in Hua Hin in August. By the worst possible luck, his partner, former dual Australian Open junior doubles winner Bradley Mousley, injured his knee in his singles semi-final earlier in the day and had to retire from that match. He played the doubles final, but with very restricted movement the pair were easily beaten by the top-seeded Ratiwatana twins from the host country.
Rai reached two more ITF doubles finals before the end of the year, in Hua Hin two weeks later and in Cancun, Mexico, in late November, finishing runner-up on each occasion.
2020
With the ITF tour returning to New Zealand for the first time in several years, Rai's first event for 2020 was at the new tournament in Te Anau, where he lost in the quarter-finals of both singles and doubles. At the ASB Classic in Auckland, Rai received a wild card into both the singles qualifying rounds and the doubles, losing his first match in both. The doubles defeat, however, came at the hands of the eventual champions, Luke Bambridge and Ben McLachlan, and Rai and partner Mackenzie McDonald played extremely well.
Rai's next stop after Auckland was Cancún, where he played three tournaments in as many weeks. The second was the most productive, reaching the quarter-finals in singles and finally securing a doubles title, in his fifth final. Rai then returned home for New Zealand's Davis Cup tie against Venezuela in Auckland, where he lost in singles to Luis David Martínez in three sets. He didn't play again before the international tours were suspended due to the Covid-19 coronavirus.
ITF Circuit finals
Singles: 1 (1 title)
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Result | No. | Date | Level | Tournament | Surface | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | 1. | 13 October 2018 | $15,000 | Hua Hin, Thailand | Hard | 6–3, 4–6, 6–4 |
Doubles: 5 (1 title, 4 runners-up)
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Result | No. | Date | Level | Tournament | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Runner-up | 1. | 12 October 2018 | $15,000 | Hua Hin, Thailand | Hard | 1–6, 6–1, [6–10] | ||
Runner-up | 2. | 24 August 2019 | $15,000 | Hua Hin, Thailand | Hard | 2–6, 0–6 | ||
Runner-up | 3. | 7 September 2019 | $15,000 | Hua Hin, Thailand | Hard | 6–7(4–7), 2–6 | ||
Runner-up | 4. | 23 November 2019 | $15,000 | Cancun, Mexico | Hard | 5–7, 5–7 | ||
Winner | 1. | 1 February 2020 | $15,000 | Cancun, Mexico | Hard | 6–4, 6–2 |
Davis Cup (3)
Group membership |
World Group (0) |
Group I (1–1) |
Group II (1–0) |
Group III (0) |
Group IV (0) |
indicates the outcome of the Davis Cup match followed by the score, date, place of event, the zonal classification and its phase, and the court surface.
Rubber outcome | No. | Rubber | Match type (partner if any) | Opponent nation | Opponent player(s) | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Victory | 1. | III | Doubles (with Artem Sitak) | Hong Seong-chan / Lee Jea-moon | 7–5, 6–3 | |
Victory | 2. | I | Singles | Muhammad Rifqi Fitriadi | 7–6(9–7), 6–3 | |
Defeat | 1. | II | Singles | Luis David Martínez | 7–5, 4–6, 2–6 |
External links
- Ajeet Rai at the Association of Tennis Professionals
- Ajeet Rai at the International Tennis Federation
- Ajeet Rai at the Davis Cup