Massimo Bertolini

Massimo Bertolini (born 30 May 1974) is a retired professional tennis player from Italy. A doubles specialist, he won two ATP Tour titles and reached two Grand Slam quarter-finals.

Massimo Bertolini
Country (sports) Italy
ResidenceVerona, Italy
Born (1974-05-30) 30 May 1974
Verona, Italy
Height1.87 m (6 ft 1 12 in)
Turned pro1993
Retired2006
PlaysRight-handed
Prize money$487,354
Singles
Career record0–0
Career titles0
Highest rankingNo. 329 (1 May 1995)
Doubles
Career record91–128
Career titles2
Highest rankingNo. 36 (3 May 2004)
Grand Slam Doubles results
Australian Open2R (2002, 2004)
French OpenQF (2003)
Wimbledon3R (2000)
US OpenQF (2001)

Career finals

Doubles (2 wins, 5 losses)

Legend (Singles)
Grand Slam (0)
Tennis Masters Cup (0)
ATP Masters Series (0)
ATP International Series Gold (0)
ATP Tour (2)
Result No. Date Tournament Surface Partner Opponents Score
Loss 1. Nov 1998 Santiago, Chile Clay Devin Bowen Sebastián Prieto
Mariano Hood
6–7, 7–6, 6–7
Loss 2. Apr 1999 Barcelona, Spain Clay Cristian Brandi Paul Haarhuis
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
5–7, 3–6
Loss 3. Apr 1999 Munich, Germany Clay Cristian Brandi Daniel Orsanic
Mariano Puerta
6–7, 6–3, 6–7
Loss 4. Jul 1999 Umag, Croatia Clay Cristian Brandi Mariano Puerta
Javier Sánchez
6–3, 2–6, 3–6
Loss 5. Jul 2002 Gstaad, Switzerland Clay Cristian Brandi Joshua Eagle
David Rikl
6–7(5–7), 4–6
Win 1. May 2003 Sankt Pölten, Austria Clay Simon Aspelin Sargis Sargsian
Nenad Zimonjić
6–4, 6–7(8–10), 6–3
Win 2. Jul 2003 Båstad, Sweden Clay Simon Aspelin Lucas Arnold Ker
Mariano Hood
6–7(3–7), 6–0, 6–4
gollark: Solution: remove libraries.
gollark: > and rust's syntax is a horrible tradeoff :PWhy? It seems pretty C-ish. I quite like it.
gollark: > there are tools that prevent you from doing unsafe thingsThey don't seem to be hugely *good* at it, or at least aren't deployed enough, given the massive frequency of memory-related bugs in C projects.
gollark: People make mistakes and you can't just tell them not to. Even SQLite, which is ridiculously extensively tested and has very skilled developers, has bugs sometimes. If a language can prevent significant classes of mistake without horrible tradeoffs, that is a good thing to have.
gollark: But seriously, "just don't do unsafe things and it's fine" is such a bad argument.
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