Pablo Campana

Pablo Campana (born 16 December 1972 in Quito, Ecuador) is an Ecuadorian entrepreneur, current Minister of Commerce[1][2] and former male tennis player from Ecuador.[3]

Pablo Campana
Minister of Commerce
Assumed office
24 May 2017
PresidentLenín Moreno
Preceded byJuan Carlos Cassinelli
Campana, Pablo
Country (sports) Ecuador
ResidenceQuito, Ecuador
Born (1972-12-16) 16 December 1972
Quito, Ecuador
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Turned pro1990
PlaysRight-handed
Prize moneyUS$87,437
Singles
Career record9–7
Career titles0
Highest rankingNo. 165 (9 September 1996)
Grand Slam Singles results
Australian OpenDNP
French OpenQ1 (1996)
WimbledonQ1 (1992, 1993, 1994)
US Open3R (1996)
Doubles
Career record8–5
Career titles0
Highest rankingNo. 162 (23 September 1996)

Tennis career

Campana represented his native country in the doubles competition at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, partnering Nicolás Lapentti. The pair was eliminated in the second round there.

The right-hander Campana represented Ecuador in the Davis Cup from 1990–1997, posting an 11–4 record in singles and a 7–2 record in doubles in fourteen ties played.

Campana's highest ranking in singles was world No. 165, which he reached on 9 September 1996. His highest doubles ranking was World No. 162, which he reached on 23 September 1996.

In early 1997, at 24 years of age, and after learning he was going to become father, he retired from professional tennis.[4]

Career finals

Legend (Singles)
Grand Slam (0–0)
Tennis Masters Cup (0–0)
ATP Masters Series (0–0)
ATP Tour (0–0)
Challengers (1–1)
Outcome No. Date Tournament Surface Opponent Score
Winner 1. 15 July 1996 Quito, Ecuador Clay Luis Morejón 6–3, 6–2
Runner-up 1. 12 August 1996 Bronx, U.S. Hard Tamer El-Sawy 1–6, 4–6
gollark: *Valgrind immediately explodes*
gollark: Possibly.
gollark: Valgrind prints 1029719481924 warnings with python.
gollark: This is canonical, by the way.
gollark: ```pythondef am_i_joking(context): import os print("Segmentation fault, core dumped") os._exit(1)```

See also

  • List of Ecuadorian Ironman

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.