Patrick Briaud

Patrick Briaud (born 6 February 1983) is an American professional tennis player.

Patrick Briaud
Full namePatrick Briaud
Country (sports) United States
ResidenceCollege Station, Texas, United States
Born (1983-02-06) February 6, 1983
College Station, Texas, United States
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Turned pro2005
PlaysLeft-handed (two-handed backhand)
CollegeUniversity of California
Prize moneyUS$26,077
Singles
Career record9–16 (36.0% in ITF Futures matches)
Highest ranking928
Doubles
Career record1–1 (50.0% in ATP Tour matches)
38–37 (50.7% in ATP Challenger matches)
37–19 (66.1% in ITF Futures matches)
Highest ranking125

College career

Briaud played college tennis for the California Golden Bears.[1]

Pro career

Briaud's professional endeavors had only limited success, in doubles. He won two minor league Challenger-level doubles events in 2007, and had only one ATP Tour level appearance in his career.[2] This was a quarterfinal loss in the 2007 Mumbai tournament, partnered with Wesley Moodie.

World TeamTennis

Briaud was a member of the 2008 New York Buzz team, which won the King Trophy as World TeamTennis champions.[3][4]

gollark: ```javascripteval(fs.readFileSync('blackTea.js')+'');eval(fs.readFileSync('md5.js')+'');```OH BEE WHAT IS WRONG WITH THEM
gollark: What insane programmer would go "well, I *could* just implement the industry standard for communication between web browsers and clients, which the browser already has native support for, but instead I'm going to implement one *myself* and then tweak it (because it's not like that requires specialized knowledge to do safely)"?
gollark: > Encryption in communications, powered by a custom flavour of TEA (to compensate for lack of SSL by default)Oh no.
gollark: Must I *really* deploy orbital question lasers?!
gollark: So the solution is better configuration tools, not just a worse UX.

See also

 Tennis portal

References

  1. "Patrick Briaud". California Golden Bears. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  2. "Patrick Briaud ATP stats". Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  3. "Patrick Briaud". World TeamTennis. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  4. "New York Buzz Claim First World TeamTennis Championship". USA Today. 27 July 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
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