Travis Rettenmaier

Travis Rettenmaier (born August 6, 1983) is a former American professional tennis player.

Travis Rettenmaier
Country (sports)USA
ResidenceSarasota, Florida, United States
Born (1983-08-06) 6 August 1983
Tarzana, California, United States
Height188 cm (6 ft 2 in)
Turned pro2002
Retired2012
PlaysRight-handed (two handed-backhand)
Prize money$243,091
Singles
Career record2–2 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup)
Career titles2 ITF
Highest rankingNo. 273 (27 February 2006)
Grand Slam Singles results
US OpenQ2 (2005)
Doubles
Career record16-28 (at ATP Tour level, Grand Slam level, and in Davis Cup)
Career titles1 ATP Tour
Highest rankingNo. 57 (12 July 2010)
Grand Slam Doubles results
Australian Open1R (2010)
French Open3R (2010)
Wimbledon2R (2010)
US Open1R (2005, 2008, 2010)
Last updated on: 8 July 2017.

Career

Rettenmaier's highest singles ranking to date has been World Number 273 on February 27, 2006. In doubles, his ranking has been as high as World Number 57, which he achieved on July 12, 2010. At 6-foot 2-inches, Travis is a right-hander. He is 2–2 on the ATP Tour in singles matches, and 16–28 in doubles. Rettenmaier, who is coached by former touring pro Scott McCain, turned professional in 2002. He is mainly active as a doubles player.

Personal life

Travis is the son of Tom and Karen Rettenmaier, and has one sister named Bettina. He started tennis when he was one, and enjoys hard and grass courts best. Aside from tennis, Rettenmaier enjoys basketball, golf, and ping-pong. Entered UCLA at age 16 and competed for two years for the UCLA Bruins before turning pro. He currently resides in Sarasota, Florida with his wife Amanda and daughter Rowyn.

Titles

Singles (2 Wins)

No. Date Tournament Surface Level Opponent in the final Score
1. February 25, 2002 Houston, Texas, USA Hard Futures Michael Tebbutt 7–5, 6–4
2. April 7, 2008 Mobile, Alabama, USA (Source: 1) Hard Futures Ryler DeHeart 6–1, 7–6(7)

Doubles (18 Titles)

No. Date Tournament Surface Level Partner Opponents in the final Score
1. November 26, 2001 Laguna Niguel, California, USA Hard Futures Diego Ayala John Doran
Nick Rainey
6–0, 7–5
2. January 14, 2002 Delray Beach, Florida, USA Hard Futures Graydon Oliver Karol Beck
Ladislav Švarc
6–2, 6–4
3. January 21, 2002 Hallandale Beach, Florida, USA Hard Futures Graydon Oliver Pedro Braga
Alessandro Guevara
6–7(4), 6–4, 6–4
4. February 25, 2002 Houston, Texas, USA Hard Futures Graydon Oliver Esteban Carril
Trace Fielding
6–4, 7–6(3)
5. June 2, 2003 town unstated, USA Hard Futures Rylan Rizza Marcus Fluitt
Lesley Joseph
6–7(3), 6–4, 6–2
6. January 10, 2005 Leeds, United Kingdom Hard Futures Eric Butorac Frederik Nielsen
Rasmus Norby
7–6(7), 6–4
7. July 18, 2005 Tarzana, Los Angeles, California, USA Hard Challenger Alex Bogomolov Jr. Nathan Healey
Robert Smeets
6–7(3), 7–6(7), 6–3
8. May 8, 2006 Orange Park, Florida, USA Clay Futures Robert Yim Matej Bocko
Daniel Wendler
6–4, 6–2
9. March 10, 2008 Montreal, Canada (Source: 2) Hard Futures Rylan Rizza Milan Pokrajac
Milos Raonic
7–6(5), 7–6(4)
10. May 26, 2008 Carson, California, USA Hard Challenger Carsten Ball Ryler DeHeart
Daniel King-Turner
6–4, 6–2
11. August 4, 2008 Binghamton, New York, USA Hard Challenger Carsten Ball Brian Battistone
Dann Battistone
6–3, 6–4
12. November 3, 2008 Nashville, Tennessee, USA Hard Challenger Carsten Ball Harsh Mankad
Ashutosh Singh
6–4, 7–5
13. February 23, 2009 Wolfsburg, Germany Carpet Challenger Ken Skupski Sergei Bubka
Alexandre Kudryavtsev
6–3, 6–4
14. March 23, 2009 Jersey, Channel Islands, United Kingdom Hard Challenger Eric Butorac Colin Fleming
Ken Skupski
6–4, 6–3
15. April 6, 2009 Monza, Italy Clay Challenger James Auckland Jesse Huta Galung
Dušan Karol
7–5, 6–7(6), [10–4]
16. May 9, 2010 Belgrade, Serbia Clay ATP 250 Santiago González Tomasz Bednarek
Mateusz Kowalczyk
7–6(6), 6–1
17. September 24, 2011 İzmir, Turkey Hard Challenger Simon Stadler Flavio Cipolla
Thomas Fabbiano
6–0, 6–2
18. January 29, 2012 Honolulu, United States Hard Challenger Amer Delić Nicholas Monroe
Jack Sock
6–4, 7–6(7–3)
gollark: Interesting. I wonder why that is.
gollark: How do they break it more than every other language?
gollark: If you want maximum efficiency and have no concern for practical human use, just take English, run it through a good compression algorithm, and encode it as syllables somehow.
gollark: It wouldn't be very good to *speak* that, because of low noise resistance.
gollark: It annoys me that nobody unironically uses machine-parseable languages, so you have to use either horrible regices or giant machine learning models to do natural language processing.


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