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Morgan Phillips (tennis)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Morgan Phillips
Country (sports) Great Britain
Born (1984-06-23) 23 June 1984 (age 40)
Prize money$62,630
Singles
Highest rankingNo. 406 (17 May 2010)
Doubles
Highest rankingNo. 399 (10 October 2011)

Morgan Phillips (born 23 June 1984) is a British tennis coach and former professional male tennis player from Croydon. He reached a peak world ranking of 406 in May 2010.[1][2]

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Career

2003

Phillips joined the senior tour.[3]

2006

Phillips beat James Ward at the Spain Futures in the first round.[4]

2009

Phillips came back from a career threatening knee injury to jump 1,441 places in the world rankings to 431, and become the biggest mover in the British men's game in 2009.[citation needed]

2010

Phillips played doubles with the Russian player Evgeny Donskoy at the Seville Challenger, losing in the first round. [5]

2012

Phillips retired from playing with a singles ranking of 581 and a doubles ranking of 1183.[3]

2013

Phillips starts coaching Evgeny Donskoy.[6]

Donskoy made his Davis Cup debut in Europe/Africa Zone Group I match against Great Britain in Coventry. Donskoy won an epic first rubber against James Ward, one of Phillips' best friends, 4–6 4–6 7–5 6–2 8–6 to help give Russia a 2–0 lead heading into the doubles rubber the following day. Great Britain won the doubles to give the home side some hope going into the final day of matches, where Ward opened the day. Ward stunned the much higher seeded Russian Dmitry Tursunov 6–4 5–7 5–7 6–4 6–4 to level the tie. Dan Evans ranked 325 would eventually complete a remarkable turnaround, with a straight sets victory over world no. 80 Donskoy.[7] The last time Great Britain had come from 2-0 down to win a Davis Cup tie was 83 years ago against Germany. Consequently, Great Britain won a place in the 16-team World Group play-offs in September.

2015

On 4 December, Phillips became the new coach of James Ward,[2] one of his best friends.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Morgan Phillips". ATP Tour.
  2. ^ a b Rudd, Alyson (7 December 2015). "James Ward's heartbreak for stricken coach who predicted Davis Cup triumph". The Times. Times Newspapers.
  3. ^ a b "Morgan Phillips". ITF Tennis. 31 December 2012.
  4. ^ "Morgan Phillips vs James Ward". Tennis Live. 27 September 2006.
  5. ^ "Evgeny Donskoy/Morgan Phillips". Tennis Live. 6 September 2010.
  6. ^ a b "Britons lack the finishing touch". Express. Northern and Shell Media Publications. 5 April 2013.
  7. ^ "GB's James Ward and Dan Evans see off Russia and make Davis Cup history". Guardian. 7 April 2013.
This page was last edited on 20 June 2024, at 18:54
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