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Mansour Bahrami
Iranian-French tennis player (born 1956)
Iranian-French tennis player (born 1956)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Mansour Bahrami |
| country | |
| residence | Paris, France |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Arak, Imperial State of Iran |
| height | |
| turnedpro | 1974 |
| retired | 1995 (singles) |
| 2003 (doubles)Bahrami retired from the main ATP Tour in 2003. he continues to appear at invitational events. | |
| plays | Right-handed (one-handed backhand) |
| careerprizemoney | $368,780 |
| singlesrecord | |
| singlestitles | 0 |
| highestsinglesranking | No. 192 (9 May 1988) |
| AustralianOpenresult | Q1 (1977) |
| FrenchOpenresult | 2R (1981) |
| Wimbledonresult | Q1 (1976) |
| doublesrecord | |
| doublestitles | 2 |
| highestdoublesranking | No. 31 (6 July 1987) |
| AustralianOpenDoublesresult | 1R (1977Jan) |
| FrenchOpenDoublesresult | F (1989) |
| WimbledonDoublesresult | 2R (1988) |
| USOpenDoublesresult | 3R (1987) |
| Mixed | yes |
| WimbledonMixedresult | 1R (1990) |
2003 (doubles)Bahrami retired from the main ATP Tour in 2003. he continues to appear at invitational events.
Mansour Bahrami (; born 26 April 1956) is an Iranian-French former professional tennis player. A successful doubles player, he won two titles, reaching the 1989 French Open final. Hailed as "the Trick Shot King", his showmanship has made him a long-standing and popular figure in invitational tournaments.
Early life
Bahrami became familiar with the tennis ball at the age of 2, since his father worked at the Amjadieh Sport Complex as a gardener. From the age 5 to 12 he worked as a ball boy in Amjadieh tennis courts. As a child in Iran, Mansour taught himself to play tennis using an old metal frying pan and other kitchen utensils since his father couldn't afford a racket for him. He didn't own his first tennis racket until the age of 12 when Shirzad Akbari, a member of the Iranian national tennis team whom Mansour was a ball boy for at the time, gave him one as a gift. At the age of 16, he joined the national adult team in the Davis Cup. In his early 20s, following Iran's Islamic Revolution in the late 1970s, tennis was viewed as a capitalist and elitist sport and therefore banned. A few months after the revolution, the Islamic Regime permitted some tennis activities at the national level. Subsequently, licenses for several tournaments were issued. Mansour won one of this local tournament with the prize of airplane flights to Athens. He paid to have the tickets changed to Nice and left his girlfriend and family behind.
France offered Bahrami the opportunity to play small tournaments, but he saw that the cost of living was quite high and needed a way to maintain his finances until he could begin winning prize money. He gambled his savings in a casino in Nice and lost the lot on his first night. When his French visa ran out and without a carte de séjour (residence permit), he became a political refugee, an illegal immigrant, was constantly in fear of the police, regularly slept rough, and was forced to make food last for days. He relied on the financial support of friends until he was able to support himself.
In May 2023, he was featured on HBO’s Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel describing his early life.
Tennis career
Mansour Bahrami reached the Davis Cup team at the age of 16.
Due to the forced break in his tennis play from the Islamic revolution fallout, his potential in singles was never fully realized. He became a successful doubles player, winning two tournaments and reaching the 1989 French Open doubles final with Éric Winogradsky.
Senior tournaments
Bahrami has been a mainstay of the seniors invitational tennis circuit for more than 25 years. Bahrami is considered to have "found his niche" on the ATP Champions Tour, where his flamboyant, humorous style and propensity for trick shots make him a crowd favourite in the tour's more entertainment-oriented sphere. In reference to his showmanship, his 2009 English-language autobiography was titled The Court Jester. His comic turns on the court often include faking serves; slow-motion miming; hitting balls backwards between his legs, over his shoulder, or from the back; and playing while lying down, seated, or kneeling.
ATP career finals
Doubles: 12 played, 2 won
| Winner – Legend |
|---|
| Grand Slam (0–1) |
| Tennis Masters Cup (0–0) |
| ATP Masters Series (0–2) |
| ATP Tour (2–7) |
| Result | W–L | Date | Tournament | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loss | 0–1 | 1986 | ATP Bordeaux | Clay | HAI Ronald Agénor | ESP Jordi Arrese | |
| ESP David de Miguel | 5–7, 4–6 | ||||||
| Loss | 0–2 | 1986 | MercedesCup | Clay | URU Diego Pérez | CHI Hans Gildemeister | |
| ECU Andrés Gómez | 4–6, 3–6 | ||||||
| Loss | 0–3 | 1986 | Paris Masters | Carpet (i) | URU Diego Pérez | USA Peter Fleming | |
| USA John McEnroe | 3–6, 2–6 | ||||||
| Loss | 0–4 | 1987 | Monte-Carlo Masters | Clay | DNK Michael Mortensen | CHL Hans Gildemeister | |
| ECU Andrés Gómez | 2–6, 4–6 | ||||||
| Loss | 0–5 | 1987 | Geneva Open | Clay | URU Diego Pérez | BRA Ricardo Acioly | |
| BRA Luiz Mattar | 6–3, 4–6, 2–6 | ||||||
| Win | 1–5 | 1988 | Geneva Open | Clay | CSK Tomáš Šmíd | ARG Gustavo Luza | |
| ARG Guillermo Pérez Roldán | 6–4 6–3 | ||||||
| Loss | 1–6 | 1988 | Toulouse Grand Prix | Hard (i) | FRA Guy Forget | NED Tom Nijssen | |
| FRG Ricki Osterthun | 3–6, 4–6 | ||||||
| Loss | 1–7 | 1989 | French Open | Clay | FRA Éric Winogradsky | USA Jim Grabb | |
| USA Patrick McEnroe | 4–6, 6–2, 4–6, 6–7(5–7) | ||||||
| Loss | 1–8 | 1989 | Geneva Open | Clay | ARG Guillermo Pérez Roldán | ECU Andrés Gómez | |
| ARG Alberto Mancini | 3–6, 5–7 | ||||||
| Win | 2–8 | 1989 | Toulouse Grand Prix | Hard (i) | FRA Éric Winogradsky | USA Todd Nelson | |
| BAH Roger Smith | 6–2, 7–6 | ||||||
| Loss | 2–9 | 1990 | ATP Bordeaux | Clay | FRA Yannick Noah | ESP Tomás Carbonell | |
| BEL Libor Pimek | 3–6, 7–6, 2-6 | ||||||
| Loss | 2–10 | 1991 | Copenhagen Open | Carpet (i) | USSR Andrei Olhovskiy | AUS Todd Woodbridge | |
| AUS Mark Woodforde | 3–6, 1–6 |
ATP Challenger Series finals
Doubles: 5 played, 3 won
| Outcome | No. | Date | Tournament | Surface | Partnering | Opponents | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Runner-up | 1. | 1986 | Chartres, France | Clay | FRA Éric Winogradsky | ARG Javier Frana | |
| ARG Gustavo Guerrero | 2–6, 4–6 | ||||||
| Winner | 1. | 1986 | Neu-Ulm, West Germany | Clay | CZE Jaroslav Navrátil | NED Menno Oosting | |
| NED Huub van Boeckel | 7–5, 6–1 | ||||||
| Winner | 2. | 1987 | Clermont-Ferrand, France | Clay | SUI Claudio Mezzadri | FRA Christophe Lesage | |
| FRA Jean-Marc Piacentile | 6–3, 7–5 | ||||||
| Runner-up | 2. | 1987 | Neu-Ulm, West Germany | Clay | DEN Michael Mortensen | GER Jaromir Becka | |
| GER Udo Riglewski | WEA | ||||||
| Winner | 3. | 1990 | Dijon, France | Carpet (i) | FRA Rodolphe Gilbert | SWE Jan Apell | |
| SWE Peter Nyborg | 7–5, 6–2 |
Bibliography and filmography
- The Man behind the Moustache, DVD (2009).
Notes
References
References
- (2018). "چهرهها، گفتگو با منصور بهرامی". Iran International TV.
- (2023). "چند شنبه با سینا، فصل دوم، گفتگو با منصور بهرامی". MBC Persia TV.
- (2012). "منصور بهرامى هنرمند بانمک ویمبلدون".
- [https://www.10sballs.com/2023/05/22/hbos-real-sports-profiles-mansour-bahrami-tonight-at-10/ HBO’s Real Sports Profiles Mansour Bahrami Tomorrow at 10]
- (30 January 2010). "Islamic Republic Crushed the Dreams of Iran's Top Tennis Players". New York Times.
- (3 July 2013). "Bahrami: Iran's solo tennis representative". Al Jazeera.
- [http://www.atpworldtour.com/Tennis/Players/Ba/M/Mansour-Bahrami.aspx ATP profile]
- (2009). "The court jester : my story". TennisMania Trust, in association with AuthorHouse.
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