- Source: Albert Portas
- Franken Challenge
- Nord LB Open
- Lovro Zovko
- Barcelona Terbuka
- Jerman Terbuka (tenis)
- Savitri Devi
- Albert Portas
- 2001 Hamburg Masters – Singles
- Portas (surname)
- 2001 ATP Tour
- Galo Blanco
- 2000 ATP Tour
- Juan Carlos Ferrero
- Germán Puentes
- 2022 Horizon League men's soccer tournament
- ATP Masters 1000 singles records and statistics
Albert Portas Soy (Catalan: [əlˈβɛɾ(t) ˈpɔɾtəs ˈsɔj], Spanish: [alˈβeɾ ˈpoɾtas ˈsoj]; born 15 November 1973) is a Spanish former professional tennis player.
Career
Portas turned professional in 1994. He reached his career-high singles ranking of World No. 19 in October 2001.
His only top-level singles title came at the 2001 Hamburg Masters tournament, in which his mastery of the drop shot (key to his defeat of Juan Carlos Ferrero in the final) earned him the nickname "Drop Shot Dragon". According to the BBC, Lleyton Hewitt said of Portas that "He sure hits a lot of drop shots, but he hits them so well, as well as anyone I have faced.". His final at Barcelona Open in 1997 was also very remarkable. En route to the final he defeated Gustavo Kuerten (eventual champion this same year of French Open), Marcelo Ríos, and Carlos Moyá, but lost in the final to Albert Costa. In 1999, Portas lost the final of San Marino defeated by his countryman Galo Blanco.
Immediately after his retirement from playing tennis in September 2007, Portas started coaching WTA player Daniela Hantuchová, who Portas coached from 2007–2012.
Performance timelines
= Singles
== Doubles
=ATP career finals
= Singles: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-ups)
== Doubles: 4 (1 title, 3 runner-ups)
=ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals
= Singles: 19 (8–11)
== Doubles: 22 (12–10)
=Wins over top 10 players
References
External links
Albert Portas at the Association of Tennis Professionals
Albert Portas at the International Tennis Federation
Albert Portas at ESPN.com