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Todd Woodbridge

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Full name
  
Todd Andrew Woodbridge

Name
  
Todd Woodbridge

Children
  
Zara Rose, Beau Andrew

Country (sports)
  
Australia

Role
  
Tennis player

Parents
  
Kevin, Barbara

Turned pro
  
1988

Height
  
1.77 m

Siblings
  
Warren, Gregory

Retired
  
2005

Spouse
  
Natasha (m. 1995)


Todd Woodbridge Davis Cup Video Davis Cup Idols Todd Woodbridge

Residence
  
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Born
  
2 April 1971 (age 53) Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (
1971-04-02
)

Plays
  
Right-handed (one-handed backhand)

Similar People
  
Mark Woodforde, Jonas Bjorkman, Fabrice Santoro, Rennae Stubbs, Helena Sukova

Profiles

Kim clijsters chided commentator todd woodbridge at the australian open


Todd Andrew Woodbridge, OAM (born 2 April 1971) is a retired Australian tennis player. He was born in Sydney and raised in Kogarah Bay by his parents, Kevin and Barbara. He has two older brothers, Gregory and Warren. He attended Lyneham High School, Canberra, then turned professional in 1988.

Contents

Todd Woodbridge www1pictureszimbiocomgiToddWoodbridge2011N

Woodbridge is best known for his successful Doubles partnerships with Mark Woodforde and later Jonas Björkman. He is among the most successful doubles players of all time, having won 16 Grand Slam men's doubles titles (nine Wimbledons, three US Opens, three Australian Opens and one French Open), and a further six Grand Slam mixed doubles titles (three US Opens, one French Opens, one Wimbledon, one Australian Open). Additionally, he was a gold medalist with Woodforde at the 1996 Summer Olympics to complete a career Golden Slam. In total he has won 83 ATP doubles titles. Woodbridge reached the World No. 1 doubles ranking in July 1992.

Todd Woodbridge Todd Woodbridge 2011 Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

In 2002, he was inducted into the Australian Institute of Sport 'Best of the Best'.

Todd Woodbridge wwwatpworldtourcommediatennisplayersheads

Todd woodbridge


Juniors

Todd Woodbridge Talking tennis with Todd Woodbridge ABC Darwin Australian

In juniors, Woodbridge made the finals of the Jr Australian Open in 1987 and 1989, and Wimbledon in 1989.

Pro tour

Todd Woodbridge Todd Woodbridge takes up new role with Tennis Australia

He is best known as one of the top doubles players in the world for most of the 1990s and into the early 2000s (decade). His primary doubles partnerships were first with fellow Australian Mark Woodforde and later with Swede Jonas Björkman. Woodbridge and Woodforde are often referred to as "The Woodies" in the tennis world. Woodbridge also had a career high singles ranking of 19 after reaching the semifinals of Wimbledon in 1997, beating Michael Chang, Marcos Ondruska, Alex Rădulescu, Patrick Rafter and Nicolas Kiefer before losing to Pete Sampras. He did however have the distinction of being one of the few players to beat Sampras at Wimbledon, knocking him out in the first round in 1989.

The Woodies won a record 61 ATP doubles titles as a team, including 11 Grand Slam events. After Woodforde retired from the tour in 2000, Woodbridge established a partnership with Björkman that resulted in five Grand Slam titles in four years. At the end of 2004, Björkman ended his partnership with Woodbridge. According to an interview Woodbridge granted to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Björkman wanted him to play more weeks on the tour, but Woodbridge wanted to limit his time away from his family as much as possible.

Woodbridge then took on India's Mahesh Bhupathi as his new partner, who had just been dumped by Belarusian Max Mirnyi. Coincidentally, Björkman and Mirnyi ended up partnering together. In the 2000 Sydney Olympics, he partnered with Woodforde to reach the final. In the fourth set tie-breaker against Canadians Sébastien Lareau and Daniel Nestor, he served a double fault to lose the match. He was a member of the Australian Davis Cup Team, playing the most ties (32) of any player.

Woodbridge announced his retirement at the 2005 Wimbledon Championships after 17 years as a tennis professional and 83 ATP tournament doubles titles, an all-time record at the time now surpassed by the Bryan brothers. According to the ATP website, he finished his career with US$10,095,245 in prize money.

After retirement

In 2006 and 2007, Woodbridge joined the Seven Network's commentary team for the Australian Open.

He also became an ambassador for bowel cancer awareness group "Let's Beat Bowel Cancer". A Cabrini Health initiative.

In 2007, Woodbridge joined the 6th season of Dancing with the Stars, the Australian version. In 2008 and 2009, Woodbridge aligned himself closely to the sailing community through his commitments at Hamilton Island Race Week hosting tennis clinics and wine tasting events.

Woodbridge served as the tournament director for the 2009 Australian Open legends event. In July 2009, he was appointed coach of the Australian Davis Cup Team, taking on a newly expanded, full-time position that merges a role as the national men's coach overseeing the male player development pathway with the Davis Cup coaching job.

In January 2010 on Australia day, The Woodies were inducted to the Australian Tennis Hall of Fame for their achievements in tennis. As a part of the induction ceremony, their bronzed statues were placed with other great Australian tennis players at the Melbourne Park. In July 2010 The Woodies were inducted to the International Tennis Hall of Fame.

In January 2011, Woodbridge was confronted on court by Belgian player Kim Clijsters for comments he made via SMS to Rennae Stubbs alleging Clijsters was pregnant. In June that year, Woodbridge started anchoring the Seven Network's Wimbledon coverage.

Personal life

Todd and Natasha Woodbridge married on 8 April 1995 in Melbourne; they have two children Zara, and Beau.

Singles performance timeline

1This event was held in Stockholm through 1994, Essen in 1995, and Stuttgart from 1996 through 2001.

References

Todd Woodbridge Wikipedia