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Julien Benneteau’s career
Published
3:18 AM EST, Tue December 18, 2018
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Julien Benneteau ended his 18-year pro career in October. He made 10 singles finals but ...
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Benneteau didn't win any of them. It is an Open Era record in tennis.
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He said his most painful loss in a final came against Joao Sousa in Kuala Lumpur in 2013 when he held a match point.
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Another tough loss in a final came in Sydney in 2012 against Jarkko Nieminen. Rain pushed back the final, which the Frenchman said affected him.
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Cedric Pioline (pictured) and Pat Dupre lost their first nine finals before winning on the 10th attempt.
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But Benneteau also experienced success, including making the quarterfinals of his home grand slam, the French Open.
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Benneteau beat Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic in his career. The Frenchman also led Federer by two sets at Wimbledon in 2012 before the Swiss rallied.
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Weeks later on the grass at Wimbledon, Benneteau combined with Richard Gasquet to win bronze in doubles at the London Olympics.
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Benneteau excelled in doubles. In 2014 he combined with Edouard Roger-Vasselin to end France's 30-year men's doubles drought at Roland Garros.
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In his farewell Davis Cup outing in September, Benneteau (seen here with his son) and Nicolas Mahut won in doubles against Spain.
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Benneteau played the last match of his career in October but he is staying in tennis. He is now France's Fed Cup captain, replacing Yannick Noah (left).