Filip Peliwo: Difference between revisions

 
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|from = Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
|residence =
|countryrepresented = Poland since March 2022
|height = 5’11” (1,80m)
|styleofplay = Right-handed (two-handed backhand)
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==Biography==
'''Filip Peliwo''' (born January 30, 1994 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) is a Canadian-Polish professional tennis player. He reached a career-high ATP singles ranking of No. 161 on May 21, 2018 and a career-high ATP doubles ranking of No. 321 on March 19, 2018.
 
Peliwo became the first Canadian male and second Canadian ever to win a Grand Slam in singles at any level with his 2012 Wimbledon boys' title win. This was Canada's second Grand Slam title in two days, one day after [[Eugenie Bouchard]]'s. With the victory, Peliwo reached the No. 1 combined junior world ranking in July 2012, the first time a Canadian has been top ranked. He won his second straight junior Grand Slam title at the 2012 US Open. Peliwo was also runner-up in the boys singles events at the 2012 Australian Open and French Open. At the Masters 1000 [[Canadian Open|Rogers Cup]] at the beginning of August, Peliwo was granted a wildcard into the main draw, his first appearance at an ATP Tour tournament. He scored an upset with a three-set win over world No. 39 Jarkko Nieminen in the first round when Nieminen retired at 1–3 in the third set. He was defeated in the next round by world No. 66 Denis Istomin in three sets. In 2017, he won his first ATP Challenger title, defeating Denis Kudla at the 75K in Knoxville.
 
Peliwo was born in Vancouver to Polish parents Mark and Monika. He played his early tennis through his teens at the North Shore Winter Club in North Vancouver BC and was part of the National Training Centre in Montréal from 2009 to 2013. He is the only one of three siblings not born in Poland. Peliwo started representing Poland in March 2022.
 
==ATP Challenger Tour finals==
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{|class="wikitable"
!Legend
|- style="background:#ffc87a;"
|ATP Challenger 175 (0–0)
|- style="background:#e5d1cb;"
|ATP Challenger 125 (0–0)
Line 41 ⟶ 44:
|- style="background:#e4fae4;"
|ATP Challenger 90 (0–0)
|- style="background:#eeeeeeffffcc;"
|ATP Challenger 80 (0–1)
|- style="background:#eeeeee;"
|ATP Challenger 75 (0–0)
|- style="background:#f8f8ff;"
|ATP Challenger 50 (0–0)
Line 84 ⟶ 89:
|<small>1–1</small>
|May 2019
|style="background:#eeeeeeffffcc;"|Jerusalem, Israel
|style="background:#eeeeeeffffcc;"|80 Series
|Hard
|Danilo Petrović (SRB)
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|}
 
===Doubles: 23 (1 title, 2 runners-up)===
{|
|- valign="top"
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{|class="wikitable"
!Legend
|- style="background:#ffc87a;"
|ATP Challenger 175 (0–0)
|- style="background:#e5d1cb;"
|ATP Challenger 125 (0–0)
Line 105 ⟶ 112:
|- style="background:#e4fae4;"
|ATP Challenger 90 (0–1)
|- style="background:#eeeeeeffffcc;"
|ATP Challenger 80 (0–0)
|- style="background:#eeeeee;"
|ATP Challenger 75 (0–0)
|- style="background:#f8f8ff;"
|ATP Challenger 50 (0–01–0)
|- style="background:moccasin;"
|ATP Challenger Tour prior to 2019 (0–1)
Line 116 ⟶ 125:
!Titles by surface
|-
|Hard (0–21–2)
|-
|Clay (0–0)
Line 156 ⟶ 165:
|Nathan Pasha (USA) <br /> Max Schnur (USA)
|6–7<sup>(4–7)</sup>, 3–6
|-
|style="background:#98fb98;"|Win
|<small>1–2</small>
|Aug 2023
|style="background:#f8f8ff;"|Zhuhai, China
|style="background:#f8f8ff;"|50 Series
|Hard
|Luca Castelnuovo (SUI)
|Li Hanwen (CHN) <br /> Li Zhe (CHN)
|7–5, 7–6<sup>(7–4)</sup>
|}
 
==ITF Circuit finals==
===Singles: 1626 (1012 titles, 614 runners-up)===
{|
|- valign="top"
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!Legend
|- style="background:lightblue;"
|ITF $25,000 tournaments / ITF M25 (2–24–8)
|- style="background:#ccccff;"
|ITF $15,000 tournaments / ITF M15 (7–27–4)
|- style="background:#f0f8ff;"
|ITF $10,000 tournaments (1–2)
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!Titles by surface
|-
|Hard (10–612–13)
|-
|Clay (0–00–1)
|-
|Grass (0–0)
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|Ulises Blanch (USA)
|4–6, retired
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>10–7</small>
|Aug 2021
|style="background:#ccccff;"|Gdynia, Poland
|style="background:#ccccff;"|M15
|Clay
|Roman Andres Burruchaga (ARG)
|7–6<sup>(7–2)</sup>, 6–7<sup>(3–7)</sup>, 1–6
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>10–8</small>
|Oct 2021
|style="background:lightblue;"|Pretoria, South Africa
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Rio Noguchi (JPN)
|3–6, 5–7
|-
|style="background:#98fb98;"|Win
|<small>11–8</small>
|Oct 2021
|style="background:lightblue;"|Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard (i)
|Andrey Kuznetsov (RUS)
|6–3, 7–5
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>11–9</small>
|Aug 2022
|style="background:#ccccff;"|Helsinki, Finland
|style="background:#ccccff;"|M15
|Hard
|Charles Broom (GBR)
|6–4, 4–6, 1–6
|-
|style="background:#98fb98;"|Win
|<small>12–9</small>
|Aug 2022
|style="background:lightblue;"|Aldershot, United Kingdom
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Leandro Riedi (SUI)
|6–4, 7–6<sup>(7–5)</sup>
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>12–10</small>
|Oct 2022
|style="background:lightblue;"|Glasgow, United Kingdom
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Aidan McHugh (GBR)
|6–7<sup>(4–7)</sup>, 4–6
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>12–11</small>
|Oct 2022
|style="background:lightblue;"|Afula, Israel
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Daniel Cukierman (ISR)
|6–7<sup>(4–7)</sup>, 3–6
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>12–12</small>
|Nov 2022
|style="background:lightblue;"|Jerusalem, Israel
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Vladyslav Orlov (UKR)
|6–1, 1–6, 5–7
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>12–13</small>
|Jun 2023
|style="background:lightblue;"|Netanya, Israel
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Martyn Pawelski (POL)
|1–6, 5–7
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>12–14</small>
|Jul 2023
|style="background:lightblue;"|Netanya, Israel
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Yshai Oliel (ISR)
|6–1, 6–7<sup>(5–7)</sup>, 2–6
|}
 
===Doubles: 1416 (5 titles, 911 runners-up)===
{|
|- valign="top"
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!Legend
|- style="background:lightblue;"
|ITF $25,000 tournaments / ITF M25 (2–12–2)
|- style="background:#ccccff;"
|ITF $15,000 tournaments / ITF M15 (2–72–8)
|- style="background:#f0f8ff;"
|ITF $10,000 tournaments (1–1)
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!Titles by surface
|-
|Hard (5–95–11)
|-
|Clay (0–0)
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|Alexios Halebian (USA) <br /> Alexander Sarkissian (USA)
|3–6, 6–7<sup>(0–7)</sup>
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>5–10</small>
|Jun 2021
|style="background:#ccccff;"|Monastir, Tunisia
|style="background:#ccccff;"|M15
|Hard
|Matías Franco Descotte (ARG)
|Hong Seong-chan (KOR) <br /> Nam Ji-sung (KOR)
|3–6, 1–6
|-
|style="background:#ffa07a;"|Loss
|<small>5–11</small>
|Nov 2022
|style="background:lightblue;"|Jerusalem, Israel
|style="background:lightblue;"|M25
|Hard
|Mattias Southcombe (GBR)
|Daniel Cukierman (ISR) <br /> Joshua Paris (GBR)
|3–6, 4–6
|}
 
Line 540 ⟶ 669:
 
==Singles performance timeline==
''This table is current through the 20212024 WimbledonAustralian ChampionshipsOpen.''
{|class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
!Tournament!!2013!!2014!!2015!!2016!!2017!!2018!!2019!!2020!!2021!!2022!!2023!!2024!!SR!!W–L!!Win %
|-
|colspan=1316 style="text-align:left;"|'''Grand Slam tournaments'''
|-
|style="text-align:left;"|Australian Open
Line 554 ⟶ 683:
|A
|style="background:#ecf2ff;"|Q1
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
Line 571 ⟶ 703:
|A
|A
|A
|A
|
|0 / 0
|0–0
Line 585 ⟶ 720:
|style="color:#cccccc;"|NH
|A
|A
|A
|
|0 / 0
|0–0
Line 596 ⟶ 734:
|A
|style="background:#ecf2ff;"|Q1
|A
|A
|A
|A
|A
Line 604 ⟶ 745:
|- style="font-weight:bold; background:#efefef;"
|style="text-align:left;"|Win–Loss
|0–0
|0–0
|0–0
|0–0
|0–0
Line 620 ⟶ 764:
'''Notes'''
*<sup>NB</sup> The French Open was played in September and after the US Open due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
*
 
==External links==