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Eric Prodon

Éric Prodon
Éric Prodon.jpg
Country (sports)  France
Residence Tampere, Finland
Born (1981-06-27) 27 June 1981 (age 35)
Paris, France
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Turned pro 2000
Plays Right-handed
Singles
Career record 1–12
Career titles 0
Highest ranking No. 83 (22 August 2011)
Current ranking No. 121 (9 July 2012)
Grand Slam Singles results
Australian Open 1R (2012)
French Open 1R (2000, 2002, 2008, 2011, 2012)
Wimbledon Q1 (2010, 2014)
US Open 1R (2011)
Doubles
Career record 0–3
Career titles 0
Highest ranking No. 580 (4 October 2004)
Last updated on: 3 October 2008.

Éric Prodon (born 27 June 1981) is a French professional tennis player.

Prodon had a long career in Juniors, playing from 1997 to 1999 and reaching year-end No. 28 in 1998. In matches against future top pros, he beat Mikhail Youzhny and Julien Benneteau in 1997. Early in 1998, he lost to Jarkko Nieminen, and late in the year, he beat Roger Federer, Karol Beck, and Guillermo Coria in successive rounds at Eddie Herr before losing to David Nalbandian in the final. He then beat Youzhny again after that in the Orange Bowl. Early in 1999, he had a great Australian hard court run, beating Nieminen and splitting matches with Kristian Pless in finals two weeks in a row. In March 1999, he lost to Coria and Paul-Henri Mathieu in successive finals. In May, he lost to Nieminen again, but beat him and Karol Beck the next week in the French Open before losing again to Nalbandian in the quarters. In June in England on the grass, he lost to Mardy Fish in a final. In the summer, back on clay, he beat Tommy Robredo and Boris Pašanski but lost to Igor Kunitsyn. And finally in his next to last match as a junior, he lost to Danai Udomchoke in September in Canada.

Prodon's transition to the pro tour was a rocky one. While he first entered the top-300 in late 2000 as a 19-year-old, he spent most of 2001 in the 300's before getting back down into the 230's late in 2002. He faded again to the 300's in 2003 and 2004 before getting back down to the 230's again in late 2004 and early 2005, but an injury in February kept him out for 7 months. Another injury in April 2006 kept him off the court the rest of the year. So he spent most of 2005 and 2006 ranked outside the top-500.

Prodon returned to the tour in mid-February 2007, ranked #683, and won Italy F1 in his first tournament back from a 10-month layoff. His ranking continued to slip, despite some Futures success, and by the time he got to Scotland for a Futures tournament in May, he was #721.


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