TENNIS PLAYER

Igor Andreev

1983 - Today

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Igor Valeryevich Andreev (Russian: И́горь Вале́рьевич Андре́ев, BGN/PCGN: Andreyev, ISO 9: Andreev, ; born 14 July 1983) is a Russian coach and a former professional tennis player. He won three ATP Tour singles titles, reached the quarterfinals of the 2007 French Open and achieved a career-high singles ranking of world No. 18 in November 2008. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 34 different languages on Wikipedia (down from 35 in 2024). Igor Andreev is the 659th most popular tennis player (down from 599th in 2024), the 2,725th most popular biography from Russia (down from 2,716th in 2019) and the 31st most popular Russian Tennis Player.

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Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Igor Andreev ranks 659 out of 1,569Before him are Adrian Mannarino, Alona Bondarenko, Candy Reynolds, Kent Carlsson, Bettina Bunge, and Florian Mayer. After him are Jarmila Wolfe, Pierre-Hugues Herbert, Julia Görges, Ashleigh Barty, Andreas Seppi, and Carlos Costa.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Igor Andreev ranks 331Before him are Ameera al-Taweel, Dmytro Razumkov, Alexander Wang, Florian Mayer, Jessy Matador, and Jesse Moss. After him are Lima, Ilya Naishuller, Gabourey Sidibe, Jelena Tomašević, Federico Marchetti, and Mike Hanke.

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Igor Andreev ranks 2,725 out of 3,761Before him are Rubén Gallego (1968), Ilia Kulik (1977), Lyubov Yegorova (1966), Irina Pantaeva (1967), Andrei Shleifer (1961), and Elena Chizhova (1957). After him are Alexander Borodai (1972), Arkady Babchenko (1977), Grigory Kiriyenko (1965), Valeri Broshin (1962), Irina Belova (1968), and Sergei Zalyotin (1962).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Russia

Among tennis players born in Russia, Igor Andreev ranks 31Before him are Dmitry Tursunov (1982), Anna Chakvetadze (1987), Maria Kirilenko (1987), Daria Gavrilova (1994), Ekaterina Makarova (1988), and Anna Kalinskaya (1998). After him are Ekaterina Alexandrova (1994), Aleksandra Krunić (1993), Mikhail Kukushkin (1987), Galina Voskoboeva (1984), Andrei Olhovskiy (1966), and Sofia Kenin (1998).