TENNIS PLAYER

Juan Mónaco

1984 - Today

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Juan Mónaco (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈxwam ˈmonako]; born 29 March 1984), nicknamed "Pico", is an Argentine former professional tennis player. He won nine singles titles, reached the semifinals of the 2010 Shanghai Masters and the 2012 Miami Masters, and achieved a career-high singles ranking of world no. 10 in July 2012. He announced his retirement from professional tennis on 15 May 2017. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Juan Mónaco is the 723rd most popular tennis player (down from 609th in 2019), the 780th most popular biography from Argentina (down from 776th in 2019) and the 22nd most popular Argentinean Tennis Player.

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Among TENNIS PLAYERS

Among tennis players, Juan Mónaco ranks 723 out of 1,569Before him are Marcelo Filippini, Mikhail Kukushkin, Fernando Meligeni, Galina Voskoboeva, Davide Sanguinetti, and Jonathan Erlich. After him are Yanina Wickmayer, Andrei Olhovskiy, Gilles Müller, Mario Ančić, Sabine Appelmans, and Borna Ćorić.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Juan Mónaco ranks 386Before him are Esperanza Spalding, Dušan Basta, Owen Jones, Alex Bruce, Galina Voskoboeva, and Stijn Schaars. After him are Junior dos Santos, Konstantin Vassiljev, Mamdouh Elssbiay, Olga Rypakova, Marco Huck, and Oussama Mellouli.

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In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Juan Mónaco ranks 780 out of 1,154Before him are Mario Bolatti (1985), Fernando Meligeni (1971), Axel Kicillof (1971), Juan Antonio Flecha (1977), Jonathan Erlich (1977), and Leonardo Astrada (1970). After him are Norberto Fontana (1975), Franco Di Santo (1989), Marcelo Carracedo (1970), Nahuel Guzmán (1986), Chenoa (1975), and Marcelo Trivisonno (1966).

Among TENNIS PLAYERS In Argentina

Among tennis players born in Argentina, Juan Mónaco ranks 22Before him are Horacio Zeballos (1985), José Acasuso (1982), Martín Jaite (1964), Juan Ignacio Chela (1979), Fernando Meligeni (1971), and Jonathan Erlich (1977). After him are Javier Frana (1966), Franco Squillari (1975), Agustín Calleri (1976), Inés Gorrochategui (1973), Mariano Zabaleta (1978), and Leonardo Mayer (1987).