Peter Lundgren
Hans Peter Lundgren (29 January 1965 – 22 August 2024) was a Swedish professional tennis player and tennis coach. He preferred playing indoors, hardcourt and on grass to clay. Playing careerLundgren was one of the second generation of Swedish players along with Mats Wilander, Stefan Edberg, Joakim Nyström, Anders Järryd, Henrik Sundström, Hans Simonsson, and Kent Carlsson that followed after the success of Björn Borg. He left Sundsvall as an 18-year-old and moved to Stockholm,[2] to further his tennis career. In 1984 Lundgren finished the year ranked at 265.[3] At the end of the 1985 season, Lundgren jumped up 234 places on ranking list to finish at No. 31.[3] In the process he won his first title in Cologne as a qualifier defeating Wojtek Fibak, Goran Prpić, Jeremy Bates, and Tim Wilkison before defeating Ramesh Krishnan in the final.[4] After the title win he was hailed as "the new Björn Borg", in reference to his talent and the long hair that bore resemblance to Borg and that he had trained with him as well.[5] Lundgren's best ranking was 25th in the world, but at the time he was only the seventh best Swede behind Mats Wilander, Stefan Edberg, Anders Järryd, Joakim Nyström, Henrik Sundström, and Jan Gunnarsson.[3] This was the golden age of Swedish tennis in which Lundgren said "We had at most 14 players in the top 100. (Don't forget the size of the Swedish population, it makes it even better this achievement)".[6] Lundgren while managing to have some big wins over Ivan Lendl, Mats Wilander, Michael Chang, Jim Courier, Thomas Muster, and Pete Sampras, was not able to achieve consistency and he said himself that "I was a little up and down. Sometimes I could lose motivation and then suddenly get thrashed against lower ranked players."[6] He played his last match on tour against Karol Kučera in Copenhagen Open and retired at 30 years of age and then went into coaching.[5] CoachingLundgren first made a name for himself as a coach when he took Marcelo Ríos into the top 10 and then they split ways, when Lundgren said that "he needed a psychologist more than a coach".[5] After that he was working for the Swiss Tennis Federation helping out with the juniors. He replaced Peter Carter as coach for Roger Federer and they worked together from 2000 to the end of 2003 before splitting.[citation needed] Lundgren then took over coaching Marat Safin and guided him to the 2005 Australian Open championship and worked with him until August 2006. In September 2006, it was announced that he would be helping out the British Davis Cup team for the next two years.[citation needed] He was given a "leave of absence" from the LTA in June 2007.[7] In 2008 Lundgren took some time away from his job, because his father was ill, though he later expressed interest to return to work with British tennis.[8] During 2008 he started coaching the Cypriot tennis player Marcos Baghdatis.[citation needed] In February 2009 Lundgren started coaching Grigor Dimitrov from Bulgaria.[citation needed] He then coached Stanislas Wawrinka.[citation needed] In September 2011 Lundgren and Wawrinka split. Lundgren then went on to teach Vicht virtual tennis coaching in Houston, Texas.[citation needed] In March 2014 Lundgren began to coach Daniela Hantuchová.[citation needed] DeathLundgren suffered from type 2 diabetes, and one of his feet was amputated in 2023.[9] Lundgren died in August 2024, at the age of 59.[10][11] Career statisticsGrand Slam tournament finalsDoubles: 1 (loss)
ATP Tour finalsSingles: 6 (3 titles, 3 runner-ups)
Doubles: 10 (3 titles, 7 runner-ups)
ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finalsDoubles (1–0)
Performance timelines
(W) winner; (F) finalist; (SF) semifinalist; (QF) quarterfinalist; (#R) rounds 4, 3, 2, 1; (RR) round-robin stage; (Q#) qualification round; (DNQ) did not qualify; (A) absent; (NH) not held; (SR) strike rate (events won / competed); (W–L) win–loss record.
Singles
Doubles
References
External links |