Martin Štěpánek (tennis)

Martin Štěpánek (born 13 December 1979) is a tennis coach and former professional player from the Czech Republic.

Martin Štěpánek
Full nameMartin Štěpánek
Country (sports) Czech Republic
ResidencePrague, Czech Republic
Born (1979-12-13) 13 December 1979 (age 44)
Havana, Cuba
Prize money$82,685
Singles
Highest rankingNo. 248 (25 August 2003)
Grand Slam singles results
WimbledonQ1 (1999, 2004)
Doubles
Highest rankingNo. 102 (26 September 2005)
Coaching career

Biography

The son of teachers, Blanka and Ludek Štěpánek, he was born in Havana, Cuba. He also lived in Mexico growing up in the 1980s.[1]

Štěpánek, who is not related to Radek Štěpánek, has one brother.[2]

Playing career

At an ITF Futures event in the Czech Republic in 2001, Štěpánek had a win over Tomáš Berdych in what was the future world number four's first appearance on tour.[3]

In 2003 he won the Mordovia Cup, a tournament on the ATP Challenger circuit.[4]

He won eight Challenger doubles titles, five of them in 2005, a year he reached a career high 102 in the world.

Coaching

A shoulder injury ended his career at the end of the 2005 season and he made the move into coaching.[2]

Based in Prague, he is best known as the coach of Croatian player Ivan Dodig. During their time together, Dodig made it to 29 in the world in singles and 4 in doubles.[5]

He has also coached Lukáš Dlouhý to two Grand Slam doubles titles and worked with Frederico Gil when he was a coach at the Break Point Academy in Halle, Germany.[2]

Since 2018 he was the coach of Tomáš Berdych until his retirement in 2019.

He started coaching Borna Ćorić at the end of 2019 till 2022.[6]

He is currently coaching Sebastian Korda[7] and Patrik Rikl.

Challenger titles

Singles: (1)

YearTournamentSurfaceOpponentScore
2003Mordovia, RussiaClay Michal Mertiňák6–1, 6–1

Doubles: (8)

YearTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
2003Mordovia, RussiaClay Kornél Bardóczky Łukasz Kubot
Orest Tereshchuk
7–6(3), 6–3
2003Prague, Czech RepublicCarpet Igor Zelenay Karsten Braasch
Jean-Claude Scherrer
6–4, 4–6, 6–4
2004Manerbio, ItalyClay Petr Luxa Johan Landsberg
Rogier Wassen
6–4, 6–2
2005Wrocław, PolandHard Lukáš Dlouhý Jason Marshall
Huntley Montgomery
6–2, 5–7, 6–4
2005Lübeck, GermanyCarpet Pavel Šnobel Philipp Petzschner
Lars Uebel
7–6(5), 5–7, 7–5
2005Ostrava, Czech RepublicClay Pavel Šnobel Tomáš Cibulec
Mariusz Fyrstenberg
7–6(1), 2–6, 7–6(4)
2005Rimini, ItalyClay David Škoch Christopher Kas
Philipp Petzschner
6–3, 6–7(1), 6–1
2005Freudenstadt, GermanyClay Pavel Šnobel Sebastian Fitz
Simon Greul
6–2, 6–4

References