Residence: Monte Carlo, Monaco Son, Philip
Singles titles: 2, as follows: Doubles titles: 8, as follows:
1990--(1) Brussels (w/E. Sanchez)
1988--(1) Sydney Indoor 1988--(1) Tokyo Indoor (w/Gomez)
1986--(1) Houston 1987--(2) Brussels, Milan (w/Becker)
1986--(3) Brussels (w/Becker), Rotterdam
(w/Edberg), U.S. Open (w/Gomez)
1985--(1) Boston (w/Pimek)
Year-by-Year Highlights:
1989- Quarterfinalist at Milan, Sydney Indoor; RD 16 at Wimbledon (d. Mecir);
Doubles Semifinalist at Milan (w/Ivanisevic); Doubles Runner-up at Tokyo
Indoor (w/Gomez); Doubles Quarterfinalist at Key Biscanye (w/Gomez), Monte
Carlo (w/Ivanisevic).
1988- Runner-up at Forest Hills-T.O.C. l. Agassi); Quarterfinalist at
Livingston; RD 16 at Wimbledon.
1987- Semifinalist Milan, Forest Hills-T.O.C., Sydney Indoor, Tokyo Indoor;
Quarterfinalist at Wimbledon, Montreal, Basle; RD 16 at Key Biscayne;
Doubles Semifinalist at Wimbledon, U.S. Open (w/Gomez).
1986- Semifinalist at Wimbledon; Doubles Runner-up at Tournament of Champions
Toronto (w/Becker), Vienna (w/Gilbert), Stockholm (w/Cash).
1985- Runner-up at Nancy, Thessaloniki Challenger; Semifinalist at Queens,
Australian Open; Quarterfinalist at Nice; Doubles Runner-up at Wembley (w/
Becker).
1984- Quarterfinalist at Kitzbuhel.
Best Grand Slam Results: Australian Open, 1985 Semifinalist; Wimbledon, 1986
Semifinalist, 1987 Quarterfinalist, 1989 RD 16; U.S. Open, 1987 Doubles
Champion (w/Gomez).
Doubles quarterfinalist (w/Ivanisevic) at 1988 Seoul Olympic Games.
Reached the 1986 Wimbledon semifinals, taking Lendl to five sets. It was
the best Yugoslav finish in a Grand Slam since Nikki Pilic went to the final
at the 1973 French Open.
Finished 1986 No. 2 on the ATP computer doubles rankings, behind Andres
Gomez who he teamed with to win the U.S. Open that year.
Won the Italian Open junior title and runner-up at the European Junior
Championships in 1981.
The Yugoslavian National Champion in seven different age categories (12s
13s, 14s, 15s, 16s, 18s, and 21s).
Known as "Bobo" on the NGP tour and one of the most intriguing figures
at 6-foot-6, 220 pounds.
Earned a career-high $319,029 in 1986. Compiled a 27-18 match record
and finished No. 31 on the ATP computer in 1988, his fourth straight top 50
finish. Slipped to No. 71 in 1989, his lowest since 1984 when he was 115.
Surpassed the $1 million mark in career prize money in April 1989 at
Monte Carlo.
Coached by Gunther Bresnik.