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André Göransson

Swedish tennis player (born 1994) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

André Göransson
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André Göransson (born 30 April 1994) is a Swedish tennis player who specializes in doubles. He has a career-high ATP doubles ranking of world No. 26, achieved on 19 May 2025. He is the current No. 1 Swedish doubles player.[1] Göransson has won two ATP Tour doubles titles as well as fourteen ATP Challenger titles and two Futures titles. He also a career-high in singles of No. 773, achieved on 25 September 2017.[2]

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College career

Göransson played college tennis at the University of California, Berkeley.[3]

Professional career

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2020-2021: First ATP title & top 100, Major quarterfinal

He won his first ATP doubles title at the 2020 Maharashtra Open partnering Christopher Rungkat. He reached the top 100, at world No. 81, on 10 February 2020.[2]

At the 2021 Wimbledon Championships Göransson and his partner Casper Ruud made the quarterfinals of the men's doubles tournament.

At the ATP 250 tournament 2021 Stockholm Open, he reached the quarterfinals with Swedish compatriot Robert Lindstedt.[4] He reached a career-high ranking of World No. 64 on 8 November 2021.[2]

2022-2024: Second ATP title

He reached his third ATP final at the 2022 Chile Open with American Nathaniel Lammons.[5]

He reached the final at the 2022 Estoril Open with Argentine Máximo González after defeating fourth seeds Raven Klaasen/ Ben McLachlan.[6]

He won his second ATP title with Sem Verbeek at the 2024 Hall of Fame Open.[7][8]

2025: Grand Slam semifinal, top 50

At the 2025 Australian Open, he reached the quarterfinals for the first time at the tournament with Verbeek, defeating local wildcards Li Tu and Luke Saville, who played his last match before retirement.[9] Next Verbeek and Göransson upset top pair Marcelo Arevalo and Mate Pavic to reach the semifinals of a Grand Slam for the first time in their careers.[10][11]

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ATP career finals

Doubles: 7 (3 titles, 4 runner-ups)

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Challenger and Futures finals

Singles: 1 (0–1)

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Doubles: 32 (16 titles, 16 runners-up)

More information Legend (doubles), Titles by surface ...
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References

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