Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Marcelo Arévalo

Salvadoran tennis player (born 1990) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marcelo Arévalo
Remove ads

Marcelo Arévalo González (Latin American Spanish: [maɾˈselo aˈɾeβalo ɣonˈsales];[2][a] born October 17, 1990)[1] is a Salvadoran professional tennis player. He is a former world No. 1 in doubles by the ATP, achieved on 11 November 2024 and has a career-high singles ranking of No. 139, attained in April 2018, making him the highest-ranked player, male or female, across both disciplines in Salvadoran tennis history.[3] In December 2024, Arévalo was named El Salvador's Male Sportsman of the Year.[4]

Quick facts Full name, Country (sports) ...

He has won fourteen career ATP Tour doubles titles, including two Grand Slam titles at the Roland Garros in 2022 with partner Jean-Julien Rojer and in 2024 with Mate Pavić. With the win, he became the first player from Central America to claim a men's doubles major title.[5] He had previously reached one other Grand Slam final, having lost at the 2021 US Open in the mixed doubles tournament with partner Giuliana Olmos.

As a junior, Arévalo was ranked as high as No. 8 in the world and won seven singles and doubles titles on the ITF Junior Circuit. As a professional, he broke into the top 100 in doubles in 2018 and won his first ATP title at the 2018 Los Cabos Open with Miguel Ángel Reyes-Varela, making his debut in the top 50. After several years with intermittent partners, Arévalo formed a new partnership with Rojer in 2022 that took them to four additional tour finals, three of which they won, and helped him debut in the top 10.

Remove ads

Personal life

He is the younger brother of former tennis player Rafael Arévalo, who he often partnered with to represent El Salvador together in the Davis Cup.[3]

Professional career

Summarize
Perspective

2018: Maiden ATP title and top 50 in doubles

As a professional, he emerged into the top 100 of the doubles rankings in February 2018. He won his first ATP title six months later at the Los Cabos Open, a victory that propelled him into the top 50.

2021: Second career title, first Grand Slam mixed doubles final

2021 was the most successful year on the ATP tour in Arevalo's professional doubles career. He reached in the end of March the quarterfinals in the 2021 Miami Open with Horia Tecău defeating the top seeded pair of Farah/Cabal.

With his Dutch partner Matwé Middelkoop, the pair reached the quarterfinals of the Australian Open (his second in a row) and the semifinals of the Italian Open as alternates, defeating home favorites Fognini/Musetti in the round of 16[6] and 7th seeded Dutch pair Koolhof/Rojer in the quarterfinals. As a result he returned to the top 50 in the doubles rankings at a career-high ranking of World No. 42 on 17 May 2021.

Again as an alternate pair with Fabio Fognini, Arevalo reached the semifinals of the Cincinnati Open where they were defeated by No. 2 seeded pair Zeballos/Granollers. As a result, he reached a new career-high ranking of world No. 39 on 23 August 2021.

At the Winston-Salem Open, Arévalo won the title partnering Matwé Middelkoop when they defeated Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek in the final. This was his first title in over three years and second of his career.[7] As a result he reached a new career-high ranking of World No. 36 on 30 August 2021.

At the US Open, following a first round loss in the men's doubles draw, Arévalo partnered Giuliana Olmos in the mixed doubles draw and reached the final by defeating top seeds Nicole Melichar-Martinez and Ivan Dodig en route.[8] They lost to second seeded pair Desirae Krawczyk and Joe Salisbury in straight sets. Arevalo became the first player from El Salvador to reach a Grand Slam final.[9]

2022–23: Historic Major and Masters doubles titles, World No. 5

After wrapping up 2021 with Middelkoop, Arévalo joined with Jean-Julien Rojer for a new doubles partnership for the 2022 season. Arevalo reached the top 30 on 17 January 2022. With no title wins during the Australian swing, they moved onto the inaugural Dallas Open in February as the top seeds, where they clinched their first title together as a team without dropping a set after defeating Lloyd Glasspool and Harri Heliövaara.[10] The pair carried their momentum into the following week as the top seeds at the Delray Beach Open and they sealed their second consecutive title together, having dropped just one set in the championship match to Aleksandr Nedovyesov and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi.[11] Arevalo reached the top 25 on 21 February 2022. Their winning streak extended yet another week as they reached their third consecutive final and their biggest one as a team thus far, the ATP 500 in Acapulco, but they were halted in straight sets by Feliciano López and Stefanos Tsitsipas.[12] Although the team started off their European clay swing strongly by reaching the semifinals in Monte Carlo[13] and Barcelona,[14][15] they did not make a final.

At the French Open, seeded twelfth, Arévalo and Roger reached their maiden Grand Slam championship match together to vie for their first Major title as a team, defeating 16th seeds Rohan Bopanna and Matwé Middelkoop also first time semifinalists.[16][17] In the final, they faced Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek, who, after winning the first set in a tiebreak, had three championship points on Rojer's serve in the second set. But after Arévalo and Rojer saved those decisive points and closed the second set in another tiebreak, they went on to convert their first break point opportunity in the third set and continued to hold serve to seal off the match for their third victory of the season. Arévalo's maiden Grand Slam win made him the first player from Central America to become a men's doubles major champion.[18][19] As a result, he moved onto the top 10 in the rankings on 13 June 2022. The pair won their fourth title as a team at the 2022 Stockholm Open. He reached a new career-high of World No. 5 on 14 November 2022.

At the 2023 Canadian Open, the Arévalo and Roger won their seventh title together and first Masters 1000 defeating Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury.[20]

2024: Consecutive French Open title, ATP Finals runner-up, World No. 1

With new partner Mate Pavić, Arévalo defeated Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori in the final, 7–5, 6–3 to win title at the 2024 French Open. It was Arévalo's second major men's doubles title and Pavić's fourth. Pavić completed a career Golden Slam with the win, having previously won the three other Grand Slams and an Olympic gold medal.[21]

At the 2024 Cincinnati Open he won his second Masters title with Mate Pavić, defeating Alex Michelsen and Mackenzie McDonald.[3] On 28 August 2024, Arévalo and Pavic became the first doubles team to qualify for the 2024 ATP Finals.[22]

On 11 November 2024, he became the world No. 1 player in doubles jointly with his partner Mate Pavić.[23][24] The duo also clinched the year-end ATP No. 1 doubles team ranking.[25] They reached the final with a straight set defeat over Harri Heliövaara and Henry Patten.[26] They lost to the German duo Kevin Krawietz and Tim Pütz in the final.[27]

2025: Sunshine Double champion

Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavić won the Indian Wells Masters becoming the first World No. 1 pair to accomplish the feat since the Bryan Brothers in 2014, defeating Sebastian Korda and Jordan Thompson.[28][29] They won the next Sunshine Double Masters in Miami and became only the sixth team in history to accomplish the feat.[30][31]

Remove ads

World TeamTennis

Arevalo made his World TeamTennis debut in 2020 by joining the Washington Kastles when the WTT season began July 12 at The Greenbrier.[32]

Significant finals

Grand Slam finals

Doubles: 2 (2 titles)

More information Result, Year ...

Mixed doubles: 1 (1 runner-up)

More information Result, Year ...

Year-end championships finals

Doubles: 1 (1 runner-up)

More information Outcome, Year ...

Masters 1000 finals

Doubles: 7 (4 titles, 2 runner-up)

More information Outcome, Year ...
Remove ads

ATP career finals

Doubles: 23 (16 titles, 7 runner-ups)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
More information Result, W–L ...
Remove ads

Performance timeline

Key
W  F  SF QF #R RRQ# DNQ A NH
(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.
To avoid confusion and double counting, these charts are updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Doubles

More information Tournament, SR ...

Mixed doubles

More information Tournament, SR ...
Remove ads

Challenger and Futures finals

Singles: 25 (14–11)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
More information Result, W–L ...

Doubles: 59 (35–24)

More information Legend, Finals by surface ...
More information Result, W–L ...
Remove ads

Davis Cup

Participations: (45–30)

More information Group membership, Matches by surface ...
More information Rubber outcome, No. ...
Remove ads

Notes

  1. In isolation, González is pronounced [ɡonˈsales].
  2. Planned for playing alongside Jean-Julien Rojer but they withdrew in the last minute. As a result, no alternates were chosen.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads