Paul Haarhuis


Paul Vincent Nicholas Haarhuis is a Dutch tennis coach and a former professional player. He is a former world No. 1 doubles player, having reached a career-high singles ranking of world No. 18 in November 1995. He has won 54 doubles titles, including six Grand Slam titles, five with Jacco Eltingh, and one with Yevgeny Kafelnikov.

Personal life

Haarhuis was born on 19 February 1966 in Eindhoven in the Netherlands. He played tennis for Armstrong State College and Florida State University. He supports PSV Eindhoven.

Professional career

He is best known for his success in doubles with fellow countryman Jacco Eltingh, winning five Grand Slam titles together, although some would say he is best known for his 4 set loss to Jimmy Connors in the 1991 U.S. Open quarterfinals.
He is, together with Sergi Bruguera, Richard Krajicek, Leander Paes, and Michael Stich, one of the players of the same generation with a positive head-to-head record against Pete Sampras: 3–1.
His best Grand Slam singles performance was reaching the quarterfinals of the 1991 US Open, where he defeated Eric Jelen, Andrei Chesnokov, top seed Boris Becker and Carl-Uwe Steeb, before losing to Jimmy Connors.
After retiring, he won the end-of-year Blackrock Masters Tennis tournament in the Royal Albert Hall in 2005 and 2006, beating legends such as Goran Ivanišević and John McEnroe. He completed a hat-trick of victories in the tournament in 2007, beating Frenchman Guy Forget.

Coaching career

In 2014 Haarhuis succeeded Manon Bollegraf as captain of the Netherlands Fed Cup team until 2021.
He is currently coaching the Netherlands Davis Cup team.

ATP Tour World Championships

  • ''Doubles champion: 1993, 1998 ''

    Grand Slam finals

Doubles: 13 (6 titles, 7 runners-up)

Mixed doubles (1 runner-up)

ResultYearChampionshipSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Loss1991French OpenClay

Career finals

Doubles: 94 (54 titles, 40 runner-ups)

ResultW/LDateTournamentSurfacePartnerOpponentsScore
Loss1.Jan 1990Auckland, New ZealandHard

Singles: 8 (1 title, 7 runner-ups)

Performance timelines

Doubles

Singles

Senior Tour titles