Jaime Fillol
Jaime José Fillol Durán, known professionally as Jaime Fillol, is a retired professional tennis player from Chile, who played in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
Fillol was ranked as high as world No. 14 in singles on the ATP rankings and No. 82 in doubles.
In the Open era, Fillol won 6 singles titles and 16 doubles titles. Additionally, he was a founding member and one of the first presidents of the ATP. As president of the ATP, Fillol had a passion to create the first pension plan of the ATP and thus it was named after him. Fillol is a member of the University of Miami sports hall of fame.
He competed at the 1973 Davis Cup with Patricio Cornejo where he played the longest Davis Cup rubber in terms of games, eventually losing to the United States team of Stan Smith and Erik van Dillen, winning the first set 9–7, the next 39–37, but lost the next three sets, 6–8, 1–6, 3–6 in the 1973 American Zone Final. The second set is the Davis Cup record for the most games in a set.
He was also a member of the 1975 Davis Cup team, which advanced to the semifinals, and the 1976 Davis Cup team, which made it to the final, losing to Italy.
He is the older brother of tennis player Álvaro Fillol, father of Jaime Fillol Jr., and the grandfather of tennis player Nicolás Jarry. Fillol, who currently works at a Chilean university, coached Jarry as the United Cup captain for Chile in 2024.
Career finals
Mixed doubles (1 title, 1 runner-up)
| Result | No. | Date | Tournament | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
| Win | 1. | 1971 | Torquay | Carpet | ![]() |
