Dimitar Kutrovsky is a retired tennis player from Bulgaria.
Education
He graduated his secondary education in the sport school "General Vladimir Stoychev" in Sofia. After that he also finished his higher education in the University of Texas at Austin, where he played for the American College championships (National Collegiate Athletic Association).
Career
On 18 May 2015, he reached his highest Association of Tennis Professionals singles ranking of 293 whilst his best doubles ranking was 234 on 10 August 2015. As a junior he played for CSKA. In 2003 he was №28 in the rankings of the European Tennis Association for boys under 16 years old. In 2005 he reached №69 in the International Tennis Federation"s rankings for boys under 18 years old.
With his 230 wins in singles and doubles, he became the best tennis player in the history of the university.
After graduating in 2010 Kutrovsky started playing actively in International Tennis Federation Futures and Association of Tennis Professionals Challenger tournaments. In doubles he has three titles and three lost finals.
After investigations of allegedly using prohibited stimulant methylhexaneamine at the 2012 Systems, Applications and Products Open on 14 February 2012 he was found guilty by the International Tennis Federation on 15 May and retroactively banned for two years dating back from the said tournament. On 5 October 2012 it was announced that the Court of Arbitration for Sport has partially upheld the appeal by Dimitar Kutrovksy against the decision of the independent tribunal dated 15 May 2012.
The panel"s decision was that the appropriate period of ineligibility should be fifteen months and the Bulgarian will be eligible to participate on 14 May 2013.
As of May 2013 Kutrovsky is back to playing after his ban expired. He reached the final of the clay-court Futures event in Varna, which was his first tournament after the ban, but there he lost 7–5 4–6 2–6 to Kristijan Mesaroš. In January 2016, Kutrovsky announced his retirement from professional tennis.
Singles: 11 (2–9) Doubles: 15 (7–8) Since then he has a 6–4 singles record and a 2–2 doubles record (8–6 overall).
Singles (6–4) Doubles (2–2) RPO = Relegation Play–off PPO = Promotion Play–official