Education
He finished as northern
He finished as northern
Carlsen played left-handed with a one-handed backhand. His greatest asset was his powerful serve, and his game was therefore best suited to fast surfaces (grass and hardcourt). Foreign most of his long career Carlsen was Denmark"s best tennis player, and consistently among the few Danish players playing at the highest international level
He was awarded as best Danish "Tennis Player of the Year" seven times by the Danish Tennis Federation (first time in 1991, last time in 2005).
Carlsen began playing tennis at age nine, and in his teens became one of the best juniors in the world. 3 in the world in 1991.
He turned full-time professional in 1992, and his breakthrough as senior in a major tournament came at the Copenhagen Open where he beat top-20 player Alexander Volkov in the first round. Later that year, he reached the final in Brisbane—-only his fourth Association of Tennis Professionals tournament.
His debut in the 1993 Australian Open confirmed his position among the best players in the world as he went to the fourth round.
The same year he reached his career-best singles ranking as World Number. 41 in June. Since 1993 he was for most of the time ranked within the Top 100. In 1994 he played the most famous match of his career when he beat Stefan Edberg in five sets at Wimbledon.
In 1996 he reached the final of the tournament that triggered his career, Copenhagen Open, but lost to Cédric Pioline.
The next year he reached the final in Auckland, but this time lost to Jonas Björkman. This saw his ranking shoot up 20 spots to World Number.
52. In 1999, Carlsen reached the final in Newport, but lost to Chris Woodruff.
In 2000 he suffered from a serious shoulder injury, and underwent surgery twice. As a result, he did not play any tournaments that year.
His recovery was relatively slow, and he could not return to professional tennis until June 2001. His long absence from the sport, however, did not seem to affect his playing negatively.
His resurgence saw him in June 2005 become World Number.
50.
Carlsen rarely played doubles, but reached three Association of Tennis Professionals doubles finals in his career. In Copenhagen with Frederik Fetterlein in 1997 (lost to Andrei Olhovskiy/Brett Steven), Tashkent, Uzbekistan with Sjeng Schalken in 1998 (lost to Stefano Pescosolido/Laurence Tieleman), and Beijing with Michael Berrer in 2006 (lost to Mario Ančić/Mahesh Bhupathi). He played a total of 46 Grand Slam events during his career, and used to hold the record for most first-round exits for a long time.
30.
But he was surpassed by Albert Montañés at 2014 Australian Open where he reached 31 career Grand Slam first-round exits. On June 27, 2007 he announced that he would retire from professional tennis, and he played his last Association of Tennis Professionals match in first round of the Stockholm Open on October 10, 2007. The week after, he played his final professional tennis match at a Challenger tournament in Kolding, Denmark.
Under his guidance the Danes returned in 2011 to the Europe/Africa Zone Group I.
Singles.