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The Schüttler Waske Tennis-University is a tennis academy located in Offenbach am Main near Frankfurt, Germany. The academy was founded in 2010 by two German former Davis Cup players, Alexander Waske and onetime Australian Open finalist Rainer Schüttler. The academy is member of the Hessian Tennis Association.
He was born in Sieverodonetsk in Ukraine to Roman and Tanja Molleker and moved to Oranienburg in Germany when he was three years old. He is of Russian–German descent. [1] [2] He trained at Mouratoglou Tennis Academy in Sophia Antipolis (France) starting in 2018. [3]
Alexander Waske (born 31 March 1975) is a retired tennis player from Germany.. Waske was ranked as high as world No. 16 in doubles, winning four titles. He achieved his career-high singles ranking of world No. 89 in June 2006. [1]
Tennis is one of the most popular sports in Germany with more than five million active players. The German Tennis Federation is the largest tennis federation in the world with ca. 1.4 million members.
John McEnroe Tennis Academy; Junior Tennis Champions Center; M. Mouratoglou Tennis Academy; N. National Tennis Centre (Canada) National Tennis Centre (United Kingdom)
In his coaching career since the mid-1980s, although never a tour level player, Bresnik has coached 27 top 100 tennis pros, [11] including Boris Becker from September 1992 to May 1993 (Becker described Bresnik as a disciplined, hard-working, and humble man and coach), [12] Henri Leconte, Horst Skoff, Patrick McEnroe, Patrick Baur, Ernests Gulbis (calling Bresnik the "best technical coach out ...
The German Tennis Federation (German: Deutscher Tennis Bund, short form: DTB) is the governing body of tennis federations and clubs in Germany.. It is the largest tennis federation in the world with more than 1,800,000 members.
The Academy was founded in 2011 by Nicklas Kulti, Magnus Norman, and Mikael Tillström. [2] [3] In an interview with Tennis.com, Norman stated, "We want[ed] to build our own center, where the only focus is on developing future Top 100 players, no recreational players, only high performance."