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{{Otheruses1|the tennis player}} {{Otheruses1|the tennis player}}



'''Brian Dunn''' (born May 4, 1974) was the 1992 juniors ] champion for ].<ref></ref><ref></ref> That same year losing in the final round of the Junior Wimbeldon, and Australian Open.<ref></ref><ref></ref> However, he retired at a young age due to knee injuries. '''Brian Dunn''' (born May 4, 1974) was the 1992 juniors ] champion for ].<ref></ref><ref></ref> That same year losing in the final round of the Junior Wimbeldon, and Australian Open.<ref></ref><ref></ref> However, he retired at a young age due to knee injuries.


The 6 feet, 7 inch Dunn reached an high ] of '''World No. 153'''. A native of ], he resided in ] while on the tour. He reached the second round of the (senior) ] in his only grand slam event main draw appearance. Dunn played in a handful of grand prix events during 1992 through 1995, finishing with a career record of 4 wins, 12 losses. He reached one final in ], ] in May, 1994. He played his final tour event in September 1996. The 6 feet, 7&nbsp;inch Dunn reached a high ] of '''World No. 153'''. A native of ], he resided in ] while on the tour. He reached the second round of the (senior) ] in his only grand slam event main draw appearance. Dunn played in a handful of grand prix events during 1992 through 1995, finishing with a career record of 4 wins, 12 losses. He reached one final in ], ] in May, 1994. He played his final tour event in September 1996.


Dunn was also the 14-and-under singles champion at Les Petits As in 1988.<ref></ref> Dunn was also the 14-and-under singles champion at Les Petits As in 1988.<ref></ref>
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{{US Open boy's singles champions}} {{US Open boy's singles champions}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dunn, Brian}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Dunn, Brian}}
] ]

Revision as of 16:32, 15 October 2009

For other uses, see the tennis player.

Brian Dunn (born May 4, 1974) was the 1992 juniors US Open champion for tennis. That same year losing in the final round of the Junior Wimbeldon, and Australian Open. However, he retired at a young age due to knee injuries.

The 6 feet, 7 inch Dunn reached a high ATP ranking of World No. 153. A native of Tampa, FL, he resided in Bradenton while on the tour. He reached the second round of the (senior) 1992 U.S. Open in his only grand slam event main draw appearance. Dunn played in a handful of grand prix events during 1992 through 1995, finishing with a career record of 4 wins, 12 losses. He reached one final in challenger events, Napoli, FL in May, 1994. He played his final tour event in September 1996.

Dunn was also the 14-and-under singles champion at Les Petits As in 1988.

References

  1. ITF Tennis - Juniors - Player Biography
  2. ITF Tennis - Juniors - Roll of Honour
  3. SPORTS PEOPLE: TENNIS; American Is Top Junior - New York Times
  4. Young Wins Wimbledon Boys' Championship; Brengle Reaches Girls' Final
  5. Junior Spotlight of the Week
US Open boys' singles champions


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