Michel Haguenauer


Born: 22/01/1916
Died: 25/08/2000
Height: 188 cm
Nationality: French
Style: Right-handed, Shakehand
Best WR: 6 (1951)


NEWS & ARTICLES ABOUT HAGUENAUER

Michel Haguenauer was born 22 January, 1916 in Paris, France.
He was a 21-time French champion – 9 times in doubles, 8 times in singles, and 4 times in mixed doubles event. On the professional circuit, Haguenauer won 4 singles and 8 doubles titles in his career.

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS RESULTS

Year
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1959

C
















Q
















R128
















R64
















R32
















R16
















1/4
















1/2
















FIN
















WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

1936 Prague (Team)
1939 Cairo (Doubles)
1947 Paris (Team)
1948 Wembley (Team)
1950 Budapest (Team)
1953 Bucharest (Team)
1954 Wembley (Doubles)

PROFESSIONAL TOUR SINGLES ACCOLADES

1948 French Open Swiss Open
1949 French Open
1950 French Open Swiss Open English Open
1951 Belgian Open Welsh Open Netherlands Open Swiss Open
1952 Netherlands Open
1953 French Open English Open
1954 Italian Open
1955 French Open

PROFESSIONAL TOUR DOUBLES ACCOLADES

1948 French Open Swiss Open
1950 French Open Swiss Open
1951 French Open Belgian Open Welsh Open Swiss Open Austrian Open
1952 Netherlands Open
1953 French Open
1954 Italian Open
1955 Belgian Open
1958 Belgian Open

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

1933 Bordeaux (Singles) (Doubles)
1934 Clermont-Ferrand (Singles) (Mixed Doubles)
1935 Tours (Singles & Mixed Doubles)
1936 Nantes (Singles & Doubles)
1937 Rouen (Singles & Doubles) (Mixed Doubles)
1938 Cognac (Singles, Doubles & Mixed Doubles)
1943 Vichy (Mixed Doubles) (Singles & Doubles)
1944 Paris (Doubles) (Singles & Mixed Doubles)
1945 Paris (Singles) (Doubles)
1946 Paris (Doubles) (Singles)
1948 Tours (Doubles & Mixed Doubles) (Singles)
1949 Lille (Singles) (Doubles)
1950 Lorient (Singles) (Doubles & Mixed Doubles)
1951 Valence (Doubles & Mixed Doubles) (Singles)
1952 Reims (Doubles) (Singles)
1953 Bordeaux (Singles) (Doubles)
1954 Rouen (Singles & Doubles)
1955 Grenoble (Doubles)
1956 Toulouse (Doubles)
1957 Paris (Doubles) (Singles)
1958 Saint-Etienne (Doubles)
1959 Lyon (Doubles)