Matija PecotiÃÂ (born 3 July 1989) is a Croatian tennis player.
PecotiÃÂ has a career high ATP singles ranking of 206 achieved on 23 November 2015. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 485 achieved on 16 November 2015. PecotiÃÂ has won 12 ITF titles, 10 singles and 2 doubles.
PecotiÃÂ was born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia and moved to Malta at the age of 3, where he picked up tennis.
During his time off due to an injury suffered in 2016, PecotiÃÂ applied and was accepted to Harvard Business School, which he attended from 2017 to 2019, earning an MBA at the completion of his studies.
In 2021, PecotiÃÂ began working for a private equity/real estate development firm in West Palm Beach, Florida, USA, but continued to play tournaments that were close by.
He played college tennis at Princeton University, where he became the most winning player in program history. He was also the captain of the tennis team, Princeton's first All-American since 1984, and the first-ever and only three-time Ivy League Player of the Year. Pecotic played as the No. 1 player for Princeton, and became the first player from Princeton since 1984 to reach the semifinals of the All-American tournament.
In January 2014, Pecotic joined the professional tour.
In less than 24 months, he climbed to world No. 206 but was sidelined by an injury that kept him out for most of 2016.
Pecotiàreturned to the ATP Tour in August 2019, and put up a 46âÂÂ8 W/L Record to return to the top 300, but did not play for most of 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In 2022, he only played three events, beating Stefano Travaglia 6âÂÂ0 6âÂÂ1 in the qualifications of the ATP event in Umag, Croatia as a wildcard.
In 2023, he debuted for the Croatia national team at the 2023 United Cup in Perth, Australia but did not play any singles matches. He played one match in doubles with Petra MarÃÂinko. Team Croatia beat Argentina (5âÂÂ0) and France (3âÂÂ2) but lost to Greece.
At 33, ranked No. 784 he qualified for his first main draw at the 2023 Delray Beach Open as an alternate defeating two Americans Stefan Kozlov and Tennys Sandgren. As a result he moved more than a 100 positions in the rankings. He defeated a third American, former top-10 player Jack Sock in the first round, his first ATP win ever. In the round of 16 he lost to American Marcos Giron. He moved another 100 positions into the top 600.
He accepted a wildcard for the qualifications at the 2023 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships in Houston.
Current through the 2023 ATP Tour.