Brigitte Sfat is Ilie Nastase spouse! Brigitte Sfat was born in February 1977 in Arad. Brigitte Szeifert (birth name) is one of the names of the moment in Romanian showbiz due to her relationship with former tennis player Ilie Nastase.
Brigitte was one of the most famous mannequins in Banat. She won "Top Model of the world “and" Top Model of the world".
In 2002 she was widowed following the death of businessperson Octavin to whom she was married.
In 2003 she was arrested for accessory to deprivation of liberty and robbery after she seized the manager of a club in her office with the help of three other people and forced him to give her 5,000 euros.
Brigitte was later sentenced by judges to prison, and in 2006 she was paroled.
Ilie Nastase spouse
In prison Brigitte started teaching aerobics and fitness to her colleagues, painted the walls of her cell in which she was imprisoned in pink colour, but also gave an interview for Playboy.
Her appearance in the show "Acces Direct" was the moment when she contacted Ilie Nastase. The tennis player texted her and that is how the two hooked up. On May 24, 2013, the two filed their marriage papers, and three weeks later they said “Yes” at the Timisoara City Hall.
After her divorce from Ilie Nastase, Brigitte, Ilie Nastase spouse, married Florin Pastrama on July 7, 2019. Brigitte tip and Florin Pastrama met on their participation in the Ferma show, which was broadcast by Pro TV. It was there that their romance began which later turned into a love story.
Brigitte SFAT, Ilie Nastase spouse, was also married to Octavian SFAT, Ovidiu Torj and Ilie Nastase.
The story of Ilie Nastase spouse
Ilie Năstase (born 19 July 1946 in Bucharest) is a former Romanian tennis player who had his glory in the 1970s. Remembered throughout the ages for both his talented and colourful play and his objectionable behaviour on several occasions within the playing field. It was the world's first № 1 since the advent of computerized rankings and won two Grand Slam titles.
Born on July 19, 1946, in Bucharest, Năstase was the first Romanian to excel in world tennis and was the main reason Romania reached three Davis Cup finals: 1969, 1971 and 1972. Having participated for eighteen years in the Davis Cup, Năstase had participated in 146 matches during fifty-two heats.
He became known in 1966 when, along with his mentor Ion Tiriac, they reached the doubles final of the French Open in which they lost to Clark Graebner and Dennis Ralston.
His first major title came at the 1970 Rome tournament where he beat Czechoslovak Jan Kodeš in the final, later winner of the French Open. His skill with the racket made him a versatile player who could stand out on any surface. He was an expert at putting the ball out of the opponent's reach, with precise ground strokes, an excellent kickback, exquisite lobs, a serve with many variants and very effective, and colourful volleys. He could adapt to serve and net play when playing on grass courts and background play on slower courts. However, his fragile temperament made him lose concentration in many moments and deflated his game. Known for his good humour on the court and a reputation for his dishonest ways of getting advantages in the game, he earned the nickname "Nasty “or the most well-known “Bucharest Jester". In his career he suffered countless fines, disqualifications, and suspensions, in a sport accustomed to good manners and chivalry.
The first Grand Slam of Ilie Nastase spouse
His first Grand Slam final was reached in 1971, in which he lost to Jan Kodeš, a player much less gifted but very fighter on the track, who did not give up. Kodeš won in four sets, 8-6 6-2 2-6 7-5.
His brightest moments took place in the Masters tournaments, in which the best players participated for a whole year. Năstase managed to reach five finals in this type of tournament winning four of them. The first was in 1971, where he won in six matches played on the synthetic track in Paris.
In 1972 he had his biggest disappointment at losing the Wimbledon final when Stan Smith defeated him in five tight sets, in one of the most exciting Wimbledon finals in history. Months later he took great comfort in winning the US Open in five sets against Arthur Ashe after being 2-4 and serving for Ashe in the fourth set. This was his only major turf title in his career. At the end of the year, he achieved his second consecutive Masters by beating Smith in the final in Barcelona.
1973 was his big year. He won fifteen singles titles, surpassing the twelve of the previous year, and eight doubles titles. In his second final at the Roland Garros Tournament, he beat Yugoslav Nikola Pilić in three sets and defeated Tom Okker in the Masters final in Boston 6-3 7-5 4-6 6-3. That year it was consecrated as No. 1 in the world, in the first year of computerized rankings.
The following years were fruitful in terms of titles, but none of the highest hierarchy. The only major tournament in the following years was the Stockholm Masters in 1975 in which he defeated local Björn Borg in the final in a brilliant final with a very inspired Nastase. In 1974 he lost his only Masters final to Argentine Guillermo Vilas on the Melbourne lawn. In 1976 he achieved his second Wimbledon final but lost to Borg, in which it was the first of five consecutive titles on the British turf for the Swede. In that tournament Năstase had set out not to get angry or out of control to achieve the title and he saw an excellent version of the player, but he could not in the final against the proficiency in the Iceman.
For some years he refused to join the ATP, preferring to play a parallel tour organized by his manager Bill Riordan.

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