- China Open (tennis)
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China Open Location Beijing
ChinaVenue National Tennis Center (2009–present)
Beijing Tennis Center (2004–2008)Surface Hard / Outdoors chinaopen.com.cn ATP World Tour Category 500 Series Draw 32S / 16D Prize Money US$2,100,000[1] WTA Tour Category Premier Mandatory Draw 60S/32Q/28D Prize Money US$4,500,000[2] The China Open (formerly the Beijing Salem Open) is an annual professional tennis tournament held in Beijing, China. The men's singles and doubles events were first held in 1993, the year in which the Qatar Open and Dubai Tennis Championships were also introduced to the men's tour, as the ATP opened a series of new tournaments in Asia.
In 1998, the tournament was dropped from the ATP tour calendar, but was reinstated in 2004, the same year as the WTA Tour women's singles and doubles events, previously held in Shanghai, were moved to Beijing.
In 2006, the China Open became the first tournament outside of the United States to utilize the Hawk-Eye system in match play.[3]
Michael Chang and Novak Djokovic are the only men to have won the singles competition more than once, and Chang holds the record for both total and consecutive wins with three titles. In doubles, the Bryan Brothers are the only doubles pair to have won consecutive titles.
Contents
Past finals
Men's Singles
Year Champion Runner-up Score 2011 Tomáš Berdych Marin Čilić 3–6, 6–4, 6–1 2010 Novak Djokovic David Ferrer 6–2, 6–4 2009 Novak Djokovic Marin Čilić 6–2, 7–6(7–4) 2008 Andy Roddick Dudi Sela 6–4, 6–7(6–8), 6–3 2007 Fernando González Tommy Robredo 6–1, 3–6, 6–1 2006 Marcos Baghdatis Mario Ančić 6–4, 6–0 2005 Rafael Nadal Guillermo Coria 5–7, 6–1, 6–2 2004 Marat Safin Mikhail Youzhny 7–6(7–4), 7–5 1998–2003 No tournament 1997 Jim Courier Magnus Gustafsson 7–6(12–10), 3–6, 6–3 1996 Greg Rusedski Martin Damm 7–6(7–5), 6–4 1995 Michael Chang Renzo Furlan 7–5, 6–3 1994 Michael Chang Anders Järryd 7–5, 7–5 1993 Michael Chang Greg Rusedski 7–6(7–5), 6–7(6–8), 6–4 2006
Marcus Baghdatis, the third seed, beat Mario Ančić, the fourth seed, in the final of the 2006 China Open. Both the first seed, Ivan Ljubičić, and the second seed, Nikolay Davydenko, were knocked out in the second round. The two retirements from this tournament was Ivo Karlović with a problem with his left knee, and Nikolay Davydenko who had a virus.
2005
Rafael Nadal, the top seed for this tournament, beat Guillermo Coria, the second seed, in the 2005 final.
2004
Marat Safin, the fifth seed, beat the unseeded Mikhail Youzhny in the 2004 final. Mikhail had between fourth seed Rainer Schüttler, eight seed Dominik Hrbatý, and sixth seed Paradorn Srichaphan on his way to the final. Another seed that was knocked out early on was Carlos Moyà, the top seed, who has defeated by qualifier Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the first round.
1997
Jim Courier, the top seed for the tournament, beat Magnus Gustafsson in the 1997 final. In the first round there were knock outs for two seeded players. Second seed Mark Woodforde was beaten by Kenneth Carlsen in straight sets, and eighth seed Richey Reneberg was beaten by Ján Krošlák.
1996
Unseeded Greg Rusedski beat unseeded Martin Damm in the 1997 final. On his way Greg had defeated Andrei Olhovskiy, Jean Philippe-Fleurian, Gustavo Kuerten, and fourth seed Byron Black. Martin, though, defeated in the first round top seed Michael Chang, then Scott Draper and finally Thomas Johansson.
1995
Top seed Michael Chang defeated second seed Renzo Furlan in the 1995 final. The only surprise in that year's tournament was that unseeded Dick Norman beat seventh seed Michael Tebbutt. It was the third year in a row that Michael had won this open.
1994
Top seed Michael Chang beat unseeded Anders Järryd in the 1994 final. Jarryd had beat second seed David Wheaton in the second round.
1993
In the first China Open Michael Chang beat Greg Rusedski. Chang, the number one seed, defeated the unseeded Rusedski by 7–6, 6–7, 6–1. On his way to the final Greg beat eighth seed Jamie Morgan, second seed Magnus Gustafsson and fourth seed Brad Gilbert.
Men's Doubles
Year Champion Runner-up Score 2011 Michaël Llodra
Nenad ZimonjićRobert Lindstedt
Horia Tecău7–6(7–2), 7–6(7–4) 2010 Bob Bryan
Mike BryanMariusz Fyrstenberg
Marcin Matkowski6–1, 7–6(7–5) 2009 Bob Bryan
Mike BryanMark Knowles
Andy Roddick6–4, 6–2 2008 Stephen Huss
Ross HutchinsAshley Fisher
Bobby Reynolds7–5, 6–4 2007 Rik de Voest
Ashley FisherChris Haggard
Lu Yen-hsun6–7, 6–0, [10–6] 2006 Mahesh Bhupathi
Mario AnčićMichael Berrer
Kenneth Carlsen6–4, 6–3 2005 Justin Gimelstob
Nathan HealeyDmitry Tursunov
Mikhail Youzhny4–6, 6–3, 6–2 2004 Justin Gimelstob
Graydon OliverAlex Bogomolov Jr.
Taylor Dent4–6, 6–4, 7–6 1998–2003 No tournament 1997 Mahesh Bhupathi
Leander PaesJim Courier
Alex O'Brien7–5, 7–6 1996 Martin Damm
Andrei OlhovskiyPatrik Kühnen
Gary Muller6–4, 7–5 1995 Tommy Ho
Sébastien LareauDick Norman
Fernon Wibier7–6, 7–6 1994 Tommy Ho
Kent KinnearDavid Adams
Andrei Olhovskiy7–6, 6–3 1993 Paul Annacone
Doug FlachJacco Eltingh
Paul Haarhuis7–6, 6–3 Women Singles
Year Champion Runner-up Score 2011 Agnieszka Radwańska Andrea Petkovic 7–5, 0–6, 6–4 2010 Caroline Wozniacki Vera Zvonareva 6–3, 3–6, 6–3 2009 Svetlana Kuznetsova Agnieszka Radwańska 6–2, 6–4 2008 Jelena Janković Svetlana Kuznetsova 6–3, 6–2 2007 Ágnes Szávay Jelena Janković 6–7(7–9), 7–5, 6–2 2006 Svetlana Kuznetsova Amélie Mauresmo 6–4, 6–0 2005 Maria Kirilenko Anna-Lena Grönefeld 6–3, 6–4 2004 Serena Williams Svetlana Kuznetsova 4–6, 7–5, 6–4 2003 Elena Dementieva Chanda Rubin 6–3, 7–6(8–6) 2002 Anna Smashnova Anna Kournikova 6–2, 6–3 2001 Monica Seles Nicole Pratt 6–2, 6–3 2000 Meghann Shaughnessy Iroda Tulyaganova 7–6(7–2), 7–5 1997–1999 No Tournament 1996 Wang Shi-ting Chen Li Ling 6–3, 6–4 1995 Linda Wild Wang Shi-ting 7–5, 6–2 1994 Yayuk Basuki Kyoko Nagatsuka 6–4, 6–2 2008
In the 2008 final, top seeded Jelena Janković beat fourth seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova. Janković saved two set points in her quarterfinal with Daniela Hantuchová and defeated Vera Zvonareva in three sets in her semifinal, while Kuznetsova got past China's Zheng Jie in two tight sets in the last four.
2007
In the 2007 final, sixth seed Ágnes Szávay beat top seed Jelena Janković, after Janković served for the match twice in the 2nd set. Szávay had defeated Shuai Peng in the semis, after Peng had defeated Martina Hingis and Amélie Mauresmo.
2006
In the 2006 final, second seed Svetlana Kuznetsova beat first seed Amélie Mauresmo. Svetlana had beaten wildcard Peng Shuai in the semi-finals, after Shuai had beaten Maria Kirilenko and Ai Sugiyama.
2005
In the 2005 final, unseeded Maria Kirilenko beat the ninth seed Anna-Lena Grönefeld. Anna-Lena was filling in for second seed Lindsay Davenport after she pulled out of that year's tournament. Another top seed to pull out was number one seed Maria Sharapova. She was injured in her semi-final match against Maria Kirilenko.
2004
Top seed Serena Williams beat second seed Svetlana Kuznetsova in the first WTA China Open. In the semi-finals, Serena beat fourth seed Vera Zvonareva, and Svetlana beat Maria Sharapova, who was the third seed in this tournament.
Women's Doubles
Sponsors
2010
- Mercedes Benz
- BBDC
- Kappa
- Sony Ericsson
- Think Pad
- China CITIC Bank
- Rolex
- China Central Television
- Sina.com.cn
- Shangri-La Hotel Beijing
- Ticketmaster
See also
References
External links
China Open ATP World Tour 500 series (2009–current) WTA Premier tournaments (2009–current) Sydney · Paris · Dubai · Indian Wells · Miami · Charleston · Stuttgart · Rome · Madrid · Eastbourne
Stanford · Cincinnati · Toronto/Montreal · New Haven · Tokyo · Beijing · Moscow
2009 Los Angeles · 2009–2010 Warsaw · 2010–current San Diego · 2011–current Doha · Brussels · 2012–current Brisbane2009 schedule · 2010 schedule · 2011 scheduleWTA Tour Championships, Istanbul
*Bold denotes the four mandatory tournaments.WTA Tier II tournaments (1988–2008) 1988–2008 Amelia Island · 1988–1990/1993–1995 Boca Raton · 1988–1989 Charleston · 1988–1989 Montreal/Toronto · 1988–1995 Houston · 1988–2008 Los Angeles · 1989–2008 Eastbourne · 1989 Rome · 1990–1995 Brighton · 1990–1996 Indian Wells/Palm Springs · 1990–2002 Hamburg · 1990–2008 Stanford · 1990–2008 Stuttgart · 1990–1996 Tokyo (Nicherei) · 1990–1992 Tokyo (Pan Pacific) ·
1991–1997 Chicago · 1991–1992/1996–2005 Philadelphia · 1993–1997 Barcelona/Madrid · 1993–2008 Paris · 1993–2003 Leipzig · 1993–2008 Sydney · 1996 Madrid · 1997–2008 New Haven ·
1997–2002 Tokyo (Princess) · 1998–2008 Linz · 2000–2008 Beijing · 2000–2003 Scottsdale · 2001–2008 Dubai · 2002–2008 Antwerp · 2003–2007 Warsaw · 2004–2007 Doha · 2005–2007 Luxembourg City ·
2008 Bangalore · 2008 ZürichWTA Tier IV tournaments (1988–2008) 1988 Rome · Zürich · 1988–1989 Hamburg · Mahwah · Newport · San Antonio · San Diego · Sydney · Tampa · Taipei · 1988–1993 San Juan/Dorado · 1990 Wichita ·
1990–1991 Albuquerque · Nashville · 1990–1992 Birmingham · Brisbane · Geneva/Lucerne · Indianapolis · Oklahoma City · Paris · Strasbourg · Tokyo ·
1990–1992/1994–1998 Kitzbühel/Styria/Maria Lankowitz · 1990/1994 Singapore/Kallang · 1990–2000/2005–2008 Palermo 1990/2007–2008 Barcelona · 1991–1992 Bayonne ·
1992–1993 Kuala Lumpur · 1992–1997/2005–2008 Prague/Karlovy Vary · 1992–1994 Taiwan · 1993 Hong Kong · San Marino · Sapporo · 1993–1994 Taranto · 1993–1994/1997 Jakarta · 1993/1999–2000 Curitba/Sao Paulo · 1993/1999–2000/2002 Liege/Anvers/Brussels · 1993–2000/2001–2008 Auckland · 1993–2000/2005–2008 Pattaya · 1994 Melbourne · 1994–1996/2000–2002 Shanghai/Peking · 1994–1997 Surabaya · 1994–2000/2006–2008 Hobart · 1995 Bournemouth · Nagoya · 1996–1997 Cardiff · 1996–1999 Bol ·
1996–2000/2005–2006 Budapest · 1998 Istanbul · Sopot · 1998–2000 Bogota · Bratislava · 1999 Prostějov · Vienna · 1999–2000 Warsaw · 1999–2001 Knokke-Zoute ·
1999–2003/2005–2008 Estoril · 1999–2008 Tashkent · 2001 Basel · 2001–2002 Porto · Waikoloa · 2002–2003 Sarasota · 2002–2008 Espoo/Stockholm · 2003–2005 Hyderabad ·
2004–2008 Seoul · 2005 Modena · 2005–2008 Forest Hills · Portoroz · Rabat/Fes · 2006 CanberraCategories:- China Open (tennis)
- Tennis tournaments in China
- Hard court tennis tournaments
- ATP Tour
- WTA Tour
- Sport in Beijing
- Recurring sporting events established in 1993
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