Details | |
---|---|
Duration | January 1, 1990 – November 19, 1990 |
Edition | 1st |
Tournaments | 80 |
Categories | Grand Slam (4) ATP Tour World Championships Grand Slam Cup ATP Championship Series, Single-Week (9) ATP Championship Series (12) ATP World Series (53) |
Achievements (singles) | |
Most tournament titles | Stefan Edberg (7) |
Most tournament finals | Stefan Edberg (12) |
Prize money leader | Pete Sampras ($2,875,406) |
Points leader | Stefan Edberg (3889) |
Awards | |
Player of the year | Stefan Edberg |
Doubles team of the year | |
Most improved player of the year | Pete Sampras |
Newcomer of the year | Fabrice Santoro |
Comeback player of the year | Thomas Muster |
← 1989 1991 → |
The 1990 IBM ATP Tour was the first season of the ATP Tour, the newly formed single world tennis circuit which came in replacing the two dual tours the ITF Grand Prix Circuit and WCT Circuit. It was the elite tour for professional tennis organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals. In 1990 the IBM ATP Tour included the four Grand Slam tournaments (organized by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP Tour World Championships, the ATP Championship Series, Single-Week, the ATP Championship Series and the ATP World Series.[1] The World Team Cup, Davis Cup (organized by the ITF) and Grand Slam Cup (organized by the ITF) are included in this calendar but did not count towards the Tour.
Schedule
editThis is the complete schedule of events on the 1990 IBM ATP Tour, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.
- Key
Grand Slam |
ATP Tour World Championships |
ATP Championship Series, Single-Week |
ATP Championship Series |
ATP World Series |
Team Events |
January
editFebruary
editMarch
editApril
editMay
editJune
editJuly
editAugust
editSeptember
editOctober
editNovember
editDecember
editWeek | Tournament | Champions | Runners-up | Semifinalists | Quarterfinalists |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 Dec | Compaq Grand Slam Cup Munich, Germany Grand Slam Cup Carpet (i) – $6,000,000 – 16S Singles |
Pete Sampras 6–3, 6–4, 6–2 |
Brad Gilbert | Michael Chang David Wheaton |
Henri Leconte Goran Ivanišević Aaron Krickstein Ivan Lendl |
ATP rankings
edit
|
|
Statistical information
editList of players and titles won, alphabetically by last name:
- Andre Agassi – San Francisco, Miami Masters, Washington, D.C., Season-Ending Championships (4)
- Ronald Agénor – Genova, Berlin (2)
- Juan Aguilera – Nice, Hamburg Masters (2)
- Pieter Aldrich – Newport (1)
- Alex Antonitsch – Seoul (1)
- Jordi Arrese – San Remo, Prague (2)
- Boris Becker – Brussels, Stuttgart, Indianapolis, Sydney Indoors, Stockholm Masters (5)
- Pat Cash – Hong Kong (1)
- Michael Chang – Canada Masters (1)
- Andrei Cherkasov – Moscow (1)
- Andrei Chesnokov – Monte Carlo Masters, Tel Aviv (2)
- Francisco Clavet – Hilversum (1)
- Stefan Edberg – Indian Wells Masters, Tokyo, Wimbledon, Los Angeles, Cincinnati Masters, Long Island, Paris Masters (7)
- Franco Davín – Palermo (1)
- Scott Davis – Auckland (1)
- Guy Forget – Bordeaux (1)
- Richard Fromberg – Bologna, Båstad (2)
- Brad Gilbert – Rotterdam, Orlando, Brisbane (3)
- Andrés Gómez – Barcelona, Madrid, French Open (3)
- Jakob Hlasek – Wembley (1)
- Goran Ivanišević – Stuttgart (1)
- Martín Jaite – Guarujá, Gstaad (2)
- Anders Järryd – Vienna (1)
- Kelly Jones – Singapore (1)
- Mark Koevermans – Athens (1)
- Ramesh Krishnan – Schenectady (1)
- Magnus Larsson – Florence (1)
- Ivan Lendl – Australian Open, Milan, Toronto, London, Tokyo Indoors (5)
- Amos Mansdorf – Rosmalen (1)
- Luiz Mattar – Rio de Janeiro (1)
- John McEnroe – Basel (1)
- Thomas Muster – Adelaide, Casablanca, Rome Masters (3)
- Yannick Noah – Sydney (1)
- Karel Nováček – Munich (1)
- Horacio de la Peña – Kitzbühel (1)
- Guillermo Pérez Roldán – San Marino (1)
- Goran Prpić – Umag (1)
- Marc Rosset – Lyon (1)
- Derrick Rostagno – New Haven (1)
- Pete Sampras – Philadelphia, Manchester, US Open, Grand Slam Cup (4)
- Emilio Sánchez – Wellington, Estoril (2)
- Horst Skoff – Geneva (1)
- Michael Stich – Memphis (1)
- Jonas Svensson – Toulouse (1)
- Robbie Weiss – São Paulo (1)
- David Wheaton – Kiawah Island (1)
- Mats Wilander – Itaparica (1)
The following players won their first title:
- Pieter Aldrich
- Alex Antonitsch
- Jordi Arrese
- Andrei Cherkasov
- Francisco Clavet
- Richard Fromberg
- Goran Ivanišević
- Mark Koevermans
- Magnus Larsson
- Goran Prpić
- Derrick Rostagno
- Pete Sampras
- Michael Stich
- David Wheaton
- Robbie Weiss
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ John Barrett, ed. (1991). The International Tennis Federation : World of Tennis 1991. London: Collins Willow. pp. 111–117. ISBN 9780002184038.
- ^ "ATP Year-end top 20". ATP. Retrieved 15 September 2023.