Details | |
---|---|
Duration | 30 December 1996 – 10 November 1997 |
Categories | Grand Slam (4) ATP Super 9 (9) ATP Championship Series (12) ATP World Series |
Achievements (singles) | |
Most titles | Pete Sampras (8) |
Most finals | Pete Sampras (8) |
Prize money leader | Pete Sampras ($6,494,461) |
Points leader | Pete Sampras (4547) |
Awards | |
Player of the year | Pete Sampras |
Doubles team of the year | Todd Woodbridge Mark Woodforde |
Most improved player of the year | Patrick Rafter |
Newcomer of the year | Julian Alonso |
Comeback player of the year | Sergi Bruguera |
← 1996 1998 → |
The 1997 ATP Tour was the elite tour for professional tennis organised by the ATP that year. The ATP Tour included the four Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Tour World Championships, the ATP Super 9, the Championship Series and the World Series tournaments.
Schedule
editThe tables below summarises the results for the 1997 ATP Tour.
- Key
Grand Slam tournaments |
ATP Tour World Championships |
ATP Super 9 |
ATP Championship Series |
ATP World Series |
Team events |
January
editFebruary
editMarch
editApril
editMay
editJune
editJuly
editAugust
editSeptember
editOctober
editNovember
editATP rankings
editStatistical information
editList of players and singles titles won:
- Julian Alonso – Santiago (1)
- Hicham Arazi – Casablanca (1)
- Alberto Berasategui – Palermo (1)
- Jonas Björkman – Auckland, Indianapolis, Stockholm (3)
- Michael Chang – Memphis, Indian Wells Masters, Hong Kong, Orlando, Washington, D.C. (5)
- Francisco Clavet – Mexico City, Bogotá (2)
- Àlex Corretja – Estoril, Rome Masters, Stuttgart (3)
- Albert Costa – Barcelona, Marbella (2)
- Jim Courier – Doha, Los Angeles, Beijing (3)
- Filip Dewulf – Kitzbühel (1)
- Slava Doseděl – Amsterdam (1)
- Thomas Enqvist – Marseille (1)
- Marcelo Filippini – Atlanta, St. Poelten (2)
- Richard Fromberg – Bucharest (1)
- Magnus Gustafsson – Singapore (1)
- Tim Henman – Sydney, Tashkent (2)
- Goran Ivanišević – Zagreb, Milan, Vienna (3)
- Thomas Johansson – Copenhagen, St. Petersburg (2)
- Yevgeny Kafelnikov – Halle, New Haven, Moscow (3)
- Nicolas Kiefer – Toulouse (1)
- Petr Korda – Stuttgart Masters (1)
- Ján Krošlák – Shanghai (1)
- Karol Kučera – Ostrava (1)
- Gustavo Kuerten – French Open
- Richard Krajicek – Rotterdam, Tokyo, Rosmalen (3)
- Félix Mantilla – Bologna, Gstaad, Umag, San Marino, Bournemouth (5)
- Andrei Medvedev – Hamburg Masters (1)
- Carlos Moyá – Long Island (1)
- Thomas Muster – Dubai, Miami Masters (2)
- Magnus Norman – Båstad (1)
- Mark Philippoussis – Scottsdale, Munich, London (3)
- Cédric Pioline – Prague (1)
- Patrick Rafter – US Open (1)
- Marcelo Ríos – Monte Carlo Masters (1)
- Marc Rosset – Antwerp (1)
- Greg Rusedski – Nottingham, Basel (2)
- Pete Sampras – Australian Open, San Jose, Philadelphia, Wimbledon, Cincinnati Masters, Paris Masters, Season-Ending Championships, Grand Slam Cup (8)
- Fabrice Santoro – Lyon (1)
- Sargis Sargsian – Newport (1)
- Sjeng Schalken – Boston (1)
- Jason Stoltenberg – Coral Springs (1)
- Mikael Tillström – Chennai (1)
- Todd Woodbridge – Adelaide (1)
- Chris Woodruff – Canada Masters (1)
Titles won by nation:
- 16 (Doha, Australian Open, San Jose, Memphis, Philadelphia, Indian Wells Masters, Hong Kong, Orlando, Wimbledon, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Canada Masters, Cincinnati Masters, Beijing, Paris Masters, Season-Ending Championships)
- 15 (Estoril, Barcelona, Rome Masters, Bologna, Gstaad, Stuttgart, Umag, San Marino, Long Island, Marbella, Bournemouth, Palermo, Mexico City, Bogotá, Santiago)
- 9 (Auckland, Marseille, Copenhagen, St. Petersburg, Chennai, Båstad, Indianapolis, Singapore, Stockholm)
- 7 (Adelaide, Scottsdale, Munich, Coral Springs, London, US Open, Bucharest)
- 4 (Sydney, Nottingham, Tashkent, Basel)
- 4 (Rotterdam, Tokyo, Rosmalen, Boston)
- 3 (Zagreb, Milan, Vienna)
- 3 (Halle, New Haven, Moscow)
- 2 (Dubai, Miami Masters)
- 2 (Amsterdam, Stuttgart Masters)
- 2 (Prague, Lyon)
- 2 (Shanghai, Ostrava)
- 2 (Atlanta, St. Poelten)
- 1 (Newport)
- 1 (Kitzbühel)
- 1 (French Open)
- 1 (Monte Carlo Masters)
- 1 (Toulouse)
- 1 (Casablanca)
- 1 (Antwerp)
- 1 (Hamburg Masters)
The following players won their first career title:
- Julian Alonso – Santiago
- Hicham Arazi – Casablanca
- Jonas Björkman – Auckland
- Tim Henman – Sydney
- Thomas Johansson – Copenhagen
- Nicolas Kiefer – Toulouse
- Gustavo Kuerten – French Open
- Magnus Norman – Båstad
- Fabrice Santoro – Lyon
- Sargis Sargsian – Newport
- Mikael Tillström – Chennai
- Chris Woodruff – Canada Masters
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "ATP Year-end top 20". ATP. Retrieved 15 September 2023.