ATP Challenger Ljubljana

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
tennis BMW Ljubljana Open
ATP Challenger Tour
venue Ljubljana Slovenia
SloveniaSlovenia 
First run 1990
Last event 2011
category Challenger
Tournament type Free place tournament
Game surface sand
draw 32E / 32Q / 16D
Prize money 42,500 
As of August 14, 2016

The ATP Challenger Ljubljana (officially including the BMW Ljubljana Open ) was a tennis tournament that took place annually in Ljubljana from 1990 to 2011 - except for 2001 and 2006 . In the early years the city belonged to Yugoslavia before Slovenia became independent in 1992. The tournament was part of the ATP Challenger Tour and was played outdoors on clay. In singles and doubles, a total of six players managed to win two titles.

List of winners

singles

year winner Final opponent Result
2011 ItalyItaly Paolo Lorenzi (2) SloveniaSlovenia Grega Žemlja 6: 2, 6: 4
2010 SloveniaSlovenia Blaž Kavčič BelgiumBelgium David Goffin 6: 2, 4: 6, 7: 5
2009 ItalyItaly Paolo Lorenzi (1) SloveniaSlovenia Grega Žemlja 1: 6, 7: 6 4 , 6: 2
2008 SerbiaSerbia Ilija Bozoljac ItalyItaly Giancarlo Petrazzuolo 6: 4, 6: 3
2007 AustriaAustria Marco Mirnegg FranceFrance Mathieu Montcourt 7: 6 5 , 7: 5
2006 not carried out
2005 SpainSpain Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo ItalyItaly Massimo Dell'Acqua 6: 7 2 , 5: 2 problem
2004 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Jiří Vaněk (2) GermanyGermany Bjorn Phau 5: 7, 6: 1, 7: 6 5
2003 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Jiří Vaněk (1) Serbia and MontenegroSerbia and Montenegro Boris Pašanski 6: 3, 3: 6, 6: 1
2002 FranceFrance Arnaud Di Pasquale SpainSpain Juan Balcells 6: 4, 6: 3
2001 not carried out
2000 GermanyGermany Oliver Gross SpainSpain Juan Balcells 4: 6, 6: 1, 7: 6 3
1999 BelarusBelarus Uladsimir Waltschkou RomaniaRomania Dinu Pescariu 7: 5, 6: 7 3 , 6: 4
1998 RomaniaRomania Dinu Pescariu RomaniaRomania Adrian Voinea 7: 6, 2: 6, 6: 3
1997 New ZealandNew Zealand Brett Steven RomaniaRomania Andrei Pavel 7: 6, 6: 2
1996 MoroccoMorocco Hicham Arazi UruguayUruguay Marcelo Filippini 4: 6, 6: 2, 6: 4
1995 SpainSpain Jordi Burillo RomaniaRomania Adrian Voinea 6: 2, 6: 1
1994 AustriaAustria Horst Skoff SpainSpain Tomás Carbonell 0: 6, 6: 4, 7: 6
1993 ArgentinaArgentina Daniel Orsanic Soviet UnionSoviet Union Andrei Cherkassov 4: 6, 6: 2, 7: 5
1992 SwedenSweden Magnus Larsson (2) SwedenSweden Mikael Tillström 6: 4, 6: 4
1991 Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Slobodan Živojinović Soviet UnionSoviet Union Andrei Olchowski 6: 7, 7: 6, 6: 3
1990 SwedenSweden Magnus Larsson (1) ItalyItaly Diego Nargiso 7: 5, 6: 7, 7: 6

Double

year winner Final opponent Result
2011 SloveniaSlovenia Aljaž Bedene Grega Žemlja
SloveniaSlovenia 
SpainSpain Roberto Bautista Agut Iván Navarro
SpainSpain 
6: 3, 6: 7 10 , [12:10]
2010 CroatiaCroatia Nikola Mektić Ivan Zovko
CroatiaCroatia 
CroatiaCroatia Marin Draganja Dino Marcan
CroatiaCroatia 
3: 6, 6: 0, [10: 3]
2009 United KingdomUnited Kingdom Jamie Delgado Jamie Murray
United KingdomUnited Kingdom 
FranceFrance Stéphane Robert Simone Vagnozzi
ItalyItaly 
6: 3, 6: 3
2008 ArgentinaArgentina Juan Pablo Brzezicki Mariano Hood
ArgentinaArgentina 
(2)
AustraliaAustralia Rameez Junaid Philipp Marx
GermanyGermany 
7: 5, 7: 6 4
2007 RussiaRussia Alexander Kudrjawzew Alexander Krasnoruzki
RussiaRussia 
CroatiaCroatia Ivan Dodig Lovro Zovko
CroatiaCroatia 
7: 6 9 , 1: 6, [10: 6]
2006 not carried out
2005 AustraliaAustralia Paul Baccanello Lovro Zovko
CroatiaCroatia 
AustraliaAustralia Andrew Derer Joseph Sirianni
AustraliaAustralia 
6: 3, 6: 3
2004 EcuadorEcuador Giovanni Lapentti Rik De Voest
South AfricaSouth Africa 
SwedenSweden Robert Lindstedt Michael Craig Russell
United StatesUnited States 
6: 3, 6: 4
2003 ItalyItaly Leonardo Azzaro Gergely Kisgyörgy
HungaryHungary 
CroatiaCroatia Ivan Cerović Aleksander Slović
Serbia and MontenegroSerbia and Montenegro 
7: 6 3 , 6: 3
2002 ArgentinaArgentina Mariano Hood (1) Edgardo Massa
ArgentinaArgentina 
PeruPeru Luis Horna Sebastián Prieto
ArgentinaArgentina 
7: 5, 6: 1
2001 not carried out
2000 SpainSpain Emilio Benfele Álvarez Álex López Morón
SpainSpain 
South AfricaSouth Africa Paul Rosner Jason Weir-Smith
South AfricaSouth Africa 
6: 3, 6: 4
1999 ItalyItaly Massimo Valeri Tom Vanhoudt
BelgiumBelgium 
SpainSpain Eduardo Nicolás Germán Puentes
SpainSpain 
7: 6 8 , 6: 4
1998 South AfricaSouth Africa Marius Barnard Stephen Noteboom
NetherlandsNetherlands 
SpainSpain Alberto Martín Tomáš Anzari
Czech RepublicCzech Republic 
7: 6, 6: 7, 7: 6
1997 ArgentinaArgentina Lucas Arnold Ker (2) Daniel Orsanic
ArgentinaArgentina 
Czech RepublicCzech Republic David Škoch Fernon Wibier
NetherlandsNetherlands 
6-0, 6-4
1996 ArgentinaArgentina Pablo Albano Lucas Arnold Ker
ArgentinaArgentina 
(1)
SwedenSweden Rikard Bergh Shelby Cannon
United StatesUnited States 
6: 1, 3: 6, 6: 1
1995 SwedenSweden Nicklas Kulti Mikael Tillström
SwedenSweden 
(2)
United StatesUnited States Shelby Cannon Stefan Kruger
South AfricaSouth Africa 
6: 4, 6: 4
1994 FranceFrance Olivier Delaître Jean-Philippe Fleurian
FranceFrance 
DenmarkDenmark Kenneth Carlsen Mikael Tillström
SwedenSweden 
6: 1, 4: 6, 6: 1
1993 SlovakiaSlovakia Branislav Stankovič Richard Vogel
Czech RepublicCzech Republic 
NetherlandsNetherlands Hendrik Jan Davids Goran Prpić
CroatiaCroatia 
6: 4, 7: 6
1992 SwedenSweden Magnus Larsson, Mikael Tillström
SwedenSweden 
(1)
ItalyItaly Cristian Brandi Federico Mordegan
ItalyItaly 
7: 5, 6: 2
1991 Soviet UnionSoviet Union Andrei Olchowski Slobodan Živojinović
Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia 
CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Richard Vogel Daniel Vacek
CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia 
7: 5, 6: 3
1990 SpainSpain Carlos Costa Francisco Roig
SpainSpain 
ItalyItaly Omar Camporese Mark Koevermans
NetherlandsNetherlands 
6: 7, 6: 4, 6: 4

Web links