ATP Challenger Tolyatti

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
tennis Tolyatti Challenger
ATP Challenger Tour
venue Tolyatti Russia
RussiaRussia 
First run 2000
Last event 2007
category Challenger
Tournament type Free place tournament
Game surface Hard court
draw 32E / 16D
Prize money US $ 25,000 
Status: end of the tournament

The ATP Challenger Tolyatti (officially: Tolyatti Challenger ) was a tennis tournament that took place between 2000 and 2007 in Tolyatti , Russia . It was part of the ATP Challenger Tour and was played outdoors on hard courts. Alexander Peya is the record winner of the tournament with two titles in singles and one in doubles.

List of winners

singles

year winner Final opponent Result
2007 IsraelIsrael Dudi Sela RussiaRussia Mikhail Ledovskich 7: 6 4 , 6: 3
2006 ItalyItaly Uros Vico AustriaAustria Alexander Peya 3: 6, 6: 4, 6: 1
2005 RussiaRussia Igor Kunitsyn SlovakiaSlovakia Viktor Bruthans 6: 1, 6: 2
2004 FranceFrance Jo-Wilfried Tsonga SlovakiaSlovakia Ladislav Švarc 6: 3, 7: 6 2
2003 IsraelIsrael Dudi Sela ArgentinaArgentina Juan Pablo Brzezicki 6: 2, 6: 4
2002 AustriaAustria Alexander Peya (2) RussiaRussia Dmitry Vlasov 6: 4, 6: 4
2001 AustriaAustria Alexander Peya (1) SlovakiaSlovakia Karol Beck 6: 2, 6: 2
2000 UzbekistanUzbekistan Vadim Kucenko RussiaRussia Igor Kunitsyn 6: 4, 6: 1

Double

year winner Final opponent Result
2007 SwedenSweden Johan Brunström Mohammad Ghareeb
KuwaitKuwait 
CroatiaCroatia Ivan Cerović Pierrick Ysern
FranceFrance 
7: 6 4 , 4: 6, [13:11]
2006 AustriaAustria Alexander Peya Uros Vico
ItalyItaly 
KazakhstanKazakhstan Alexei Kedrjuk Orest Tereshchuk
UkraineUkraine 
6: 4, 6: 4
2005 United StatesUnited States Scott Lipsky Mark Nielsen
New ZealandNew Zealand 
ItalyItaly Flavio Cipolla Massimo Ocera
ItalyItaly 
6: 2, 6: 3
2004 RussiaRussia Teimuras Gabashvili Dmitry Vlasov
RussiaRussia 
United KingdomUnited Kingdom James Auckland Ladislav Švarc
SlovakiaSlovakia 
6: 3, 5: 7, 6: 4
2003 JapanJapan Jun Katō Alexander Peya
AustriaAustria 
FranceFrance Rodolphe Cadart Benjamin Cassaigne
FranceFrance 
7: 6 7 , 6: 4
2002 RussiaRussia Filipp Muchometow Dmitri Vlasov
RussiaRussia 
RussiaRussia Artyom Derepasko Mikhail Jelgin
RussiaRussia 
6: 4, 6: 4
2001 SlovakiaSlovakia Karol Beck Igor Zelenay
SlovakiaSlovakia 
UzbekistanUzbekistan Abdul-Hamid Makhkamov Dmitrij Tomaševič
UzbekistanUzbekistan 
7: 5, 4: 6, 6: 3
2000 Yugoslavia Federal Republic 1992Yugoslavia Dušan Vemić Lovro Zovko
CroatiaCroatia 
RomaniaRomania Ion Moldovan Yuri Shchukin
KazakhstanKazakhstan 
6: 4, 6: 4

Web links