J1 Sarawak

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The J1 Sarawak (officially Sarawak Chief Minister's Cup ) is a world junior tennis tournament that has been held on hard court in the Malay city ​​of Kuching in the state of Sarawak by the International Tennis Federation since 2002 . It belongs to the second highest tournament category G1 and is one of the most important junior tennis tournaments in Southeast Asia .

history

In 2002, the first edition of the tournament, which at that time still belonged to the lowest tournament class G5, was held on the grounds of the Sarawak Lawn Tennis Center . The competition has been held twice a year since 2004, in March and November. Only the first tournament in 2007 was included in the series of G1 cups and is therefore clearly better staffed.

Winners list

The winning lists are dominated by players from Asia and Australia . The most successful winner in singles and doubles is world number one Ashleigh Barty .

singles

year Men's Ladies
↓ ITF Malaysian International Junior Championships - Category: G5 ↓
2002 KazakhstanKazakhstan Dias Doskarayev Korea SouthSouth Korea Jung Mi-hee
↓ Category: G4 ↓
2003 United KingdomUnited Kingdom Jamie Baker AustraliaAustralia Natalie Tanevska
↓ Sarawak Chief Minister's Cup - Category: G3 ↓
2004 Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Yi Chu-huan BotswanaBotswana Tapiwa Marobela
2005 Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Lee Hsin-han Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Kao Shao-yuan
2006 IndonesiaIndonesia Christopher Rungkat UkraineUkraine Nadia Kitschenok
↓ Category: G1 ↓
2007 AustraliaAustralia John-Patrick Smith Hong KongHong Kong Zhang Ling
2008 IndonesiaIndonesia Christopher Rungkat ThailandThailand Noppawan Lertcheewakarn
2009 BelgiumBelgium Laurent-Olivier Daxhelet HungaryHungary Tímea Babos
2010 AustraliaAustralia James Duckworth China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Tang Haochen
2011 AustraliaAustralia Andrew Whittington AustraliaAustralia Ashleigh Barty
2012 SerbiaSerbia Nikola Milojevic RussiaRussia Yelisaveta Kulichkova
2013 CroatiaCroatia Borna Ćorić TurkeyTurkey İpek Soylu
2014 Korea SouthSouth Korea Lee Duck-hee IndonesiaIndonesia Tami Grende
2015 VietnamVietnam Lý Hoàng Nam Czech RepublicCzech Republic Lucie Kaňková
2016 China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Wu Yibing China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China You Zhima
2017 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Tomáš Macháč IndiaIndia Zeel Desai
2018 Czech RepublicCzech Republic Dalibor Svrčina JapanJapan Naho Sato
2019 JapanJapan Shunsuke Mitsui Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Joanna Garland
2020 Canceled after quarter-finals due to COVID-19 pandemic

Double

year Men's Ladies
↓ ITF Malaysian International Junior Championships - Category: G5 ↓
2002 RussiaRussia Artur Djabarov Đỗ Minh Quân
VietnamVietnam 
Korea SouthSouth Korea Jung Mi-hee Kim Ji-young
Korea SouthSouth Korea 
↓ Category: G4 ↓
2003 South AfricaSouth Africa David North Fritz Wolmarans
South AfricaSouth Africa 
AustraliaAustralia Daniella Jeflea Lara Giltinan
AustraliaAustralia 
↓ Sarawak Chief Minister's Cup - Category: G3 ↓
2004 Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Yi Chu-huan Yu Yen-sheng
Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei 
Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Kao Shao-yuan Liao Jung
Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei 
2005 IndonesiaIndonesia Elbert you Shuhei Uzawa
JapanJapan 
JapanJapan Yurina Koshino Chie Moriuchi
JapanJapan 
2006 South AfricaSouth Africa Jean Anderson Brad Brinkhaus Williams
South AfricaSouth Africa 
Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Chen Mu-ying Ashmitha Easwaramurthi
IndiaIndia 
↓ Category: G1 ↓
2007 SlovakiaSlovakia Eugen Brázdil Christopher Rungkat
IndonesiaIndonesia 
UkraineUkraine Ljudmyla Kitschenok Alexandra Kolesnichenko
UzbekistanUzbekistan 
2008 AustriaAustria Nikolaus Moser Ilija Vučić
SerbiaSerbia 
UkraineUkraine Lyudmyla Kitschenok Nadija Kitschenok
UkraineUkraine 
2009 PhilippinesPhilippines Francis Casey Alcantara Daniel Berta
SwedenSweden 
HungaryHungary Tímea Babos Malou Ejdesgaard
DenmarkDenmark 
2010 IrelandIreland John Morrissey Ben Wagland
AustraliaAustralia 
Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei Juan Ting-fei Zheng Saisai
China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China 
2011 AustraliaAustralia Luke Saville Joey Swaysland
AustraliaAustralia 
AustraliaAustralia Ashleigh Barty Abbie Myers
AustraliaAustralia 
2012 Korea SouthSouth Korea Chung Hyeon Kim Duk-young
Korea SouthSouth Korea 
Czech RepublicCzech Republic Barbora Krejčíková Abbie Myers
AustraliaAustralia 
2013 United KingdomUnited Kingdom Luke Bambridge Borna Ćorić
CroatiaCroatia 
AustraliaAustralia Naiktha Bains Olivia Tjandramulia
AustraliaAustralia 
2014 Korea SouthSouth Korea Chung Yun-seong Oh Chan-yeong
Korea SouthSouth Korea 
United KingdomUnited Kingdom Katie Boulter Freya Christie
United KingdomUnited Kingdom 
2015 PhilippinesPhilippines Alberto Lim junior Lý Hoàng Nam
VietnamVietnam 
AustraliaAustralia Naiktha Bains Olivia Tjandramulia
AustraliaAustralia 
2016 United KingdomUnited Kingdom Alexis Canter Mikhail Sokolovsky
RussiaRussia 
IndonesiaIndonesia Rifanty Kahfiani Lee Yang
Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei 
2017 FranceFrance Constantin Bittoun Kouzmine Park Ui-sung
Korea SouthSouth Korea 
JapanJapan Yūki Naitō Naho Satō
JapanJapan 
2018 SwedenSweden Erik Grevelius Hikaru Shiraishi
JapanJapan 
JapanJapan Anri Nagata Naho Satō
JapanJapan 
2019 JapanJapan Kokoro Isomura Shunsuke Mitsui
JapanJapan 
Czech RepublicCzech Republic Linda Fruhvirtová Kristyna Lavičková
Czech RepublicCzech Republic 
2020 Canceled after semifinals due to COVID-19 pandemic

Web links