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2023 ATP Finals

Tennis tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2023 ATP Finals (also known as the 2023 Nitto ATP Finals for Nitto sponsorship) was a men's tennis year-end tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Pala Alpitour in Turin, Italy, from 12 to 19 November 2023. It was the season-ending event for the highest-ranked singles players and doubles teams on the 2023 ATP Tour.

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This is the 54th edition of the tournament (49th in doubles), and the third time Turin hosted the ATP Tour year-end championships.

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Champions

Singles

Doubles

Points and prize money

The 2023 ATP Finals rewarded the following points and prize money, per victory[1]

More information Stage, Singles ...
  1. Prize money for doubles is per team.
  • An undefeated champion would earn the maximum 1,500 points, and $4,801,500 in singles or $943,650 in doubles.
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Format

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The ATP Finals group stage has a round-robin format, with eight players/teams divided into two groups of four and each player/team in a group playing the other three in the group. The eight seeds were determined by the Pepperstone ATP rankings and ATP Doubles Team Rankings on the Monday after the last ATP Tour tournament of the calendar year. All singles matches, including the final, were best of three sets with tie-breaks in each set including the third. All doubles matches were two sets (no ad) and a Match Tie-break.[2]

In deciding placement within a group, the following criteria were used, in order:[2]

  1. Most wins.
  2. Most matches played (e.g., a 2–1 record beats a 2–0 record).
  3. Head-to-head result between tied players/teams.
  4. Highest percentage of sets won.
  5. Highest percentage of games won.
  6. ATP rank after the last ATP Tour tournament of the year.


If after criterion 4 there was one superior/inferior player and the other two were tied, the head-to-head result was used to sort these two players. Criteria 5-6 were thus used only in case three players were all tied after the evaluation of criteria 1-4.

The top two of each group advanced to semifinals, with the winner of each group playing the runner-up of the other group. The winners of the semifinals then played for the title.

Qualification

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Singles

Eight players compete at the tournament, with two named alternates. Players receive places in the following order of precedence:[3]

  1. First, the top 7 players in the ATP Race to Turin after the final week of the ATP Tour on 11 November 2023
  2. Second, up to two 2023 Grand Slam tournament winners ranked anywhere 8th–20th, in ranking order
  3. Third, the eighth ranked player in the ATP rankings

In the event of this totaling more than 8 players, those lower down in the selection order become the alternates. If further alternates are needed, these players are selected by the ATP.

Provisional rankings are published weekly as the ATP Race to Turin, coinciding with the 52-week rolling ATP rankings on the date of selection.[4] Points are accumulated in Grand Slam, ATP Tour, United Cup, ATP Challenger Tour and ITF Tour tournaments. Players accrue points across 19 tournaments, usually made up of:[5]

  • The 4 Grand Slam tournaments
  • The 8 mandatory ATP Masters 1000 tournaments
  • The best results from any 7 other tournaments that carry ranking points (Monte-Carlo Masters, United Cup, ATP 500, ATP 250, Challenger, ITF)
  • Player can replace up to 3 mandatory Masters 1000 results with a better score from ATP 500 or ATP 250

Doubles

Eight teams compete at the tournament, with one named alternate. The eight competing teams receive places according to the same order of precedence as in singles. The named alternate will be offered first to any unaccepted teams in the selection order, then to the highest ranked unaccepted team, and then to a team selected by the ATP. Points are accumulated in the same competitions as for the singles tournament. However, for Doubles teams there are no commitment tournaments, so teams are ranked according to their 19 highest points scoring results from any tournaments on the ATP Tour.[3]

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Groupings

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Singles

The singles draw of the 2023 edition of the Year–end Championships will feature three number ones, three major champions and two major finalists. The competitors were divided into two groups.[6]

More information Green Group, Red Group ...

Doubles

The doubles draw of the 2023 edition of the Year–end Championships will feature six major champions, six number ones and 1 major finalist team. The pairs were divided into two groups.[6]

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Qualified players

Singles

More information #, Players ...

Doubles

More information #, Players ...
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Points breakdown

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Singles

 Player qualified for ATP Finals.[20]
More information Seed, Player ...

Notes

  1. Player can replace points from up to 3 mandatory Masters 1000 plus Monte Carlo (not mandatory) with other next-best results from tournaments taking place after the replaced tournaments.[5] Ranking points are shown in italics in these cases.

Doubles

 Team qualified for ATP Finals.[21]
More information Seed, Team ...

Notes

  1. Hijikata/Kubler qualified as one of this year's Grand Slam doubles champions ranked in the top 20 on 13 November 2023.[4]
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Head-to-head records

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Below are the head-to-head records as they approached the tournament.

Singles

   Djokovic    Alcaraz   Medvedev   Sinner     Rublev   Tsitsipas   Zverev      Rune   OverallYTD W–L
1 Serbia Novak Djokovic 2–2 10–5 3–0 5–1 11–2 8–4 2–241–1651–5
2 Spain Carlos Alcaraz 2–2 2–2 3–4 0–0 5–0 3–3 2–117–1263–10
3 Daniil Medvedev 5–10 2–2 6–2 6–2 9–4 10–7 1–139–2864–16
4 Italy Jannik Sinner 0–3 4–3 2–6 4–2 2–5 1–4 0–213–2557–14
5 Andrey Rublev 1–5 0–0 2–6 2–4 5–6 3–5 2–115–2756–23
6 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 2–11 0–5 4–9 5–2 6–5 9–4 0–226–3851–22
7 Germany Alexander Zverev 4–8 3–3 7–10 4–1 5–3 4–9 0–127–3553–26
8 Denmark Holger Rune 2–2 1–2 1–1 2–0 1–2 2–0 1–0 10–743–22

Doubles

  Dodig
 Krajicek 
 Koolhof 
Skupski
Bopanna
Ebden
S González
Roger-Vas.
Granollers
Zeballos
Ram
Salisbury
M González
Molteni
  Hijikata  
Kubler
OverallYTD W–L
1 Croatia Ivan Dodig
United States Austin Krajicek
2–2 1–0 2–0 2–1 2–2 0–1 0–09–638–13
2 Netherlands Wesley Koolhof
United Kingdom Neal Skupski
2–2 3–2 2–3 1–2 1–3 0–1 2–111–1444–20
3 India Rohan Bopanna
Australia Matthew Ebden
0–1 2–3 2–1 1–2 0–1 0–0 0–05–838–18
4 Mexico Santiago González
France Édouard Roger-Vasselin
0–2 3–2 1–2 2–0 2–1 0–0 0–08–751–21
5 Spain Marcel Granollers
Argentina Horacio Zeballos
1–2 2–1 2–1 0–2 3–5 2–1 0–110–1334–17
6 United States Rajeev Ram
United Kingdom Joe Salisbury
2–2 3–1 1–0 1–2 5–3 0–0 0–012–832–18
7 Argentina Máximo González
Argentina Andrés Molteni
1–0 1–0 0–0 0–0 1–2 0–0 0–03–238–20
8 Australia Rinky Hijikata
Australia Jason Kubler
0–0 1–2 0–0 0–0 1–0 0–0 0–0 2–29–6
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See also

References

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