Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

WTA 1000 Series doubles records and statistics

List of WTA 1000 records and statistics From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WTA 1000 Series doubles records and statistics
Remove ads

WTA 1000 is a category of tennis tournaments on the WTA Tour organized by the Women's Tennis Association.

Thumb
Martina Hingis has won a record 26 WTA 1000 titles in doubles.

The Series was initially called WTA Tier I which began in 1988 and lasted until 2008. Records before 1990 are excluded from this list.[1] When the WTA Tour was established in 1990 there were initially six Tier I tournaments held annually in the first three years. The list thereafter expanded to eight events in 1993, nine in 1997 and ten in 2004, before being scaled back to nine for 2008.

In 2009 the WTA changed the tournament categories, so that the majority of Tier I and Tier II tournaments were in one category, Premier Tournaments, split into three categories: two of them being Premier Mandatory and Premier 5, comprising nine events being held with Wuhan, which replaced Tokyo in 2014, as the only exception.[2]

WTA Premier Mandatory and Premier 5 tournaments merged into a single highest tier and it is implemented since the reorganization of the schedule in 2021.[3][4]

In 2024 the WTA expanded to ten WTA 1000 tournaments, up from nine in 2023, with both Doha and Dubai becoming 1000 events every year instead of alternating.[5] There are ten WTA 1000 tournaments: Doha, Dubai, Indian Wells, Miami, Madrid, Rome, Canada, Cincinnati, Beijing and Wuhan.[6]

These tournaments offer 1000 ranking points for the winner.[5]

Only three tournaments were held in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic: Doha, Rome and Cincinnati.[7][8]

Guadalajara replaced Wuhan and Beijing in 2022 due to the disappearance of Peng Shuai.[9][10]

On 1 March 2022, the WTA announced that players from Belarus will not be allowed to compete under the name or flag of Belarus following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[11]

Remove ads

Champions by year

  • New tournaments underlined.

Tier I (1990–2008)

  Active tournaments
  Defunct tournaments
More information Year, Tournaments ...

Premier / 1000 (2009–2023)

  Active tournaments
  Mandatory tournaments
  Defunct tournaments
More information Year, Dubai ...

1000 (since 2024)

More information Year, Doha ...
  1. All of the listed tournaments were held in chronological order with some exceptions:
    1. Berlin was held before Rome between 1990–1999.
    2. Zürich was held before Moscow between 1997–2000.
    3. Canada preceded Cincinnati in 2009–2010.
    4. Rome was held before Madrid between 2009–2011.
    5. Rome was held as the last event in 2020.
    6. Indian Wells was held in October as the last event in 2021.
  2. First event of Tokyo was played in Yokohama.
  3. In 2008 Doha replaced Tokyo, which was moved to September, replacing Zürich.
  4. Between 2015–2023, Dubai and Doha alternated each year, Dubai played in odd- and Doha in even-numbered years.
  5. In 2020, Cincinnati was held in October in New York City.
  6. Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[7][8][43][44]
Remove ads

Title leaders

  Active tournaments
  Defunct tournaments
More information Titles, Player ...
  • Players with 6+ titles. Active players and records are denoted in bold.
  • 158 champions in 296 events as of 2024 Cincinnati.
Remove ads

Career totals

Summarize
Perspective
  • Active players in bold.

More information No., Finals ...
More information No., Semifinals ...
More information No., Quarterfinals ...
More information No., Match wins ...
More information %, W–L ...
  • Statistics correct as of 2024 Rome. To avoid double counting, they should be updated at the conclusion of a tournament or when the player's participation has ended.

Season records

More information No., Titles ...
Remove ads

Tournament records

Most titles per tournament

More information Tournament, No. ...

Tournaments won with no sets dropped

More information No., Player ...
Remove ads

Consecutive records

More information No., Consecutive titles ...
Remove ads

Calendar title combinations

Summarize
Perspective
  • Back-to-back tournament titles.
  • Currently active combinations in bold.

Quadruples

More information Combination, Winner ...
  1. Tokyo and Charleston were held as the 1st and the 4th events of the season, respectively, until 2007.

Triples

More information Combination, Winner ...
  1. Until 2007, Tokyo was held as the 1st event.

Doubles

More information Combination, Winner ...
  1. In 2009, Madrid replaced Berlin as the first clay event of the season.
  2. Wuhan replaced Tokyo in 2014 as the 8th event.
Remove ads

Title defence

Summarize
Perspective
  Currently active tournaments in bold.
More information Tournament, Player(s) ...
Remove ads

Statistics

Seeds statistics

No. 1 vs. No. 2 seeds in final

W The top seeds won the final.
L The second seeds won the final.
More information Year, Event ...

Top 4 seeds in semifinals

  • Tournament winners in bold.
More information Year, Event ...

Top 8 seeds in quarterfinals

  • Tournament winners in bold.
More information Year, Event ...

Qualifiers in final

W Qualifiers won the final.
L Qualifiers lost the final.
More information Year, Event ...

Age statistics

More information Age, Winner ...

All countrywomen in final

More information Year, Event ...
Remove ads

Titles won by decade

Summarize
Perspective

as of 2025 Canada.

Remove ads

Titles won by country

Summarize
Perspective

Note: Titles, won by a team of players from same country, count as one title, not two.

as of 2025 Canada.

100 
 United States (35 players)
47 
 Czech Republic (11 players)
42 
 Australia (8 players)
41 
 Russia (15 players)
33 
 Spain (7 players)
30 
 Belarus (4 players)
26 
  Switzerland (1 player)
23 
 Chinese Taipei (4 players)
17 
 Zimbabwe (1 player)
16 
 Argentina (5 players)
14 
 China (7 players),  France (7 players)
13 
 Italy (6 players),  Netherlands (4 players)
12 
 Latvia (2 players)
11 
 Japan (4 players)
10 
 Belgium (4 players),  Slovenia (2 players)
9 
 India (1 player)
6 
 Canada (3 players)
5 
 Slovakia (2 players)
4 
 Brazil (2 players),  Germany (4 players),  Serbia (2 players),  South Africa (3 players)
2 
 Croatia (2 players),  Hungary (1 player),  Kazakhstan (1 player),  Mexico (1 player),  Poland (2 players)
1 
 Chile,  Romania,  Ukraine
Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads