2008 ATP Tour
The ATP Tour is the elite tour for professional tennis organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals. The ATP Tour includes the four Grand Slam tournaments, the Tennis Masters Cup, the ATP Masters Series, the International Series Gold and the International Series tournaments.
Schedule
This is the complete schedule of events on the 2008 ATP Tour, with player progression documented until the quarter-final stage.;Key
Grand Slam tournaments |
Tennis Masters Cup |
ATP Masters Series |
ATP International Series Gold |
ATP International Series |
Team events |
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
Statistical information
List of players and titles won, listed in order of number of titles won:- Rafael Nadal – Monte-Carlo Masters, Barcelona, Hamburg Masters, French Open, London Queen's Club, Wimbledon, Canada Masters, and Beijing Olympics
- Andy Murray – Doha, Marseille, Cincinnati Masters, Madrid Masters, and St. Petersburg
- Novak Djokovic – Australian Open, Indian Wells Masters, Rome Masters and Tennis Masters Cup
- Roger Federer – Estoril, Halle, US Open, and Basel
- Juan Martín del Potro – Stuttgart, Kitzbühel, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C.
- Nikolay Davydenko – Miami Masters, Portschach and Warsaw
- Andy Roddick – San Jose, Dubai and Beijing
- Gilles Simon – Casablanca, Indianapolis and Bucharest
- Nicolás Almagro – Costa do Sauipe and Acapulco
- David Ferrer – Valencia and 's-Hertogenbosch
- Fernando González – Viña del Mar and Munich
- Michaël Llodra – Adelaide and Rotterdam
- David Nalbandian – Buenos Aires and Stockholm
- Jo-Wilfried Tsonga – Bangkok and Paris Masters
- Dmitry Tursunov – Sydney and Metz
- Tomáš Berdych- Tokyo
- Marin Čilić – New Haven
- Steve Darcis – Memphis
- Marcel Granollers – Houston
- Victor Hănescu – Gstaad
- Ivo Karlović – Nottingham
- Philipp Kohlschreiber – Auckland
- Igor Kunitsyn – Moscow
- Albert Montañés – Amersfoort
- Kei Nishikori – Delray Beach
- Philipp Petzschner – Vienna
- Sam Querrey – Las Vegas
- Tommy Robredo – Båstad
- Fabrice Santoro – Newport
- Robin Söderling – Lyon
- Sergiy Stakhovsky – Zagreb
- Fernando Verdasco – Umag
- Mikhail Youzhny – Chennai
- Marin Čilić – New Haven
- Juan Martín del Potro – Stuttgart
- Marcel Granollers – Houston
- Victor Hănescu – Gstaad
- Igor Kunitsyn – Moscow
- Albert Montañés – Amersfoort
- Kei Nishikori – Delray Beach
- Philipp Petzschner – Vienna
- Sam Querrey – Las Vegas
- Sergiy Stakhovsky – Zagreb
- Jo-Wilfried Tsonga – Bangkok
- Spain 16
- France 8
- Russia 7
- Argentina 6
- United Kingdom 5
- Serbia 4
- Switzerland 4
- 4
- Chile 2
- Croatia 2
- Germany 2
- Belgium 1
- Czech Republic 1
- Japan 1
- Romania 1
- Sweden 1
- Ukraine 1
Entry rankings
Singles
Point distribution
ATP race
Singles
Grand Slams and Masters Series in bold. Points are shown in order of scoring. The second row shows the result and the week in which it was achieved. Italics indicate that a player is not yet eliminated from a tournament.18 events count towards the race, split as follows:
- 4 Grand Slam events
- 9 Masters Series events
- 5 other events
Masters Cup entrants
The top eight players who qualify on the ATP Race will compete in the year-ending finale, in Shanghai, China, from November 9 through November 16. World no. 1 Rafael Nadal has withdrew his name due to a foot injury.*
As of October 5, the following entrants remain entered in the competition:
# | Singles Entrant | Doubles Team Entrant |
1. | Roger Federer | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
2. | Novak Djokovic | Daniel Nestor Nenad Zimonjić |
3. | Andy Murray | Mahesh Bhupathi Mark Knowles |
4. | Nikolay Davydenko | Jonas Björkman Kevin Ullyett |
5. | Andy Roddick | Jeff Coetzee Wesley Moodie |
6. | Jo-Wilfried Tsonga | Lukáš Dlouhý Leander Paes |
7. | Juan Martín del Potro | Mariusz Fyrstenberg Marcin Matkowski |
8. | Gilles Simon | Pablo Cuevas Luis Horna |
Doubles
Unlike the ATP Singles Race, the Stanford ATP Doubles Race uses only the best fourteen tournaments on a team's ranking with no mandatory tournaments counting towards the ranking.Rk | Name | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | Total |
1 | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan | 200 W | 100 W | 100 W | 100 W | 90 SF | 70 F | 70 F | 60 W | 50 QF | 50 QF | 25 QF | 25 QF | 25 QF | 24 F | 989 |
2 | Daniel Nestor Nenad Zimonjić | 200 W | 140 F | 100 W | 100 W | 70 F | 70 F | 50 QF | 45 W | 45 SF | 30 R16 | 27 SF | 25 QF | 12 QF | 12 QF | 926 |
3 | Mahesh Bhupathi Mark Knowles | 90 SF | 70 F | 70 F | 70 F | 60 W | 45 SF | 40 W | 30 R16 | 28 F | 25 QF | 25 QF | 22 QF | 15 SF | 8 QF | 593 |
4 | Jonathan Erlich Andy Ram | 200 W | 100 W | 70 F | 50 QF | 30 R16 | 27 SF | 25 QF | 15 SF | 15 R32 | 11 QF | 8 QF | 551 | |||
5 | Jonas Björkman Kevin Ullyett | 140 F | 50 QF | 45 W | 45 SF | 45 SF | 45 SF | 25 QF | 25 QF | 15 R16 | 15 SF | 15 R32 | 11 QF | 476 | ||
6 | Lukáš Dlouhý Leander Paes | 140 F | 90 SF | 45 SF | 35 W | 35 F | 31 F | 30 R16 | 25 QF | 431 | ||||||
7 | Mariusz Fyrstenberg Marcin Matkowski | 100 W | 42 F | 35 W | 30 R16 | 25 QF | 25 QF | 24 F | 24 F | 15 R32 | 15 R16 | 15 R16 | 15 R16 | 15 QF | 15 SF | 395 |
8 | Jeff Coetzee Wesley Moodie | 90 SF | 45 SF | 45 SF | 45 SF | 42 F | 35 W | 20 SF | 15 R32 | 15 R16 | 15 R16 | 15 R32 | 375 | |||
9 | Marcelo Melo André Sá | 40 W | 35 W | 35 W | 31 F | 30 R16 | 30 R16 | 22 SF | 15 R32 | 15 R16 | 15 R16 | 15 R16 | 15 SF | 15 R16 | 14 SF | 328 |
10 | Simon Aspelin Julian Knowle | 30 R16 | 27 SF | 27 SF | 27 SF | 25 QF | 25 QF | 25 QF | 25 QF | 20 QF | 18 SF | 15 R32 | 12 QF | 10 QF | 8 QF | 294 |
Points distribution (Singles & Doubles)
1 point only if the Main Draw is larger than 32 or 64.Prize money leaders
Retirements
Following is a list of notable players or top 50 who announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive, or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2008 season:- Hugo Armando He turned professional in 1997 and reached no. 100 in singles the week of August 6, 2001, the only week he was within the top 100. His sole title and finals appearance came in doubles at the 2007 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships where he won with Xavier Malisse.
- Jonas Björkman He turned professional in 1991 and became world no. 4 in singles and world no. 1 in doubles. He won three Australian Open doubles titles, two French Open doubles titles, three Wimbledon doubles titles, and one US Open doubles title, in addition to being a doubles finalist in six Grand Slam tournaments. He also won two doubles year-end championships. He retired from professional tennis after competing at the 2008 Tennis Masters Cup Doubles championships.
- Gustavo Kuerten He turned professional in 1995. He reached the world no. 1 ranking, won the French Open three times, and was the Tennis Masters Cup champion in 2000. He played his last match against Paul-Henri Mathieu at the French Open.
- Félix Mantilla He turned professional in 1993 and reached a career-high ranking of world no. 10. He reached the semifinals of the French Open and the quarterfinals of the Australian Open and earned 10 career titles. He played his last career match in July 2007 in Umag against Robin Haase.