Details | |
---|---|
Duration | 2 January 1995 – 13 November 1995 |
Edition | 6th |
Tournaments | 85 |
Categories | Grand Slam (4) ATP Tour World Championships ATP Championship Series, Single-Week (9) ATP Championship Series (11) ATP World Series (59) Team Events (2) |
Achievements (singles) | |
Most titles | Thomas Muster (12) |
Most finals | Thomas Muster (14) |
Prize money leader | Pete Sampras ($5,393,266) |
Points leader | Pete Sampras (4842) |
Awards | |
Player of the year | Pete Sampras |
Doubles team of the year | Todd Woodbridge Mark Woodforde |
Most improved player of the year | Thomas Enqvist |
Newcomer of the year | Mark Philippoussis |
Comeback player of the year | Derrick Rostagno |
← 1994 1996 → |
The Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Tour is the elite tour for professional tennis organized by the ATP. The ATP Tour includes the Grand Slam tournaments (organized by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP Championship Series, Single-Week, the ATP Championship Series, the ATP World Series, the ATP World Team Cup, the Davis Cup (organized by the ITF), the ATP Tour World Championships and the Grand Slam Cup (organized by the ITF).
Schedule
editThis is the complete schedule of events on the 1995 ATP Tour, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.[1]
- Key
Grand Slam |
ATP Tour World Championships |
ATP Championship Series, Single-Week |
ATP Championship Series |
ATP World Series |
Team Events |
January
editFebruary
editMarch
editApril
editMay
editJune
editJuly
editAugust
editSeptember
editOctober
editNovember
editDecember
editWeek | Tournament | Champions | Runners-up | Semifinalists | Quarterfinalists |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 Dec | Grand Slam Cup Munich, Germany Grand Slam Cup |
Goran Ivanišević 7–6(7–4), 6–3, 6–4 |
Todd Martin | Yevgeny Kafelnikov Boris Becker |
Pete Sampras Jacco Eltingh Byron Black Andriy Medvedev |
ATP rankings
editStatistical information
editPlayers and singles titles won, listed in alphabetical order:
- Andre Agassi – Australian Open, San Jose, Miami Masters, Washington, D.C., Canadian Masters, Cincinnati Masters, New Haven (7)
- Boris Becker – Marseille, Season-Ending Championships (2)
- Alberto Berasategui – Oporto (1)
- Arnaud Boetsch – Toulouse (1)
- Michael Chang – Hong Kong, Atlanta, Tokyo Indoors, Beijing (4)
- Francisco Clavet – Palermo (1)
- Albert Costa – Kitzbühel (1)
- Jim Courier – Adelaide, Scottsdale, Tokyo Outdoors, Basel (4)
- Filip Dewulf – Vienna (1)
- Slava Doseděl – Santiago (1)
- Yahiya Doumbia – Bordeaux (1)
- Stefan Edberg – Doha (1)
- Thomas Enqvist – Auckland, Philadelphia, Pinehurst, Indianapolis, Stockholm (5)
- Wayne Ferreira – Dubai, Munich, Ostrava, Lyon (4)
- Javier Frana – Nottingham (1)
- Paul Haarhuis – Jakarta (1)
- Mauricio Hadad – Bermuda (1)
- Yevgeny Kafelnikov – Milan, Saint Petersburg, Gstaad, Long Island (4)
- Richard Krajicek – Stuttgart Indoors, Rotterdam (2)
- Ján Krošlák – Tel Aviv (1)
- Karol Kučera – Rosmalen (1)
- Nicolás Lapentti – Bogotá (1)
- Todd Martin – Memphis (1)
- Patrick McEnroe – Sydney (1)
- Andrei Medvedev – Hamburg Masters (1)
- Fernando Meligeni – Båstad (1)
- Carlos Moyá – Buenos Aires (1)
- Thomas Muster – Mexico City, Estoril, Barcelona, Monte Carlo Masters, Rome Masters, French Open, St. Poelten, Stuttgart Outdoors, San Marino, Umag, Bucharest, Essen Masters (12)
- David Prinosil – Newport (1)
- Marcelo Ríos – Bologna, Amsterdam, Kuala Lumpur (3)
- Marc Rosset – Nice, Halle (2)
- Greg Rusedski – Seoul (1)
- Pete Sampras – Indian Wells Masters, London, Wimbledon, US Open, Paris Masters (5)
- Sjeng Schalken – Valencia (1)
- Gilbert Schaller – Casablanca (1)
- Martin Sinner – Copenhagen, Johannesburg (2)
- Carl-Uwe Steeb – Moscow (1)
- Michael Stich – Los Angeles (1)
- Bohdan Ulihrach – Prague, Montevideo (2)
- Todd Woodbridge – Coral Springs (1)
The following players won their first title:
- Albert Costa – Kitzbühel
- Filip Dewulf – Vienna
- Slava Doseděl – Santiago
- Paul Haarhuis – Jakarta
- Mauricio Hadad – Bermuda
- Ján Krošlák – Tel Aviv
- Karol Kučera – Rosmalen
- Nicolás Lapentti – Bogotá
- Patrick McEnroe – Sydney
- Fernando Meligeni – Båstad
- Carlos Moyá – Buenos Aires
- David Prinosil – Newport
- Marcelo Ríos – Bologna
- Sjeng Schalken – Valencia
- Gilbert Schaller – Casablanca
- Martin Sinner – Copenhagen
- Bohdan Ulihrach – Prague
- Todd Woodbridge – Coral Springs
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Results Archive 1995". atpworldtour.com. Archived from the original on 2010-01-14. Retrieved 2010-10-10.
- ^ TARANGO, DELAITRE WIN DOUBLES TITLE
- ^ "ATP Year-end top 20". ATP. Retrieved 15 September 2023.