Jump to content

2016 French Open – Legends over 45 doubles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Mythical glare (talk | contribs) at 10:21, 10 July 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Legends over 45 doubles
2016 French Open
Final
ChampionsSpain Sergi Bruguera
Croatia Goran Ivanišević
Runners-upFrance Yannick Noah
France Cédric Pioline
Score6–3, 7–6(7–2)
Events
Singles men women boys girls
Doubles men women mixed boys girls
WC Singles men women quad
WC Doubles men women quad
Legends −45 45+ women
← 2015 · French Open · 2017 →

Guy Forget and Henri Leconte were the defending champions; however, Forget decided not to participate in the tournament this year. Leconte teamed up with Arnaud Boetsch, but they were eliminated during the round-robin competition.

Sergi Bruguera and Goran Ivanišević emerged as the champions, defeating Yannick Noah and Cédric Pioline in the final with a score of 6–3, 7–6(7–2).

Draw

[edit]

Key

[edit]

Final

[edit]
Finals
  Spain Sergi Bruguera
Croatia Goran Ivanišević
6 77
  France Yannick Noah
France Cédric Pioline
3 62

Group C

[edit]
  France A Boetsch
France H Leconte
Australia P Cash
United States J McEnroe
Spain S Bruguera
Croatia G Ivanišević
RR
W–L
Set
W–L
Game
W–L
Standings
C1 France Arnaud Boetsch
France Henri Leconte
4–6, 2–6 3–6, 3–6 0–2 0–4 12–24 3
C2 Australia Pat Cash
United States John McEnroe
6–4, 6–2 1–6, 6–3, [5–10] 1–1 3–2 19–16 2
C3 Spain Sergi Bruguera
Croatia Goran Ivanišević
6–3, 6–3 6–1, 3–6, [10–5] 2–0 4–1 22–13 1

Standings are determined by: 1. number of wins; 2. number of matches; 3. in three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4. steering-committee decision.

Group D

[edit]
  France Y Noah
France C Pioline
Sweden M Pernfors
Sweden M Wilander
France M Bahrami
Netherlands R Krajicek
RR
W–L
Set
W–L
Game
W–L
Standings
D1 France Yannick Noah
France Cédric Pioline
6–4, 6–4 7–6(7–5), 2–6, [10–8] 2–0 4–1 22–20 1
D2 Sweden Mikael Pernfors
Sweden Mats Wilander
4–6, 4–6 6–7 (2–6), 4–6 0–2 0–4 18–25 3
D3 France Mansour Bahrami
Netherlands Richard Krajicek
6–7(5–7), 6–2, [8–10] 7–6 (6–2), 6–4 1–1 3–2 25–20 2

Standings are determined by: 1. number of wins; 2. number of matches; 3. in three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 4. steering-committee decision.

References

[edit]