The 2022 ATP Cup was the third and final edition of the ATP Cup, an international outdoor hard court men's team tennis tournament held by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). The tournament was part of the 2022 ATP Tour.

2022 ATP Cup
Date1–9 January
Edition3rd
CategoryATP Cup
Draw16 teams
Prize money$10,000,000
SurfaceHard
LocationSydney, Australia
VenueKen Rosewall Arena,
Sydney Super Dome
Champions
 Canada
← 2021 · ATP Cup

Due to the uncertainties with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, it was held at the Ken Rosewall Arena and the Sydney Super Dome in Sydney, from 1 to 9 January 2022 with 16 teams.[1][2] Canada won the tournament, defeating Spain 2–0 in the final.[3]

On 7 August 2022, as a result of all three editions being very poorly attended and riddled with logistical issues, along with heavy financial losses, and disdain for the event from fans, players - particularly women's players - and officials, Tennis Australia announced that the ATP Cup would be shut down, to be replaced by a mixed-gender United Cup from 2023.[4][5]

ATP ranking points edit

Type Player
ranked
Round Points per win vs. opponent ranked
No. 1–10 No. 11–20 No. 21–30 No. 31–50 No. 51–100 No. 101–250 No. 251+
Singles No. 1–250 Final 280 220 160 120 90 60 40
Semifinals 200 160 120 90 60 40 30
Group stage 90 80 60 45 30 25 20
No. 251+ Final 85 55 40
Semifinals 55 40 30
Group stage 30 20 15
Doubles Any Final 90
Semifinals 75
Group stage 45
  • Maximum 750 points for undefeated singles player, 250 points for doubles.[6]

Entries edit

Fifteen countries qualified for the ATP Cup, based on the ATP ranking of its No. 1 singles player at the entry deadline on 2 December 2021, while host country Australia received a wild card.[6][7][8]

Withdrawals edit

In November, Switzerland withdrew after world number 16 Roger Federer withdrew from the event due to his recovery from a knee injury.[9]

On 1 December, Spanish world number six Rafael Nadal declined to take part in the Cup,[10] though Spain qualified with their next best singles player.

Austria initially qualified with world number 15 Dominic Thiem: however, Thiem declined to participate, while Dennis Novak withdrew due to being unable to travel to Australia on 29 December. Austria were withdrawn from the competition by ATP Cup officials, as the Cup rules require at least one player from each country to be ranked inside the top 250, whereas their next three players were not.[11] Austria were replaced with France.[12]

Serbian world number 1 Novak Djokovic withdrew on 29 December 2021 due to travel and logisitical issues, but Serbia remained at the ATP Cup as their next best ranked player Dušan Lajović met the entry criteria.[13]

Russia were originally to be represented by Andrey Rublev and Aslan Karatsev, but both withdrew on 29 December 2021.[13]

# Nation No. 1 player Rank No. 2 player Rank No. 3 player No. 4 player No. 5 player Captain
1   Serbia Dušan Lajović 33 Filip Krajinović 42 Nikola Ćaćić Matej Sabanov Ivan Sabanov
2   Russia Daniil Medvedev 2 Roman Safiullin 167 Evgeny Karlovskiy Alexander Shevchenko Gilles Cervara
3   Germany Alexander Zverev 3 Jan-Lennard Struff 51 Yannick Hanfmann Kevin Krawietz Tim Pütz Michael Kohlmann
4   Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 4 Michail Pervolarakis 399 Petros Tsitsipas Markos Kalovelonis Aristotelis Thanos Apostolos Tsitsipas
5   Italy Matteo Berrettini 7 Jannik Sinner 10 Lorenzo Sonego Simone Bolelli Fabio Fognini Vincenzo Santopadre
6   Norway Casper Ruud 8 Viktor Durasovic 345 Lukas Hellum Lilleengen Leyton Rivera Andreja Petrovic Christian Ruud
7   Poland Hubert Hurkacz 9 Kamil Majchrzak 117 Kacper Żuk Jan Zieliński Szymon Walków Marcin Matkowski
8   Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime 11 Denis Shapovalov 14 Brayden Schnur Steven Diez Félix Auger-Aliassime
9   Great Britain Cameron Norrie 12 Dan Evans 25 Liam Broady Joe Salisbury Jamie Murray Liam Broady
10   Argentina Diego Schwartzman 13 Federico Delbonis 44 Federico Coria Máximo González Andrés Molteni Alejandro Fabbri
11   Chile Cristian Garín 17 Alejandro Tabilo 139 Tomás Barrios Vera Jorge Aguilar
12   Spain Roberto Bautista Agut 19 Pablo Carreño Busta 20 Albert Ramos Viñolas A. Davidovich Fokina Pedro Martínez Tomás Carbonell
13   Georgia Nikoloz Basilashvili 22 Aleksandre Metreveli 571 Aleksandre Bakshi Zura Tkemaladze Saba Purtseladze David Kvernadze
14   United States Taylor Fritz 23 John Isner 24 Brandon Nakashima Rajeev Ram Michael Russell
15 (WC)   Australia Alex de Minaur 34 James Duckworth 49 Max Purcell John Peers Luke Saville Lleyton Hewitt
16   France Ugo Humbert 35 Arthur Rinderknech 58 Édouard Roger-Vasselin Fabrice Martin Nicolas Copin
  • Rankings are as of 27 December 2021.

Group stage edit

The 16 teams were divided into four groups of four teams each in a round-robin format. The winners of each group will qualify for the semifinals.[1]

Qualified for the knockout stage
Eliminated

Overview edit

G = Group, T = Ties, M = Matches, S = Sets

G Winner Second place Third place Fourth place
Nation T M S Nation T M S Nation T M S Nation T M S
A   Spain 3–0 8–1 17–3   Chile 2–1 4–5 10–12   Serbia 1–2 4–5 9–12   Norway 0–3 2–7 5–14
B   Russia 3–0 7–2 15–8   Australia 2–1 4–5 9–12   Italy 1–2 5–4 12–9   France 0–3 2–7 8–15
C*   Canada 2–1 4–5 9–12   Great Britain 2–1 5–4 11–9   Germany 1–2 4–5 10–11   United States 1–2 5–4 12–10
D   Poland 3–0 8–1 17–4   Argentina 2–1 6–3 12–8   Greece 1–2 3–6 9–13   Georgia 0–3 1–8 4–17
  • Two-way ties between teams in Group C broken by head-to-head records

Group A edit

Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Spain 3–0 8–1 17–3 85.0% 108–71 60.3%
2   Chile 2–1 4–5 10–12 45.5% 86–88 49.4%
3   Serbia 1–2 4–5 9–12 42.9% 85–89 48.9%
4   Norway 0–3 2–7 5–14 26.3% 75–106 41.4%

Chile vs. Spain edit

 
Chile
0
Ken Rosewall Arena
1 January 2022
 
Spain
3
1 2 3
1  
 
Alejandro Tabilo
Pablo Carreño Busta
4
6
64
77
   
2  
 
Cristian Garín
Roberto Bautista Agut
0
6
3
6
   
3  
 
Tomás Barrios Vera / Alejandro Tabilo
Alejandro Davidovich Fokina / Pedro Martínez
63
77
6
4
[7]
[10]
 

Serbia vs. Norway edit

 
Serbia
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
1 January 2022
 
Norway
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Filip Krajinović
Viktor Durasovic
6
2
7
5
   
2  
 
Dušan Lajović
Casper Ruud
3
6
5
7
   
3  
 
Nikola Ćaćić / Filip Krajinović
Viktor Durasovic / Casper Ruud
77
63
6
3
   

Norway vs. Spain edit

 
Norway
0
Sydney Super Dome
3 January 2022
 
Spain
3
1 2 3
1  
 
Viktor Durasovic
Pablo Carreño Busta
3
6
3
6
   
2  
 
Casper Ruud
Roberto Bautista Agut
4
6
64
77
   
3  
 
Lukas Hellum Lilleengen / Andreja Petrovic
Alejandro Davidovich Fokina / Pedro Martínez
4
6
1
6
   

Serbia vs. Chile edit

 
Serbia
1
Sydney Super Dome
3 January 2022
 
Chile
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Filip Krajinović
Alejandro Tabilo
6
4
3
6
77
65
 
2  
 
Dušan Lajović
Cristian Garín
6
4
4
6
0
3
retired
 
3  
 
Nikola Ćaćić / Matej Sabanov
Tomás Barrios Vera / Alejandro Tabilo
4
6
6
3
[7]
[10]
 

Note: By ATP Cup rules a retired match counts as a straight-set win or loss, but not into percentage of games.[6]

Norway vs. Chile edit

 
Norway
1
Ken Rosewall Arena
5 January 2022
 
Chile
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Viktor Durasovic
Alejandro Tabilo
1
6
77
65
1
6
 
2  
 
Casper Ruud
Cristian Garín
6
4
6
1
   
3  
 
Andreja Petrovic / Leyton Rivera
Tomás Barrios Vera / Alejandro Tabilo
0
6
4
6
   

Serbia vs. Spain edit

 
Serbia
1
Ken Rosewall Arena
5 January 2022
 
Spain
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Filip Krajinović
Pablo Carreño Busta
3
6
4
6
   
2  
 
Dušan Lajović
Roberto Bautista Agut
1
6
4
6
   
3  
 
Nikola Ćaćić / Matej Sabanov
Pedro Martínez / Albert Ramos Viñolas
65
77
6
3
[10]
[5]
 

Group B edit

Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Russia 3–0 7–2 15–8 65.2% 120–107 52.9%
2   Australia 2–1 4–5 9–12 42.9% 96–100 49.0%
3   Italy 1–2 5–4 12–9 57.1% 105–98 51.7%
4   France 0–3 2–7 8–15 34.8% 106–122 46.5%

Russia vs. France edit

 
Russia
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
2 January 2022
 
France
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Roman Safiullin
Arthur Rinderknech
2
6
7
5
6
3
 
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Ugo Humbert
77
65
5
7
62
77
 
3  
 
Daniil Medvedev / Roman Safiullin
Fabrice Martin / Édouard Roger-Vasselin
6
4
6
4
   

Italy vs Australia edit

 
Italy
1
Ken Rosewall Arena
2 January 2022
 
Australia
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Jannik Sinner
Max Purcell
6
1
6
3
   
2  
 
Matteo Berrettini
Alex de Minaur
3
6
64
77
   
3  
 
Matteo Berrettini / Simone Bolelli
John Peers / Luke Saville
3
6
5
7
   

Italy vs. France edit

 
Italy
3
Sydney Super Dome
4 January 2022
 
France
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Jannik Sinner
Arthur Rinderknech
6
3
77
63
   
2  
 
Matteo Berrettini
Ugo Humbert
6
4
78
66
   
3  
 
Matteo Berrettini / Jannik Sinner
Fabrice Martin / Édouard Roger-Vasselin
6
3
67
79
[10]
[8]
 

Russia vs Australia edit

 
Russia
3
Sydney Super Dome
4 January 2022
 
Australia
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Roman Safiullin
James Duckworth
78
66
6
4
   
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Alex de Minaur
6
4
6
2
   
3  
 
Daniil Medvedev / Roman Safiullin
John Peers / Luke Saville
79
67
3
6
[10]
[6]
 

Russia vs. Italy edit

 
Russia
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
6 January 2022
 
Italy
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Roman Safiullin
Jannik Sinner
66
78
3
6
   
2  
 
Daniil Medvedev
Matteo Berrettini
6
2
65
77
6
4
 
3  
 
Daniil Medvedev / Roman Safiullin
Matteo Berrettini / Jannik Sinner
5
7
6
4
[10]
[5]
 

Australia vs. France edit

 
Australia
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
6 January 2022
 
France
1
1 2 3
1  
 
James Duckworth
Arthur Rinderknech
4
6
66
78
   
2  
 
Alex de Minaur
Ugo Humbert
3
6
77
62
6
1
 
3  
 
John Peers / Luke Saville
Fabrice Martin / Édouard Roger-Vasselin
6
2
5
7
[11]
[9]
 

Group C edit

Pos.* Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Canada 2–1 4–5 9–12 42.9% 100–108 48.1%
2   Great Britain 2–1 5–4 11–9 55.0% 97–94 50.8%
3   Germany 1–2 4–5 10–11 47.6% 96–108 47.1%
4   United States 1–2 5–4 12–10 54.5% 117–100 53.9%
  • Two-way ties between teams broken by head-to-head records.

Canada vs. United States edit

 
Canada
0
Sydney Super Dome
2 January 2022
 
United States
3
1 2 3
1  
 
Brayden Schnur
John Isner
1
6
3
6
   
2  
 
Félix Auger-Aliassime
Taylor Fritz
78
66
4
6
4
6
 
3  
 
Félix Auger-Aliassime / Denis Shapovalov
Taylor Fritz / John Isner
4
6
4
6
   

Germany vs. Great Britain edit

 
Germany
1
Sydney Super Dome
2 January 2022
 
Great Britain
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Jan-Lennard Struff
Dan Evans
1
6
2
6
   
2  
 
Alexander Zverev
Cameron Norrie
77
62
6
1
   
3  
 
Kevin Krawietz / Alexander Zverev
Dan Evans / Jamie Murray
3
6
4
6
   

Germany vs. United States edit

 
Germany
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
4 January 2022
 
United States
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Jan-Lennard Struff
John Isner
79
67
4
6
7
5
 
2  
 
Alexander Zverev
Taylor Fritz
6
4
6
4
   
3  
 
Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz
Taylor Fritz / John Isner
0
6
3
6
   

Canada vs. Great Britain edit

 
Canada
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
4 January 2022
 
Great Britain
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Denis Shapovalov
Dan Evans
4
6
4
6
   
2  
 
Félix Auger-Aliassime
Cameron Norrie
77
64
6
3
   
3  
 
Félix Auger-Aliassime / Denis Shapovalov
Jamie Murray / Joe Salisbury
6
4
6
1
   

Great Britain vs. United States edit

 
Great Britain
2
Sydney Super Dome
6 January 2022
 
United States
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Dan Evans
John Isner
6
4
77
63
   
2  
 
Cameron Norrie
Taylor Fritz
64
77
6
3
1
6
 
3  
 
Dan Evans / Jamie Murray
Taylor Fritz / John Isner
63
77
7
5
[10]
[8]
 

Germany vs. Canada edit

 
Germany
1
Sydney Super Dome
6 January 2022
 
Canada
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Jan-Lennard Struff
Denis Shapovalov
65
77
6
4
3
6
 
2  
 
Alexander Zverev
Félix Auger-Aliassime
4
6
6
4
3
6
 
3  
 
Kevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz
Steven Diez / Brayden Schnur
6
3
6
4
   

Group D edit

Pos. Country Ties Matches Sets Sets % Games Games %
1   Poland 3–0 8–1 17–4 81.0% 117–68 63.2%
2   Argentina 2–1 6–3 12–8 60.0% 104–77 57.5%
3   Greece 1–2 3–6 9–13 40.9% 70–93 42.9%
4   Georgia 0–3 1–8 4–17 19.0% 47–100 32.0%

Argentina vs. Georgia edit

 
Argentina
3
Sydney Super Dome
1 January 2022
 
Georgia
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Federico Delbonis
Aleksandre Metreveli
6
1
6
2
   
2  
 
Diego Schwartzman
Nikoloz Basilashvili
6
1
6
2
   
3  
 
Máximo González / Andrés Molteni
Saba Purtseladze / Zura Tkemaladze
6
1
6
2
   

Greece vs. Poland edit

 
Greece
1
Sydney Super Dome
1 January 2022
 
Poland
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Michail Pervolarakis
Kamil Majchrzak
1
6
4
6
   
2  
 
Aristotelis Thanos
Hubert Hurkacz
1
6
2
6
   
3  
 
Michail Pervolarakis / Stefanos Tsitsipas
Hubert Hurkacz / Jan Zieliński
6
4
5
7
[10]
[8]
 

Poland vs. Georgia edit

 
Poland
3
Ken Rosewall Arena
3 January 2022
 
Georgia
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Kamil Majchrzak
Aleksandre Bakshi
6
1
6
1
   
2  
 
Hubert Hurkacz
Aleksandre Metreveli
65
77
6
3
6
1
 
3  
 
Szymon Walków / Jan Zieliński
Aleksandre Bakshi / Zura Tkemaladze
62
77
6
2
[10]
[6]
 

Greece vs. Argentina edit

 
Greece
0
Ken Rosewall Arena
3 January 2022
 
Argentina
3
1 2 3
1  
 
Michail Pervolarakis
Federico Delbonis
65
77
1
6
   
2  
 
Stefanos Tsitsipas
Diego Schwartzman
77
65
3
6
3
6
 
3  
 
Markos Kalovelonis / Petros Tsitsipas
Máximo González / Andrés Molteni
3
6
6
4
[9]
[11]
 

Poland vs. Argentina edit

 
Poland
3
Sydney Super Dome
5 January 2022
 
Argentina
0
1 2 3
1  
 
Kamil Majchrzak
Federico Delbonis
6
3
77
63
   
2  
 
Hubert Hurkacz
Diego Schwartzman
6
1
6
4
   
3  
 
Szymon Walków / Jan Zieliński
Máximo González / Andrés Molteni
77
64
77
65
   

Greece vs. Georgia edit

 
Greece
2
Sydney Super Dome
5 January 2022
 
Georgia
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Michail Pervolarakis
Aleksandre Metreveli
6
3
6
2
   
2  
 
Stefanos Tsitsipas
Nikoloz Basilashvili
4
1
     
retired
3  
 
Michail Pervolarakis / Stefanos Tsitsipas
Aleksandre Bakshi / Aleksandre Metreveli
6
4
3
6
[14]
[16]
 

Note: By ATP Cup rules a retired match counts as a straight-set win or loss, but not into percentage of games.[6]

Knockout stage edit

Bracket edit

Semifinals Final
      
12   Spain 2
7   Poland 1
12   Spain 0
8   Canada 2
8   Canada 2
2   Russia 1

Semifinals edit

Spain vs. Poland edit

 
Spain
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
7 January 2022
 
Poland
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Pablo Carreño Busta
Jan Zieliński
6
2
6
1
   
2  
 
Roberto Bautista Agut
Hubert Hurkacz
78
66
2
6
77
65
 
3  
 
Pedro Martínez / Albert Ramos Viñolas
Szymon Walków / Jan Zieliński
6
4
3
6
[6]
[10]
 

Canada vs. Russia edit

 
Canada
2
Ken Rosewall Arena
8 January 2022
 
Russia
1
1 2 3
1  
 
Denis Shapovalov
Roman Safiullin
6
4
5
7
6
4
 
2  
 
Félix Auger-Aliassime
Daniil Medvedev
4
6
0
6
   
3  
 
Félix Auger-Aliassime / Denis Shapovalov
Daniil Medvedev / Roman Safiullin
4
6
7
5
[10]
[7]
 

Final edit

Spain vs. Canada edit

 
Spain
0
Ken Rosewall Arena
9 January 2022
 
Canada
2
1 2 3
1  
 
Pablo Carreño Busta
Denis Shapovalov
4
6
3
6
   
2  
 
Roberto Bautista Agut
Félix Auger-Aliassime
63
77
3
6
   
3  
 
Alejandro Davidovich Fokina / Pedro Martínez
Félix Auger-Aliassime / Denis Shapovalov
      not
played

References edit

  1. ^ a b "FAQ ATP Cup 2022". The Switzerland Times. 1 December 2021. Archived from the original on 2 December 2021. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Sydney to host ATP Cup as part of bumper Australian Open warm-up schedule". Reuters. 25 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Felix Fantastic To Clinch ATP Cup For Canada". atpcup.com. 9 January 2022. Archived from the original on 19 May 2022. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  4. ^ Unpopular ATP Cup to be dumped, replaced by mixed-gender tournament
  5. ^ Mixed-sex United Cup to kick off 2023 Australian tennis season
  6. ^ a b c d "ATP Official Rulebook - World Championships" (PDF). ATP Tour. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  7. ^ "ATP Cup Standings". ATP Tour. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  8. ^ "Groups Announced For 2022 ATP Cup, Field Features 18 Top 20 Players". ATP Tour. 7 December 2021.
  9. ^ "Federer to skip Australian Open and not return until mid-2022". Reuters. 17 November 2021.
  10. ^ "Rafael Nadal will not play ATP Cup ahead of Australian Open". Tennishead. 1 December 2021.
  11. ^ "Austria withdrawn from ATP Cup after Dominic Thiem, Dennis Novak withdraw". Tennis World USA. 29 December 2021. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  12. ^ "France replace Austria in ATP Cup". lecourrieraustralien. 29 December 2021. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  13. ^ a b "ATP Cup Updates: France Replaces Austria, Djokovic & Rublev Out". ATP Cup. 29 December 2021. Archived from the original on 27 August 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2021.

External links edit