2010 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament

The 2010 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 38th edition of the event known as the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2010 ATP World Tour. It took place at the Rotterdam Ahoy indoor sporting arena in Rotterdam, Netherlands, from 8 February through 14 February 2010. Third-seeded Robin Söderling won the singles title.

2010 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament
Date8–14 February
Edition38th
CategoryATP World Tour 500
Draw32S / 16D
Prize money€1,150,000
SurfaceHard court / indoor
LocationRotterdam, Netherlands
VenueRotterdam Ahoy
Champions
Singles
Sweden Robin Söderling[1]
Doubles
Canada Daniel Nestor / Serbia Nenad Zimonjić[2]
Wheelchair singles
France Stéphane Houdet
← 2009 · ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament · 2011 →

The field was led by newly crowned world no. 2 Novak Djokovic, world no. 6, 2010 Qatar ExxonMobil Open champion Nikolay Davydenko and 2009 French Open finalist Robin Söderling. Other players included Gaël Monfils, Tommy Robredo, Mikhail Youzhny and Ivan Ljubičić.

Finals

edit

Singles

edit

  Robin Söderling defeated   Mikhail Youzhny, 6–4, 2–0, ret.

  • It was Söderling's first title of the year and 5th of his career.

Doubles

edit

  Daniel Nestor /   Nenad Zimonjić defeated   Simon Aspelin /   Paul Hanley, 6–4, 4–6, [10–7]

Entrants

edit

Seeds

edit
Country Player Rank1 Seed
  SRB Novak Djokovic 2 1
  RUS Nikolay Davydenko 6 2
  SWE Robin Söderling 8 3
  FRA Gaël Monfils 13 4
  ESP Tommy Robredo 15 5
  RUS Mikhail Youzhny 20 6
  CRO Ivan Ljubičić 24 7
  SRB Viktor Troicki 31 8
  • 1 Rankings as of February 1, 2010.

Other entrants

edit

The following players received wildcards into the main draw:

The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:

The following player received the lucky loser spot:

References

edit
  1. ^ "2010 Rotterdam – Singles draw". Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
  2. ^ "2010 Rotterdam – Doubles draw". Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP).
edit