2001 Copa Ericsson Chile – Singles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Singles
2001 Copa Ericsson Chile
Final
ChampionChile Marcelo Ríos
Runner-upArgentina Edgardo Massa
Score6–4, 6–2
Events
Singles Doubles
← 2000 · Copa Ericsson Chile · 2002 →

Diego Moyano was the defending champion,[1] but was forced to withdraw due to an injury.

Marcelo Ríos won the title by defeating Edgardo Massa 6–4, 6–2 in the final.[2]

Seeds[edit]

  1. Chile Marcelo Ríos (champion)
  2. Argentina David Nalbandian (second round)
  3. Argentina Mariano Zabaleta (second round)
  4. Argentina José Acasuso (quarterfinals)
  5. Argentina Juan Ignacio Chela (withdrew due to a foot injury)
  6. Brazil Alexandre Simoni (quarterfinals)
  7. Brazil André Sá (semifinals)
  8. Argentina Agustín Calleri (semifinals)
  9. Brazil Flávio Saretta (second round)

Draw[edit]

Key[edit]

Finals[edit]

Semifinals Final
          
1/WC Chile Marcelo Ríos 6 7
8 Argentina Agustín Calleri 4 5
1/WC Chile Marcelo Ríos 6 6
Argentina Edgardo Massa 4 2
7 Brazil André Sá 2 3
Argentina Edgardo Massa 6 6

Top half[edit]

First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals
1/WC Chile M Ríos 4 6 7
Chile F González 6 4 5 1/WC Chile M Ríos 6 6
WC Chile A García 7 6 WC Chile A García 3 1
Brazil D Melo 5 4 1/WC Chile M Ríos 6 6
Q Federal Republic of Yugoslavia D Vemić 77 6 6 Brazil A Simoni 0 4
Costa Rica JA Marín 65 4 Q Federal Republic of Yugoslavia D Vemić 6 2 3
Peru L Horna 4 3 6 Brazil A Simoni 3 6 6
6 Brazil A Simoni 6 6 1/WC Chile M Ríos 6 7
3 Argentina M Zabaleta 65 6 6 8 Argentina A Calleri 4 5
Spain M López 77 2 1 3 Argentina M Zabaleta 3 77 3
SE Norway JF Andersen 6 78 SE Norway JF Andersen 6 60 6
United States H Armando 4 66 SE Norway JF Andersen 2 4
WC Chile H Gamonal 6 1 4 8 Argentina A Calleri 6 6
Brazil R Mello 4 6 6 Brazil R Mello 4 3
Q Argentina S Roitman 4 66 8 Argentina A Calleri 6 6
8 Argentina A Calleri 6 78

Bottom half[edit]

First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals
7 Brazil A Sá 3
Spain G Puentes 0 r 7 Brazil A Sá 6 6
Germany T Behrend 64 3 Q Argentina S Prieto 4 2
Q Argentina S Prieto 77 6 7 Brazil A Sá 77 6
Argentina F Browne 4 6 6 4 Argentina J Acasuso 65 4
LL Argentina G Etlis 6 3 2 Argentina F Browne 2 2
Italy S Galvani 3 2 4 Argentina J Acasuso 6 6
4 Argentina J Acasuso 6 6 7 Brazil A Sá 2 3
9 Brazil F Saretta 4 6 6 Argentina E Massa 6 6
WC Chile J Aguilar 6 3 2 9 Brazil F Saretta 5 6 4
Argentina E Massa 6 0 6 Argentina E Massa 7 1 6
LL Spain D Pérez 4 6 2 Argentina E Massa 6 4 7
SE Argentina C Kordasz 6 7 SE Argentina C Kordasz 3 6 5
Spain F López 4 5 SE Argentina C Kordasz 3 77 77
Germany O Gross 4 4 2 Argentina D Nalbandian 6 65 65
2 Argentina D Nalbandian 6 6

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Argentino Diego Moyano ganó la Copa Ericsson en Santiago" [Argentine Diego Moyano won the Copa Ericsson in Santiago] (in Spanish). Santiago: El Mercurio. AFP. 12 November 2000. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  2. ^ Pérez, Carlos (4 November 2015). "Efemérides: Recordamos el último título de Marcelo Ríos y el tercer intento de Martín Vargas por ser campeón mundial" [Anniversaries: we remember Marcelo Ríos' last title and Martín Vargas' third attempt for becoming World Champion] (in Spanish). El Mostrador. Retrieved 20 August 2018.

External links[edit]