2006 Dutch Open – Singles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Singles
2006 Dutch Open
ChampionSerbia Novak Djokovic
Runner-upChile Nicolás Massú
Final score7–6(7–5), 6–4
Details
Draw32
Seeds8
Events
Singles Doubles
← 2005 · Dutch Open · 2007 →

Fernando González was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.

Novak Djokovic won the tournament (his first career title[1]), beating Nicolás Massú in the final, 7–6(7–5), 6–4.

Seeds[]

  1. Argentina Guillermo Coria (semifinals, retired due to a right shoulder injury)
  2. France Paul-Henri Mathieu (second round)
  3. Serbia Novak Djokovic (champion)
  4. Chile Nicolás Massú (final)
  5. Spain Carlos Moyá (quarterfinals)
  6. Spain Alberto Martín (quarterfinals)
  7. Italy Daniele Bracciali (second round)
  8. France Julien Benneteau (first round)

Draw[]

Key[]

  • Q = Qualifier
  • WC = Wild card
  • LL = Lucky loser
  • Alt = Alternate
  • SE = Special exempt
  • PR = Protected ranking
  • ITF = ITF entry
  • JE = Junior exempt
  • w/o = Walkover
  • r = Retired
  • d = Defaulted

Finals[]

Semifinals Final
          
1 Argentina Guillermo Coria 2 0r  
3 Serbia Novak Djokovic 6 1  
3 Serbia Novak Djokovic 77 6  
4 Chile Nicolás Massú 65 4  
4 Chile Nicolás Massú 6 6  
  Spain Rubén Ramírez Hidalgo 1 3  

Top half[]

First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals
1 Argentina G Coria 6 4 6
WC Netherlands R Haase 3 6 4 1 Argentina G Coria 7 4 6
  Argentina S Roitman 6 6     Argentina S Roitman 5 6 2
SE Croatia M Čilić 3 1   1 Argentina G Coria 6 77  
  Germany D Gremelmayr 2 65     Argentina A Calleri 3 64  
  Argentina A Calleri 6 77     Argentina A Calleri 1 77 6
WC Netherlands I Sijsling 77 4 2 7 Italy D Bracciali 6 62 0
7 Italy D Bracciali 65 6 6 1 Argentina G Coria 2 0r  
3 Serbia N Djokovic 6 6   3 Serbia N Djokovic 6 1  
  Serbia B Pašanski 0 3   3 Serbia N Djokovic 6 6  
Q Belgium S Darcis 5 3     Czech Republic T Zíb 4 2  
  Czech Republic T Zíb 7 6   3 Serbia N Djokovic 6 6  
  France M Gicquel 6 6     France M Gicquel 3 4  
  Spain F Vicente 2 4     France M Gicquel 4 6 6
WC Netherlands T de Bakker 6 6   WC Netherlands T de Bakker 6 3 2
8 France J Benneteau 3 3  

Bottom half[]

First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals
5 Spain C Moyá 6 78  
  Spain G García-López 4 66   5 Spain C Moyá 7 6  
Q Italy F Fognini 6 1 7 Q Italy F Fognini 5 3  
Q Argentina JP Guzmán 3 6 5 5 Spain C Moyá 5 4  
  Costa Rica JA Marín 6 7   4 Chile N Massú 7 6  
  Italy D Sanguinetti 2 5     Costa Rica JA Marín 4 62  
Q Sweden A Vinciguerra 63 3   4 Chile N Massú 6 77  
4 Chile N Massú 77 6   4 Chile N Massú 6 6  
6 Spain A Martín 6 6     Spain R Ramírez Hidalgo 1 3  
  Spain A Montañés 2 2   6 Spain A Martín 6 6  
  Czech Republic I Minář 4 3     Argentina E Massa 2 4  
  Argentina E Massa 6 6   6 Spain A Martín 2 2  
  Argentina C Berlocq 77 3 3   Spain R Ramírez Hidalgo 6 6  
  Spain R Ramírez Hidalgo 64 6 6   Spain R Ramírez Hidalgo 6 6  
  Italy A di Mauro 0 3   2 France P-H Mathieu 4 2  
2 France P-H Mathieu 6 6  

References[]

  1. ^ "Djokovic's Breakthrough: 10 Years On..." Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). 21 July 2016.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""