2016 Kazan Kremlin Cup – Doubles

Last updated
Doubles
2016 Kazan Kremlin Cup
Champions Flag of Belarus.svg Aliaksandr Bury
Flag of Slovakia.svg Igor Zelenay
Runners-up Flag of Russia.svg Konstantin Kravchuk
Flag of Austria.svg Philipp Oswald
Final score6–2, 4–6, [10–6]
Events
Singles Doubles
  2015  · Kazan Kremlin Cup ·  2017  

Mikhail Elgin and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions but they returned with different partners.

Contents

Elgin played with Egor Gerasimov while Zelenay played with Aliaksandr Bury.

Aliaksandr Bury and Igor Zelenay won the title by defeating Konstantin Kravchuk and Philipp Oswald 6–2, 4–6, [10–6] in the final.

Seeds

  1. Flag of Belarus.svg Aliaksandr Bury / Flag of Slovakia.svg Igor Zelenay (champions)
  2. Flag of Russia.svg Konstantin Kravchuk / Flag of Austria.svg Philipp Oswald (final)
  3. Flag of Belarus.svg Yaraslav Shyla / Flag of Belarus.svg Andrei Vasilevski (quarterfinals)
  4. Flag of Italy.svg Flavio Cipolla / Flag of Italy.svg Matteo Viola (quarterfinals)

Draw

Key

Draw

First round Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
1 Flag of Belarus.svg A Bury
Flag of Slovakia.svg I Zelenay
66
WC Flag of Russia.svg Pavel Selivanovsky
Flag of Russia.svg Alexander Vasilenko
1 2 1 Flag of Belarus.svg A Bury
Flag of Slovakia.svg I Zelenay
66
WC Flag of Russia.svg Alexander Boborykin
Flag of Russia.svg Timor Kiuamov
772 [10]WC Flag of Russia.svg A Boborykin
Flag of Russia.svg T Kiuamov
3 4
Flag of France.svg D Guez
Flag of France.svg A Sidorenko
656[2] 1 Flag of Belarus.svg A Bury
Flag of Slovakia.svg I Zelenay
7106
4 Flag of Italy.svg F Cipolla
Flag of Italy.svg M Viola
w/o Flag of Belarus.svg U Ignatik
Flag of Russia.svg D Medvedev
680
Flag of Kazakhstan.svg A Nedovyesov
Flag of Estonia.svg J Zopp
4 Flag of Italy.svg F Cipolla
Flag of Italy.svg M Viola
1 1
WC Flag of Russia.svg M Kalovelonis
Flag of Russia.svg A Vatutin
1 4 Flag of Belarus.svg U Ignatik
Flag of Russia.svg D Medvedev
66
Flag of Belarus.svg U Ignatik
Flag of Russia.svg D Medvedev
661 Flag of Belarus.svg A Bury
Flag of Slovakia.svg I Zelenay
64 [10]
Flag of France.svg T Lamasine
Flag of France.svg A Olivetti
5 7[4] 2 Flag of Russia.svg K Kravchuk
Flag of Austria.svg P Oswald
2 6[6]
Flag of Russia.svg M Elgin
Flag of Belarus.svg E Gerasimov
75 [10] Flag of Russia.svg M Elgin
Flag of Belarus.svg E Gerasimov
62 [10]
Flag of Moldova.svg R Albot
Flag of Uzbekistan.svg F Dustov
4 4 3 Flag of Belarus.svg Y Shyla
Flag of Belarus.svg A Vasilevski
3 6[8]
3 Flag of Belarus.svg Y Shyla
Flag of Belarus.svg A Vasilevski
66 Flag of Russia.svg M Elgin
Flag of Belarus.svg E Gerasimov
Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg T Brkić
Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg A Šetkić
0r2 Flag of Russia.svg K Kravchuk
Flag of Austria.svg P Oswald
w/o
Flag of Serbia.svg M Janković
Flag of Serbia.svg Ilija Vučić
1 Flag of Serbia.svg M Janković
Flag of Serbia.svg I Vučić
2 5
PR Flag of Russia.svg A Karatsev
Flag of Russia.svg D Matsukevich
3 3 2 Flag of Russia.svg K Kravchuk
Flag of Austria.svg P Oswald
67
2 Flag of Russia.svg K Kravchuk
Flag of Austria.svg P Oswald
66

Related Research Articles

Jan Hájek and Robin Vik were the defending champions; however, Hajek chose to compete in Rome instead and Vik chose not to compete this year.
Martin Fischer and Philipp Oswald won in the final 2–6, 7–6(6), [10–8], against Tomasz Bednarek and Mateusz Kowalczyk.

Philipp Kohlschreiber was the defending champion but lost to Tommy Haas in the semifinals.
Eventually, Haas won the title after defeating Roger Federer in the final by 7–6(7–5), 6–4.

Andrei Dăescu and Florin Mergea were the defending champions but decided not to participate.
Dominik Meffert and Philipp Oswald won the title, defeating Stephan Fransen and Artem Sitak 6–1, 3–6, [14–12] in the final.

František Čermák and Michal Mertiňák were the defending champion, but they decided not to participate together. Čermák played alongside Filip Polášek, but lost in the first round to Rameez Junaid and Philipp Marx. Mertiňák teamed up with André Sá, but lost in the quarterfinals to Victor Baluda and Konstantin Kravchuk.
Mikhail Elgin and Denis Istomin won the title, defeating Ken Skupski and Neal Skupski in the final, 6–2, 1–6, [14–12].

Mikhail Elgin and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions, but Zelenay did not participate that year. Elgin played alongside Michal Mertiňák and they lost in the quarterfinals to Henri Kontinen and Jarkko Nieminen, who won the title, defeating Dustin Brown and Philipp Marx in the final, 7–5, 5–7, [10–5].

Flavio Cipolla and Goran Tošić are the defending champions, but did not participate.

Andreas Siljeström and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions, but Siljeström played alongside Frank Moser and lost to Marcel Granollers and Pere Riba in the first round, while Zelenay teamed with Mateusz Kowalczyk and also lost in the first round to Julian Knowle and Philipp Oswald.

František Čermák and Jiří Veselý were the defending champions, but Veselý chose not to participate. Čermák played alongside Radu Albot, but lost in the final to Andrey Rublev and Dmitry Tursunov, 6–2, 1–6, [6–10].

The 2016 Kazan Kremlin Cup was a professional tennis tournament played on hard courts. It was the seventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2016 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place in Kazan, Russia between 14 and 20 March, 2016.

Mate Pavić and Michael Venus were the defending champions, but decided not to defend their title.

Julian Knowle and Philipp Oswald were the defending champions, but Oswald chose not to compete this year.
Knowle instead competed with Marcelo Demoliner. Demoliner and Knowle lost in the first round to Facundo Bagnis and Sergio Galdós.

Sergey Betov and Mikhail Elgin were the defending champions but only Betov returned, partnering Tomasz Bednarek. Betov lost in the quarterfinals to Mateusz Kowalczyk and Antonio Šančić.

Nicolás Almagro and Carlos Berlocq were the defending champions, but Almagro chose not to participate this year and Berlocq chose to compete in Umag instead.

Andrej Martin and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions but only Zelenay returned, partnering Hans Podlipnik. Zelenay lost in the semifinals to Andre Begemann and Aliaksandr Bury.

This was the first edition of the tournament.

This was the first edition of the tournament.

Aliaksandr Bury and Igor Zelenay were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Bury partnered Ariel Behar but lost in the quarterfinals to Guillermo Durán and Andrés Molteni. Zelenay partnered Julian Knowle but lost in the first round to David Marrero and Leander Paes.

Roman Jebavý and Andrej Martin were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.

Sanchai and Sonchat Ratiwatana were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.

Marcelo Demoliner and Santiago González were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Demoliner played alongside Divij Sharan, but lost in the quarterfinals to Denys Molchanov and Igor Zelenay. González teamed up with Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, but lost in the first round to Ivan Dodig and Filip Polášek.

References