2019 Chennai Open Challenger – Doubles

Last updated
Doubles
2019 Chennai Open Challenger
Final
Champions Flag of Italy.svg Gianluca Mager
Flag of Italy.svg Andrea Pellegrino
Runners-up Flag of Australia (converted).svg Matt Reid
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Luke Saville
Score6–4, 7–6(9–7)
Events
Singles Doubles
  2018  · Chennai Open Challenger ·  2023  

Sriram Balaji and Vishnu Vardhan were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.

Contents

Gianluca Mager and Andrea Pellegrino won the title after defeating Matt Reid and Luke Saville 6–4, 7–6(9–7) in the final.

Seeds

  1. Flag of Australia (converted).svg Matt Reid / Flag of Australia (converted).svg Luke Saville (final)
  2. Flag of Croatia.svg Tomislav Draganja / Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg Yang Tsung-hua (semifinals)
  3. Flag of India.svg Arjun Kadhe / Flag of India.svg Saketh Myneni (first round)
  4. Flag of Sweden.svg André Göransson / Flag of Finland.svg Harri Heliövaara (semifinals)

Draw

Key

First round Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
1 Flag of Australia (converted).svg M Reid
Flag of Australia (converted).svg L Saville
776
Flag of Australia (converted).svg B Ellis
Flag of Australia (converted).svg B Mousley
644 1 Flag of Australia (converted).svg M Reid
Flag of Australia (converted).svg L Saville
66
WC Flag of India.svg Sidharth Rawat
Flag of India.svg Manish Sureshkumar
656[10]WC Flag of India.svg S Rawat
Flag of India.svg M Sureshkumar
2 2
WC Flag of India.svg A Chandrasekar
Flag of India.svg Abhinav Sanjeev Shanmugam
772 [5] 1 Flag of Australia (converted).svg M Reid
Flag of Australia (converted).svg L Saville
66
4 Flag of Sweden.svg A Göransson
Flag of Finland.svg H Heliövaara
w/o4 Flag of Sweden.svg A Göransson
Flag of Finland.svg H Heliövaara
4 3
Flag of Spain.svg A Davidovich Fokina
Flag of France.svg C Moutet
4 Flag of Sweden.svg A Göransson
Flag of Finland.svg H Heliövaara
66
Flag of Lithuania.svg L Grigelis
Flag of Egypt.svg M Safwat
71067[8] Flag of Russia.svg I Gakhov
Flag of Russia.svg A Pavlioutchenkov
3 4
Flag of Russia.svg I Gakhov
Flag of Russia.svg A Pavlioutchenkov
6879[10]1 Flag of Australia (converted).svg M Reid
Flag of Australia (converted).svg L Saville
4 67
Flag of India.svg VS Prashanth
Flag of New Zealand.svg R Statham
66 Flag of Italy.svg G Mager
Flag of Italy.svg A Pellegrino
679
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg B Klein
Flag of Japan.svg T Matsui
4 4 Flag of India.svg VS Prashanth
Flag of New Zealand.svg R Statham
3 1
Flag of Italy.svg G Mager
Flag of Italy.svg A Pellegrino
776 Flag of Italy.svg G Mager
Flag of Italy.svg A Pellegrino
66
3 Flag of India.svg A Kadhe
Flag of India.svg S Myneni
643 Flag of Italy.svg G Mager
Flag of Italy.svg A Pellegrino
66
WC Flag of Vietnam.svg NH Lý
Flag of India.svg S Nagal
662 Flag of Croatia.svg T Draganja
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg T-h Yang
0 4
ITF Flag of Russia.svg I Nedelko
Flag of Russia.svg A Zhurbin
1 2 WC Flag of Vietnam.svg NH Lý
Flag of India.svg S Nagal
ITF Flag of the United States.svg JP Fruttero
Flag of Spain.svg D Pérez Sanz
4 6[11] 2 Flag of Croatia.svg T Draganja
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg T-h Yang
w/o
2 Flag of Croatia.svg T Draganja
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg T-h Yang
62 [13]

Related Research Articles

Nicolas Mahut was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Samuel Groth.
Lleyton Hewitt won the title, defeating Ivo Karlović in the final, 6–3, 6–7(4–7), 7–6(7–3).

Radu Albot and Mitchell Krueger are the defending champions, but chose not to defend their title.

Carsten Ball and Brydan Klein were the defending champions but only Klein returned, partnering Andrew Whittington. Klein lost in the first round to Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan and Ramkumar Ramanathan.

Dayne Kelly and Marinko Matosevic were the defending champions but only Kelly defended his title, partnering Christopher O'Connell. Kelly lost in the first round to Jarmere Jenkins and Anderson Reed.

The men's doubles event was held at the 2016 Canberra Tennis International in Canberra, Australia.

Carsten Ball and Matt Reid were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.

James Cerretani and Max Schnur were the defending champions, but decided not to participate this year.

Matt Reid and John-Patrick Smith 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.

Matt Reid and John-Patrick Smith were the defending champions but only Reid chose to defend his title, partnering Steven de Waard. Reid lost in the first round to Andrew Harris and Christopher O'Connell.

Luke Saville and Jordan Thompson were the defending champions but only Saville chose to defend his title, partnering Andrew Whittington. Saville lost in the final to Alex Bolt and Bradley Mousley.

Bradley Mousley and Luke Saville were the defending champions but chose to defend their title with different partners. Mousley partnered Alex Bolt and successfully defended his title. Saville partnered Matt Reid but lost in the quarterfinals to Max Purcell and Andrew Whittington.

Dino Marcan and Tristan-Samuel Weissborn were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.

Alex Bolt and Max Purcell were the defending champions but only Purcell chose to defend his title, partnering Lloyd Harris. Purcell lost in the semifinals to Joris De Loore and Marc Polmans.

Dominik Köpfer and Denis Kudla were the defending champions but only Köpfer chose to defend his title, partnering Andrew Harris. Köpfer lost in the first round to Martin Joyce and J. J. Wolf.

Alex Bolt and Bradley Mousley were the defending champions but only Mousley chose to defend his title, partnering Pedro Martínez. Mousley lost in the first round to Hiroki Moriya and Mohamed Safwat.

Jeremy Beale and Marc Polmans were the defending champions but only Polmans chose to defend his title, partnering Evan King. Polmans lost in the first round to Marcelo Tomás Barrios Vera and Alejandro Tabilo.

Max Purcell and Luke Saville were the defending champions but chose not to defend their title.

Łukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo were the defending champions, but they decided to participate in Dubai instead.

Rohan Bopanna and Ramkumar Ramanathan defeated Luke Saville and John-Patrick Smith in the final, 6–7(10–12), 6–3, [10–6] to win the doubles tennis title at the 2022 Tata Open Maharashtra. It was their second title as a team and marked Bopanna's 21st individual career ATP Tour doubles title and Ramanathan's second. Saville and Smith were contesting their first ATP Tour doubles final together.

References