1988 Geneva Open – Singles

Singles
1988 Geneva Open
Champion Czechoslovakia Marián Vajda
Runner-up Sweden Kent Carlsson
Final score 6–4, 6–4
Main article: 1988 Geneva Open

Claudio Mezzadri was the defending champion, but lost in the second round this year.

Marián Vajda won the title, defeating Kent Carlsson 6–4, 6–4 in the final.

Seeds

  1. Sweden Kent Carlsson (Final)
  2. Argentina Guillermo Pérez-Roldán (First Round)
  3. Spain Jordi Arrese (Quarterfinals)
  4. Sweden Magnus Gustafsson (First Round)
  5. Switzerland Claudio Mezzadri (Second Round)
  6. Czechoslovakia Tomáš Šmíd (First Round)
  7. Spain Fernando Luna (Quarterfinals)
  8. Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bruno Orešar (Second Round)

Draw

Key

Finals

  Semifinals Final
                         
  1  Sweden Kent Carlsson 6 6    
   Argentina Horacio de la Peña 2 2    
  1  Sweden Kent Carlsson 4 4  
     Czechoslovakia Marián Vajda 6 6  
   Argentina Eduardo Bengoechea 5 1  
     Czechoslovakia Marián Vajda 7 6    

Top Half

First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals
1 Sweden K Carlsson 6 6  
Q Sweden R Båthman 1 3   1 Sweden K Carlsson 6 1 6
  Uruguay D Pérez 6 6 4 WC Switzerland R Stadler 2 6 0
WC Switzerland R Stadler 4 7 6 1 Sweden K Carlsson 6 6  
WC Switzerland M Rosset 6 2 2 7 Spain F Luna 1 2  
  West Germany T Meinecke 1 6 6   West Germany T Meinecke 6 2  
WC West Germany A Thoms 3 1   7 Spain F Luna 7 6  
7 Spain F Luna 6 6   1 Sweden K Carlsson 6 6  
4 Sweden M Gustafsson 4 4     Argentina H de la Peña 2 2  
  Sweden C Bergström 6 6     Sweden C Bergström 6 6  
Q Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia I Flego 6 6 7 Q Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia I Flego 2 2  
Q Hungary Z Kuharszky 7 4 6   Sweden C Bergström 2 5  
Q Netherlands M Koevermans 7 4 6   Argentina H de la Peña 6 7  
  Argentina H de la Peña 6 6 7   Argentina H de la Peña 7 6  
  Sweden J Gunnarsson 7 6     Sweden J Gunnarsson 6 2  
6 Czechoslovakia T Šmíd 6 4  

Bottom Half

First RoundSecond RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinals
5 Switzerland C Mezzadri 6 6  
  Belgium E Masso 4 2   5 Switzerland C Mezzadri 2 2  
  Argentina E Bengoechea 6 6     Argentina E Bengoechea 6 6  
  Spain J Aguilera 1 1     Argentina E Bengoechea 6 6  
  Spain A Tous 6 3 4 3 Spain J Arrese 1 2  
  Spain J Colas 2 6 6   Spain J Colas 1 3  
  Romania F Segărceanu 6 1   3 Spain J Arrese 6 6  
3 Spain J Arrese 7 6     Argentina E Bengoechea 5 1  
8 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia B Orešar 7 6     Czechoslovakia M Vajda 7 6  
  New Zealand S Guy 6 1   8 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia B Orešar 6 2 4
  France J Potier 6 6 5   Chile P Rebolledo 1 6 6
  Chile P Rebolledo 2 7 7   Chile P Rebolledo 3 2  
  Peru P Arraya 6 6 6   Czechoslovakia M Vajda 6 6  
  Brazil C Motta 7 0 1   Peru P Arraya 6 3 3
  Czechoslovakia M Vajda 6 6 6   Czechoslovakia M Vajda 3 6 6
2 Argentina G Pérez-Roldán 4 7 3

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.