1991 Holsten International
Tennis tournament
1991 Holsten International | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Date | 8–15 October | |||
Edition | 2nd | |||
Draw | 32S / 16D | |||
Prize money | $260,000 | |||
Surface | Carpet / indoor | |||
Location | Berlin, Germany | |||
Venue | Deutschlandhalle | |||
Champions | ||||
Singles | ||||
![]() | ||||
Doubles | ||||
![]() ![]() | ||||
|
The 1991 Holsten International, also known as the European Indoor Championships, was an ATP men's tennis tournament held at the Deutschlandhalle in Berlin, Germany. The tournament was played on indoor carpet and was held from 8 October until 15 October 1991.
Petr Korda won his eighth career title and his fourth of the year by defeating Arnaud Boetsch in the final.[3]
Finals
Singles
Petr Korda defeated
Arnaud Boetsch, 6–3, 6–4
- It was Korda's 2nd singles title of the year and of his career.
Doubles
Petr Korda /
Karel Nováček defeated
Jan Siemerink /
Daniel Vacek, 3–6, 7–5, 7–5
References
External links
- ITF tournament edition details
- v
- t
- e
1991 IBM ATP Tour
« 1990
1992 »
- Brussels (S, D)
- Philadelphia (S, D)
- Memphis (S, D)
- Stuttgart Indoor (S, D)
- Tokyo Outdoor (S, D)
- Barcelona (S, D)
- Stuttgart Outdoor (S, D)
- Washington (S, D)
- Indianapolis (S, D)
- New Haven (S, D)
- Sydney Indoor (S, D)
- Tokyo Indoor (S, D)
- Adelaide (S, D)
- Wellington (S, D)
- Sydney Outdoor (S, D)
- Auckland (S, D)
- San Francisco (S, D)
- Guarujá I (S, D)
- Milan (S, D)
- Rotterdam (S, D)
- Chicago (S, D)
- Copenhagen (S, D)
- Casablanca (S, D)
- Orlando (S, D)
- Estoril (S, D)
- Hong Kong (S, D)
- Seoul (S, D)
- Nice (S, D)
- Singapore (S, D)
- Munich (S, D)
- Madrid (S, D)
- Charlotte (S, D)
- Umag (S, D)
- Bologna (S, D)
- Rosmalen (S, D)
- Florence (S, D)
- London/Queen's Club (S, D)
- Genoa (S, D)
- Manchester (S, D)
- Gstaad (S, D)
- Newport (S, D)
- Båstad (S, D)
- Hilversum (S, D)
- Kitzbühel (S, D)
- Los Angeles (S, D)
- San Marino (S, D)
- Prague (S, D)
- Long Island (S, D)
- Schenectady (S, D)
- Geneva (S, D)
- Brasília (S, D)
- Bordeaux (S, D)
- Palermo (S, D)
- Brisbane (S, D)
- Basel (S, D)
- Athens (S, D)
- Toulouse (S, D)
- Tel Aviv (S, D)
- Berlin (S, D)
- Lyon (S, D)
- Vienna (S, D)
- Guarujá II (S, D)
- Búzios (S, D)
- São Paulo (S, D)
- Birmingham (S, D)
- Moscow (S, D)
- Davis Cup
- World Team Cup
ATP Tour World Championships, Frankfurt (S, D)
![]() | This tennis-related competition article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e