Tennis at the 2024 Summer Olympics
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Tennis at the Games of the Olympiad
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Tennis pictogram for the 2024 Summer Olympics
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Venue | Stade Roland Garros |
Dates | 27 July – 4 August 2024 |
No. of events | 5 (2 men, 2 women, 1 mixed) |
Competitors | 175 from 40+1 nations |
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Tennis at the 2024 Summer Olympics | |
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Edition | 19th |
Surface | Clay |
Champions | |
Men's Singles | |
Novak Djokovic (SRB) | |
Women's Singles | |
Zheng Qinwen (CHN) | |
Men's Doubles | |
Matthew Ebden & John Peers (AUS) | |
Women's Doubles | |
Sara Errani & Jasmine Paolini (ITA) | |
Mixed Doubles | |
Kateřina Siniaková & Tomáš Macháč (CZE) |
The tennis tournaments at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris ran from 27 July to 4 August at the Stade Roland Garros.[1] The event featured a total of 175 players across five medal events: singles and doubles for both men and women and mixed doubles.[2][3]
Similar to previous editions, the Paris 2024 format was set in a single-elimination tournament with the men's and women's singles draws consisting of 64 players. The tennis tournaments featured six rounds in the men's and women's singles, five in the men's and women's doubles (draw size of 32), and four in the mixed doubles (draw size of 16). The players and pairs advancing to the semifinal stage put themselves into medal contention with the two losing semifinalists competing for a bronze medal. All singles matches will be best of three sets with a standard tiebreak (first to seven points) in every set, including the final set.[4] In all doubles competitions, a match tiebreak (first to ten points) will be contested instead of a third set. The Paris 2024 event is the first Olympic clay court event since the Barcelona 1992 event was played at Tennis de la Vall d'Hebron.[4] A total of 10 NOC's won medals along with the Independent Athletes team. It will also be the first Olympic tournament to be played at a Grand Slam venue since the London 2012 event was staged at the Wimbledon Championships venue, the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.
Contents
Medal summary
A total of fifteen medals were won by ten NOC's and the Independent Athletes team.[5]
Events
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
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Men's singles | Novak Djokovic Serbia |
Carlos Alcaraz Spain |
Lorenzo Musetti Italy |
Men's doubles | Australia Matthew Ebden John Peers |
United States Austin Krajicek Rajeev Ram |
United States Taylor Fritz Tommy Paul |
Women's singles | Zheng Qinwen China |
Donna Vekić Croatia |
Iga Świątek Poland |
Women's doubles | Italy Sara Errani Jasmine Paolini |
[[File:Lua error in Module:Country_alias at line 202: Invalid country alias: AIN.|23x15px|border|alt=|link=]] [[Lua error in Module:Country_alias at line 202: Invalid country alias: AIN. at the 2024 Summer Olympics|Lua error in Module:Country_alias at line 202: Invalid country alias: AIN.]] Mirra Andreeva Diana Shnaider |
Spain Cristina Bucșa Sara Sorribes Tormo |
Mixed doubles | Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková Tomáš Macháč |
China Wang Xinyu Zhang Zhizhen |
Canada Gabriela Dabrowski Félix Auger-Aliassime |
Medal table
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Tournament summary
In the women's singles, Zheng Qinwen beat Donna Vekić to become the first Chinese tennis player to win Olympic singles gold.[6] It was also China's second tennis gold medal after Li Ting and Sun Tiantian won the women's doubles in Athens in 2004. Zheng's gold medal followed an upset win in the semifinals over world #1 Iga Swiatek of Poland, the four-time and three-time defending French Open champion who had won 25 straight matches at Roland Garros.[7] Swiatek won bronze over Anna Karolína Schmiedlová.
In the men's singles, Novak Djokovic of Serbia overcame French Open champion Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz in straight sets after tiebreaks in both to win gold. It marked the first Olympic gold medal in his fifth Olympic Games for Djokovic, who had won a record 24 Grand Slam men's singles titles including three French Opens (2016, 2021 and 2023), as well as the first Olympic tennis medal for Serbia. Djokovic also became just the fifth player to win a career singles Golden Slam consisting of all four majors and Olympic gold after Steffi Graf, Andre Agassi, Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams. Graf is the only player to record a Golden Slam in a calendar year after doing so in 1988, while Williams is the only player to have a career Golden Slam in both singles and doubles (with her sister Venus as her partner).[8] Nadal and Williams, together with former French world #1 Amélie Mauresmo, were also chosen among the torchbearers during the last leg of the Olympic torch relay during the opening ceremony despite not being French, and Djokovic beat Nadal in the second round. Lorenzo Musetti won bronze over Félix Auger-Aliassime in three sets.
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Everything I felt in that moment when I won surpassed everything I thought or hoped that it would...Being on that court with the Serbian flag raising, singing the Serbian anthem, with the gold around my neck, I think nothing can beat that in terms of professional sport. It definitely stands out as the biggest sporting achievement I have had.
— Novak Djokovic after winning the men's singles gold medal[8]
In the men's doubles, Matthew Ebden and John Peers became the first Australian pair to win the event since the "Woodies" (Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde) in Atlanta in 1996, while the United States pairs took both silver and bronze. Sara Errani and Jasmine Paolini won the women's doubles, while Kateřina Siniaková and Tomáš Macháč won the mixed doubles.
The event was also Andy Murray's last professional outing after winning gold in the London 2012 event at Wimbledon and in Rio de Janeiro four years later, where he was Great Britain's opening ceremony flagbearer, in addition to three Grand Slam singles titles and a Davis Cup with Great Britain.[9]
Qualification
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To be eligible for Paris 2024, a tennis player must satisfy the key criteria to play on Davis Cup or Billie Jean King Cup teams. The qualification pathway for the singles tournaments is primarily based on the ATP and WTA rankings of 10 June 2024, with 56 players entering each of the men's and women's singles (limited to four per National Olympic Committee (NOC)).[10] Six of the remaining eight slots are attributed to the NOCs with no other qualified tennis players across five continental zones (two for the Americas and one each for the rest). The final two spots are reserved, one for the host nation France and the other for the previous Olympic gold medalist or Grand Slam champion.[10][11][12] In the men's and women's doubles tournaments, thirty-two places will offer for the highest-ranked teams with ten of them reserved for players in the top ten of the doubles rankings, who could select his or her partner from their NOC ranked in the top 300 of either singles or doubles. The remaining spots are attributed through the combined rankings with a preference given to the singles players once the total quota is filled. One team per gender is reserved for the host nation France if none has already become eligible otherwise.[10] With no quota places available for the mixed doubles, all teams will consist of players already entered in either the singles or doubles, including the top 15 combined ranking teams and the host nation France.[10]
Schedule
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Date | Sat 27 | Sun 28 | Mon 29 | Tue 30 | Wed 31 | Thu 1 | Fri 2 | Sat 3 | Sun 4 | ||
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Start time | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | 12:00 | ||
Men's singles | R64 | R32 | R16 | QF | SF | BM | F | ||||
Men's doubles | R32 | R16 | QF | SF | BM | F | |||||
Women's singles | R64 | R32 | R16 | QF | SF | BM | F | ||||
Women's doubles | R32 | R16 | QF | SF | BM | F | |||||
Mixed doubles | R16 | QF | SF | BM | F |
Participating nations
There were 175 tennis athletes from 40 participating NOC's and the Individual Neutral Athlete team.[15]
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- Argentina (8)
- Australia (9)
- Austria (1)
- Belgium (3)
- Brazil (5)
- Bulgaria (1)
- Canada (5)
- Chile (3)
- China (7)
- Colombia (1)
- Croatia (4)
- Czech Republic (7)
- Denmark (2)
- Egypt (1)
- France (9)
- Germany (10)
- Great Britain (7)
- Greece (4)
- Hungary (2)
- India (3)
- [[File:Lua error in Module:Country_alias at line 202: Invalid country alias: AIN.|23x15px|border|alt=|link=]] [[Lua error in Module:Country_alias at line 202: Invalid country alias: AIN. at the 2024 Summer Olympics|Lua error in Module:Country_alias at line 202: Invalid country alias: AIN.]] (7)
- Italy (8)
- Japan (6)
- Kazakhstan (3)
- Latvia (1)
- Lebanon (2)
- Montenegro (1)
- Netherlands (6)
- New Zealand (2)
- Norway (1)
- Poland (4)
- Portugal (2)
- Romania (4)
- Serbia (2)
- Slovakia (1)
- Spain (8)
- Chinese Taipei (4)
- Thailand (3)
- Tunisia (1)
- Ukraine (5)
- United States (11)
See also
- Tennis at the 2023 African Games
- Tennis at the 2022 Asian Games
- Tennis at the 2023 Pan American Games
- Wheelchair tennis at the 2024 Summer Paralympics
References
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External links
- Articles with short description
- Pages using Infobox Olympic event with invalid games text
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles using infobox templates with no data rows
- Articles with hatnote templates targeting a nonexistent page
- Official website not in Wikidata
- Tennis at the 2024 Summer Olympics
- Tennis at the Summer Olympics
- 2024 Summer Olympics events
- 2024 in tennis
- Tennis tournaments in France
- 2024 in French tennis