2020 World Padel Tour
| Details | |
|---|---|
| Duration | 2 March – 13 December |
| Edition | 8th |
| Tournaments | 11 |
| Categories | Open (8) Master (2) Masters Finals (1) |
| Achievements (singles) | |
| Most titles | Male Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón Female Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
| Most finals | Male Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón Female Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
← 2019 2021 → | |
The 2020 World Padel Tour was the eight edition of the World Padel Tour, the most prestigious professional padel circuit in the world. In the male division, Alejandro Galán and Juan Lebrón dominated the circuit to be crowned number 1. In the female division Gemma Triay and Lucía Sainz were crowned number one for the first time.
Schedule
In 2020, 22 World Padel Tour events were planned, with the "Master" tournaments awarding the most points, followed by the "Open" and "Challenger" tournaments. The latter, geared towards lower-ranked players, awarded the fewest points. Among the events on the calendar were the Lugo WOpen, a women-only tournament, and the men-only international tournaments in Buenos Aires, Brussels, Mexico, and Brazil. The remaining international tournaments in Båstad, Cascais, and Rome were to feature both men and women.
Two additional exhibitions were included, one in Yucatán,[1] which was ultimately postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic,[2] and another in Stockholm. The Yucatán exhibition was scheduled for March 13–15, 2020, and the Stockholm exhibition for April 15–18.
In November, the 2020 Padel World Championships were also scheduled to take place in Qatar,[3] organized by the International Padel Federation (FIP), and whose outcome is completely independent of the World Padel Tour. All events on the calendar, except the first tournament in Marbella, were canceled or modified due to the coronavirus.
On March 10 2020, the cancellation of the second tournament of the season, the Vigo Open, was confirmed due to the coronavirus pandemic.[4] Two days later, on March 12, the World Padel Tour announced changes to the 2020 calendar,[5] rescheduling the Córdoba Open and the Brasil Open due to the Padel World Championship being moved from October to November. Two Challenger tournaments were also added to the calendar, in the cities of Albacete and Santander.[6]
Due to the state of emergency declared by the Spanish government, due to the coronavirus pandemic, the tournaments following the Vigo Open, in the months of April, May and June, also had to be postponed or cancelled.[7]
New schedule
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the calendar had to be completely revised, with competition returning on June 28, 2020, with the Estrella Damm Open, held in Madrid behind closed doors. A week later, the Vuelve a Madrid Open was confirmed, also at the same venue as the previous tournament.[8]
Two weeks later, it was agreed to play a third tournament in Madrid, while three more events were confirmed for September, in Valencia, Cagliari and Menorca.
| Tournamnet | City | Country | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marbella Master | Marbella | Spain | 2 March – 8 March |
| Estrella Damm Open | Madrid | Spain | 28 July – 5 July |
| Vuelve a Madrid Open | Madrid | Spain | 12 July – 19 July |
| Adeslas Open | Madrid | Spain | 2 August – 9 August |
| Valencia Open | Valencia | Spain | 30 August – 6 September |
| Sardegna Open | Cagliari | Italy | 6 September – 13 September |
| Menorca Open | Mahón | Spain | 20 September – 27 September |
| Barcelona Master | Barcelona | Spain | 10 October – 18 October |
| Alicante Open | Alicate | Spain | 4 November – 8 November |
| Las Rozas Open | Las Rozas de Madrid | Spain | 18 November – 22 November |
| Menorca Masters Final | Mahón | Spain | 10 December – 13 December |
Results
Male
| Tournamnet[9][10] | Winners | Runners-up | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marbella Master | Paquito Navarro Pablo Lima |
Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
7–6 / 2–6 / 6–3[11] |
| Estrella Damm Open | Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
Paquito Navarro Pablo Lima |
7–5 / 6–3 |
| Vuelve a Madrid Open | Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
Agustín Tapia Fernando Belasteguín |
4–6 / 6–1 / 6–4[12] |
| Adeslas Open | Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
Federico Chingotto Juan Tello |
6–7 / 6–1 / 6–4 |
| Valencia Open | Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
Federico Chingotto Juan Tello |
6–3 / 7–6 |
| Sardegna Open | Agustín Tapia Fernando Belasteguín |
Javier Ruiz Uri Botello |
6–1 / 6–4[13] |
| Menorca Open | Franco Stupaczuk Sanyo Gutiérrez |
Agustín Tapia Fernando Belasteguín |
6–3 / 7–5[14] |
| Barcelona Master | Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
Franco Stupaczuk Sanyo Gutiérrez |
6–4 / 6–1 |
| Alicante Open | Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
Franco Stupaczuk Sanyo Gutiérrez |
4–6 / 6–3 / 6–4[15] |
| Las Rozas Open | Federico Chingotto Juan Tello |
Pablo Lima Paquito Navarro |
WO[16] |
| Menorca Masters Final | Agustín Tapia Fernando Belasteguín |
Alejandro Galán Juan Lebrón |
6–3 / 7–6[17] |
Female
| Tournamnet | Winners | Runners-up | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marbella Master | Marta Marrero Paula Josemaría |
Alejandra Salazar Ariana Sánchez |
7–6 / 3–6 / 6–2[18] |
| Estrella Damm Open | Alejandra Salazar Ariana Sánchez |
Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
6–2 / 6–3 |
| Vuelve a Madrid Open | Bea González Marta Ortega |
Elisabeth Amatriaín Patricia Llaguno |
5–7 / 6–1 / 6–1 |
| Adeslas Open | Mapi Sánchez Alayeto Majo Sánchez Alayeto |
Bea González Marta Ortega |
4–6 / 6–4 / 6–4 |
| Valencia Open | Alejandra Salazar Ariana Sánchez |
Marta Marrero Paula Josemaría |
7–5 / 7–6 |
| Sardegna Open | Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
Marta Marrero Paula Josemaría |
6–0 / 6–7 / 7–6 |
| Menorca Open | Alejandra Salazar Ariana Sánchez |
Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
3–6 / 6–1 / 6–2 |
| Barcelona Master | Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
Mapi Sánchez Alayeto Majo Sánchez Alayeto |
6–2 / 6–3 |
| Alicante Open | Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
Marta Marrero Marta Ortega |
2–6 / 7–6 / 6–3 |
| Las Rozas Open | Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
Bea González Paula Josemaría |
6–0 / 7–6 |
| Menorca Masters Final | Gemma Triay Lucía Sainz |
Alejandra Salazar Ariana Sánchez |
6–4 / 6–3 |
End of season ranking
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Male
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Female
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References
- ^ "Cartel de estrellas para la Yucatán Exhibition de World Padel Tour". padelspain.net.
- ^ "Se aplaza la Yucatán Exhibition 2020". World Padel Tour.
- ^ "Qatar acogerá el XV Campeonato Mundial de Pádel 2020". lajugadafinanciera.com.
- ^ "World Padel Tour anuncia la cancelación del Vigo Open". Faro de Vigo.
- ^ "Nuevos cambios en el Calendario World Padel Tour 2020". World Padel Tour.
- ^ "Albacete acogerá el challenger inaugural de World Padel Tour". El Digital de Albacete.
- ^ "Lleida se cae y Valladolid queda aplazado: nuevos cambios en el calendario". padelspain.net.
- ^ "El World Padel Tour regresa con dos torneos a puerta cerrada en el Madrid Arena". El Mundo.
- ^ "Confirmado el calendario del World Padel Tour 2018". World Padel Tour.
- ^ "El World Padel Tour se pondrá en marcha en Cataluña". World Padel Tour.
- ^ "Lima y Navarro ganan una tremenda final en el Marbella Master". Marca.
- ^ "Finales inéditas en el Vuelve a Madrid Open". El Mundo.
- ^ "Bela y Tapia conquistan Italia". El Mundo.
- ^ "Menorca 2020". Padel Network.
- ^ "Galán y Lebrón, campeones en Alicante". Mundo Deportivo.
- ^ "LAS ROZAS: Fede Chingotto y Juan Tello se estrenaron en Las Rozas". Soy de Madrid.
- ^ "Maestros de Maestros: Bela y Tapia se coronan en el Master Final 2020". El Confidencial.
- ^ "Marta Marrero y Paula Josemaría se llevan en Marbella su primer título". Marca.
- ^ "Ranking History". FIP.
- ^ "Ranking History". FIP.