Tennis at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Qualification: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 19:09, 8 June 2024
This section tabulates the heads of qualification in a form suitable to be filled in as events progress. The full qualification rules[1] for tennis published by ITF contain intricate conditions too lengthy for inclusion in Wikipedia. |
Qualification | |
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Tennis at the 2024 Summer Olympics |
This article details the qualifying phase for tennis at the 2024 Summer Olympics. The qualification pathway will be determined primarily based on the rankings maintained by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and the Women's Tennis Association (WTA).
Qualifying criteria
The main qualifying criterion will be the players' positions on the ATP and WTA ranking lists published on 10 June 2024. The players entering are formally submitted by the International Tennis Federation. The ATP and WTA rankings will be determined based on the performances achieved in the previous 52 weeks of the qualifying window. To be eligible, the players must satisfy the key criteria as part of the nominated team in two Billie Jean King Cup (women) or Davis Cup (men) events between Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 either if their nation competes at the Zone Group round robin level for the third year of the quadrennial cycle or if the player has represented their nation at least twenty times.[2][3]
Each National Olympic Committee (NOC) can enter a maximum of twelve tennis players (six per gender) with a maximum of four entries each in the men's and women's singles (the best ranked within their respective country), two pairs each in the men's and women's doubles and a single pair in the mixed doubles.[1][4]
For the singles, the top 56 players in the world rankings on 10 June 2024 of the WTA and ATP tours will qualify for the Olympics, respecting the four-player limit per NOC and gender. Hence, those ranked outside the top 56 and from NOCs with less than four entries are permitted to compete. A player could only participate if he or she is allowed and drafted to represent the player's country in Davis Cup or Billie Jean King Cup for three of the following years: 2022, 2023, and 2024. Four of the remaining eight slots are attributed to the NOCs who have not already qualified four tennis players across three continental zones (the winner and runner-up from the 2023 Pan American Games; the gold medalist each from the 2022 Asian Games and 2023 African Games). The final four spots are reserved, one for the host nation France, two for previous Olympic gold medalists or Grand Slam champions, and one for applicants for the Universality place.[4]
For the men's and women's doubles, 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 400 of either singles or doubles. The remaining spots are attributed to the pairs with the highest combined ranking until the 32-team field is complete. If the total quota of 86 players in the relevant gender remains incomplete, additional places continue to be allotted through the combined ranking. Once the field completes, the remaining pairs with both players qualified in the singles are officially selected based on their highest combined ranking; otherwise, additional places are assigned to the pairs with one player qualified in singles, followed by the remaining pairs without any qualified player in the singles tournament, if necessary. One team per gender is reserved for the host nation France if none has already become eligible otherwise.[4]
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.[4]
Qualified players
a | Player did not participate because of injury; declined to compete; or was not selected by their governing body |
b | Player failed to fulfill the minimum Billie Jean King Cup / Davis Cup representation level |
c | Player is ineligible because of the four-player limit per NOC |
d | Player officially retired from the sport |
e | Player received special dispensation for the Billie Jean King Cup / Davis Cup requirements from the ITF |
Men's singles
Women's singles
Men's doubles
No. | CR* | Player A | Player B | NOC | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SR† | DR‡ | Name | SR† | DR‡ | Name | |||
World ranking | ||||||||
1 | – | 1 | Matthew Ebden | Australia | ||||
2 | – | 2 | Marcel Granollers | Spain | ||||
3 | – | 2 | Horacio Zeballos | Argentina | ||||
4 | – | 4 | Rohan Bopanna | – | 67 | Sriram Balaji | India | |
5 | – | 5 | Joe Salisbury | Great Britain | ||||
6 | – | 6 | Rajeev Ram | United States | ||||
– | 7 | Marcelo Arévalo[c] | El Salvador | |||||
7 | – | 8 | Wesley Koolhof | Netherlands | ||||
8 | – | 9 | Mate Pavić | Croatia | ||||
9 | 21 | 10 | Andrea Vavassori | – | 11 | Simone Bolelli | Italy | |
Combined ranking | ||||||||
10 | ||||||||
11 | ||||||||
12 | ||||||||
13 | ||||||||
14 | ||||||||
15 | ||||||||
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28 | ||||||||
29 | ||||||||
30 | ||||||||
31 | ||||||||
Host nation | ||||||||
H1[d] | France |
^† Singles ranking
Women's doubles
No. | CR* | Player A | Player B | NOC | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SR† | DR‡ | Name | SR† | DR‡ | Name | |||
World ranking | ||||||||
b | 33 | 1 | Elise Mertens | Belgium | ||||
1 | 2 | Hsieh Su-wei | Chinese Taipei | |||||
2 | – | 3 | Erin Routliffe | New Zealand | ||||
3 | ||||||||
4 | ||||||||
5 | ||||||||
6 | ||||||||
7 | ||||||||
8 | ||||||||
9 | ||||||||
Combined ranking | ||||||||
10 | ||||||||
11 | ||||||||
12 | ||||||||
13 | ||||||||
14 | ||||||||
15 | ||||||||
16 | ||||||||
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18 | ||||||||
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24 | ||||||||
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26 | ||||||||
27 | ||||||||
28 | ||||||||
29 | ||||||||
30 | ||||||||
31 | ||||||||
Host nation | ||||||||
H1[d] | France |
^† Singles ranking
Mixed doubles
No. | CR* | Female Player | Male Player | NOC | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SR† | DR‡ | Name | SR† | DR‡ | Name | |||
Combined ranking | ||||||||
1 | ||||||||
2 | ||||||||
3 | ||||||||
4 | ||||||||
5 | ||||||||
6 | ||||||||
7 | ||||||||
8 | ||||||||
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10 | ||||||||
11 | ||||||||
12 | ||||||||
13 | ||||||||
14 | ||||||||
15 | ||||||||
Host nation | ||||||||
H1[d] | France |
^† Singles ranking
Notes
- ^ a b Quota will be passed from 2023 Pan American Games gold medalist Facundo Díaz Acosta to the bronze medalist at the Pan American Games as four athletes from Argentina have achieved direct entry quotas.
- ^ a b Quota will be passed from gold medalist Angella Okutoyi to the next best placed eligible Africa Games competitor since Okutoyi does not meet the ITF minimum ranking requirement (top 400 or higher).
- ^ Unable to get qualified because there isn't any other Salvadoran player who is ranking above the 400th in either single or double.
- ^ a b c Quota will be reallocated to the direct entry if a French athlete or team qualifies through direct entry.
References
- ^ a b "Qualification System – Games of the XXXIII Olympiad – Tennis" (PDF). ITF. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ^ "Paris 2024 Olympic Tennis Event Qualification System". ITF. 17 May 2022. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ^ "Eligibility for the Olympic tennis event, Paris 2024" (PDF). ITF. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ^ a b c d Vieira, Sheila (12 December 2022). "How to qualify for tennis at Paris 2024. The Olympics qualification system explained". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ^ "U.S. Olympic tennis qualifiers for Paris take shape at French Open". NBC News. 3 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
- ^ Janičić, Svetozar (5 June 2024). "Danka Kovinić dobila pozivnicu za Pariz!" [Danka Kovinić received an invitation to Paris!] (in Serbian). Sport Klub. Retrieved 6 June 2024.