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Following is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the ATP Rankings top 100 (singles) or top 50 (doubles) for at least one week) who came out of retirement from professional tennis during the 2011 season:
Following is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the ATP Rankings top 100 (singles) or top 50 (doubles) for at least one week) who announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive (after not playing for more than 52 weeks), or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2011 season:
4 Performance bonus awarded to a singles player who wins 8 live matches in a calendar year. In this case, no Team bonus is awarded.[17]
3 Team bonus awarded to a singles player who wins 7 live matches in a calendar year and his team wins the competition.[17]
2 For the first round only, any player who competes in a live rubber, without a win, receives 10 ranking points for participation.[17]
1 A player who wins a singles rubber in the first day of the tie is awarded 5 points, whereas a singles rubber win in tie's last day grants 10 points for a total of 15 available points.[17]
Only World Group and World Group Play-Off matches and only live matches earn points. Dead rubbers earn no points. If a player does not compete in one or more rounds he will receive points from the previous round when playing at the next tie.[17]
ATP Points distributed from 2009 onwards[17]
as of 28 November 2011[16]
These are the ATP Rankings shows the Race for the Singles and Doubles,[8][9][10] and of the 2011 season,[11][12][13] with number of rankings points, number of tournaments played, year-end ranking in 2010, highest and lowest position during the season (for singles and doubles individual only, as doubles team rankings are not calculated over a rolling year-to-date system), and number of spots gained or lost from the 2010 to the 2011 year-end rankings.
The following players defended a main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:
The following players won their first main circuit title in singles, doubles, or mixed doubles:
To avoid confusion and double counting, these tables should be updated only after an event is completed. The tables are through to the tournaments completed in the week of 31 October.
These tables present the number of singles (S), doubles (D), and mixed doubles (X) titles won by each player and each nation during the season, within all the tournament categories of the 2011 ATP World Tour: the Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP World Tour Finals, the ATP World Tour Masters 1000, the ATP World Tour 500 series, and the ATP World Tour 250 series.[4] The players/nations are sorted by: 1) total number of titles (a doubles title won by two players representing the same nation counts as only one win for the nation); 2) cumulated importance of those titles (one Grand Slam win equalling two Masters 1000 wins, one ATP World Tour Finals win equalling one-and-a-half Masters 1000 win, one Masters 1000 win equalling two 500 events wins, one 500 event win equalling two 250 events wins); 3) a singles > doubles > mixed doubles hierarchy; 4) alphabetical order (by family names for players).
This is the complete schedule of events on the 2011 calendar, with player progression documented from the quarterfinals stage.[4]
[2][1]
Madrid, Andalusia, Portugal, European Union, Barcelona
New York City, United States, American Civil War, Hawaii, Western United States
United Kingdom, European Union, Italy, Canada, Spain
Belgrade, Republic of Macedonia, Kosovo, Romania, Albania
Uruguay, Brazil, Buenos Aires, Venezuela, Mexico
Spain, France, United States, Serbia, Argentina
Germany, Canada, United States, England, Austria
Spain, United States, France, Argentina, United Kingdom
United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Cuba
Portugal, Spain, Italy, Argentina, France