1989 Nabisco Masters – Doubles

Rick Leach and Jim Pugh were the defending champions but were eliminated in the round robin stage.

Doubles
1989 Nabisco Masters
1988 Champions Rick Leach
Jim Pugh
Champions Jim Grabb
Patrick McEnroe
Runners-up John Fitzgerald
Anders Järryd
Final score75, 76, 57, 63

Jim Grabb and Patrick McEnroe won in the final 75, 76, 57, 63 against John Fitzgerald and Anders Järryd.

Draw

Key

Finals

Semifinals Final
              
  Jim Grabb
Patrick McEnroe
6 6 6    
  Pieter Aldrich
Danie Visser
4 1 3    
  Jim Grabb
Patrick McEnroe
7 7 5 6  
  John Fitzgerald
Anders Järryd
5 6 7 3  
  John Fitzgerald
Anders Järryd
7 7 6    
  Darren Cahill
Mark Kratzmann
6 6 3    

Playoffs

Fifth Place

Fifth Place Playoff
  Rick Leach
Jim Pugh
6 3 5
  Jorge Lozano
Todd Witsken
4 6 7

Seventh Place

Seventh Place Playoff
  Jim Courier
Pete Sampras
6 6  
  Paul Annacone
Christo van Rensburg
4 3  

Round robin

Red Group

  Cahill
Kratzmann
Courier
Sampras
Grabb
McEnroe
Leach
Pugh
RR
W–L
Set
W–L
Game
W–L
Standings
  Darren Cahill
Mark Kratzmann
62, 76, 76 67, 16, 46 63, 76, 76 21 63 5044 2
  Jim Courier
Pete Sampras
26, 67, 67 26, 36, 36 36, 06, 36 03 09 2455 4
  Jim Grabb
Patrick McEnroe
76, 61, 64 62, 63, 63 64, 62, 67, 62 30 91 6134 1
  Rick Leach
Jim Pugh
36, 67, 67 63, 60, 63 46, 26, 76, 26 12 46 4845 3

Standings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.

Blue Group

  Fitzgerald
Järryd
Annacone
van Rensburg
Aldrich
Visser
Lozano
Witsken
RR
W–L
Set
W–L
Game
W–L
Standings
  John Fitzgerald
Anders Järryd
63, 67, 61, 75 62, 76, 76 63, 36, 75, 46, 61 30 93 7151 1
  Paul Annacone
C van Rensburg
36, 76, 16, 75 46, 26, 26 76, 67, 46, 46 03 29 4568 4
  Pieter Aldrich
Danie Visser
26, 67, 67 64, 62, 62 62, 76, 63 21 63 5139 2
  Jorge Lozano
Todd Witsken
36, 63, 57, 64, 16 67, 76, 64, 64 26, 67, 36 12 56 5762 3

Standings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.

gollark: Gigabit Ethernet can consistently deliver 1Gbps basically regardless of conditions and is widely supported and various fibre optic standards can do 10Gbps or 40Gbps (much higher is ridiculously expensive).
gollark: Theoretically 802.11ax/WiFi 6 can do 3Gbps or something. Practically, you can't get all that throughput on one device, your devices are probably 802.11ac or 802.11n, and the wireless environment isn't going to be utterly perfect and free of noise.
gollark: 8.
gollark: 1Gbps is pretty common in saner countries.
gollark: I don't think you can get consumer 8Gbps service anywhere.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.