1989 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Doubles Qualifying

Players and pairs who neither have high enough rankings nor receive wild cards may participate in a qualifying tournament held one week before the annual Wimbledon Tennis Championships.

Men's Doubles Qualifying
1989 Wimbledon Championships

Seeds

  1. Guillaume Raoux / Éric Winogradsky (Qualified)
  2. Luke Jensen / Richey Reneberg (Second round)
  3. Martin Laurendeau / Leif Shiras (Second round)
  4. Zeeshan Ali / Jonathan Canter (Qualified)
  5. Jason Stoltenberg / Todd Woodbridge (Qualifying competition)
  6. Dan Cassidy / Jeff Klaparda (Second round)
  7. Ricardo Acuña / Royce Deppe (First round)
  8. Brett Custer / David Macpherson (First round)
  9. Steve Guy / Jared Palmer (First round)
  10. Peter Palandjian / Larry Scott (First round)

Qualifiers

Qualifying draw

First qualifier

First Round Second Round Qualifying Competition
                 
1 Guillaume Raoux
Éric Winogradsky
78 6
WC Mark Blincow
Andrew Sproule
66 4
1 Guillaume Raoux
Éric Winogradsky
4 6 6
Warren Green
Brian Levine
6 1 2
Clinton Banducci
Earl Zinn
7 66 3
Warren Green
Brian Levine
5 78 6
1 Guillaume Raoux
Éric Winogradsky
Piet Norval
Byron Talbot
w/o
Joe DeFoor
Kent Kinnear
79 6
Charles Merzbacher
Hitoshi Shirato
67 4
Joe DeFoor
Kent Kinnear
4 4
Piet Norval
Byron Talbot
6 6
Piet Norval
Byron Talbot
7 6
10 Peter Palandjian
Larry Scott
5 4

Second qualifier

First Round Second Round Qualifying Competition
                 
2 Luke Jensen
Richey Reneberg
78 6
Arthur Engle
Brett Buffington
66 4
2 Luke Jensen
Richey Reneberg
6 64 2
Brian Page
Scott Warner
4 77 6
Brian Page
Scott Warner
6 6
Alt Johan Anderson
Peter Carter
3 4
Brian Page
Scott Warner
6 7 6
Andrei Cherkasov
Andrei Olhovskiy
2 5 4
Morten Christensen
Peter Wright
63 3
Andrei Cherkasov
Andrei Olhovskiy
77 6
Andrei Cherkasov
Andrei Olhovskiy
3
WC Paul Hand
David Ison
0r
WC Paul Hand
David Ison
6 77
8 Brett Custer
David Macpherson
4 65

Third qualifier

First Round Second Round Qualifying Competition
                 
3 Martin Laurendeau
Leif Shiras
6 6
Nelson Aerts
Michael Daniel
4 4
3 Martin Laurendeau
Leif Shiras
64 5
José Daher
Fernando Roese
77 7
WC Mark Petchey
Danny Sapsford
2 77 7
José Daher
Fernando Roese
6 65 9
José Daher
Fernando Roese
6 2 78 68 10
Andreas Maurer
Harald Rittersbacher
4 6 66 710 8
Kevin Lubbers
Robert Pellizzi
6 65 4
Andreas Maurer
Harald Rittersbacher
3 77 6
Andreas Maurer
Harald Rittersbacher
6 66 8
Tom Mercer
Michael Robertson
2 78 6
Tom Mercer
Michael Robertson
64 6 6
9 Steve Guy
Jared Palmer
77 3 3

Fourth qualifier

First Round Second Round Qualifying Competition
                 
4 Zeeshan Ali
Jonathan Canter
6 6
Ashok Amritraj
Srinivasan Vasudevan
4 4
4 Zeeshan Ali
Jonathan Canter
77 6
Kenny Thorne
Bryan Shelton
62 3
Henrik Holm
Peter Nyborg
6 1 13
Kenny Thorne
Bryan Shelton
4 6 15
4 Zeeshan Ali
Jonathan Canter
77 64 6 6
Bret Garnett
Bill Scanlon
64 72 2 4
Todd Nelson
Phil Williamson
6 5 11
Mike Bauer
Steve Furlong
4 7 13
Mike Bauer
Steve Furlong
68 63
Bret Garnett
Bill Scanlon
710 77
Bret Garnett
Bill Scanlon
3 6 6
7 Ricardo Acuña
Royce Deppe
6 2 3

Fifth qualifier

First Round Second Round Qualifying Competition
                 
5 Jason Stoltenberg
Todd Woodbridge
6 6
Doug Flach
Mark Knowles
3 4
5 Jason Stoltenberg
Todd Woodbridge
77 6
Arnaud Boetsch
Stéphane Grenier
60 4
Misel Klesinger
Nicklas Kulti
62 6 4
Arnaud Boetsch
Stéphane Grenier
77 4 6
5 Jason Stoltenberg
Todd Woodbridge
3 6 5 3
Lan Bale
Mihnea-Ion Năstase
6 3 7 6
Julian Barham
John Sobel
1 3
Lan Bale
Mihnea-Ion Năstase
6 6
Lan Bale
Mihnea-Ion Năstase
77 64 6
5 Dan Cassidy
Jeff Klaparda
65 77 4
Neil Borwick
Charles Honey
3 4
6 Dan Cassidy
Jeff Klaparda
6 6
gollark: https://github.com/ksimka/go-is-not-good#reverse-complaints-index
gollark: NO NO NO NO NO NO DON'T USE GO PLEASE STOP AAARGH
gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/9ptjoa/as_companies_embrace_ai_a_shortage_of_machine/
gollark: ```As companies embrace buzzwords, a shortage of blockchain cryptocurrency connoisseurs opens. Only the finest theoretical code artisans with a background in machine learning (20 years of experience minimum) and artificial general intelligence (5+ years of experience) can shed light on the future of quantum computing as we know it. The rest of us simply can't hope to compete with the influx of Stanford graduates feeding all the big data to their insatiable models, tensor by tensor. "Nobody knows how these models really work, but they do and it's time to embrace them." said Boris Yue, 20, self-appointed "AI Expert" and "Code Samurai". But Yue wasn’t worried about so much potential competition. While the job outlook for those with computer skills is generally good, Yue is in an even more rarified category: he is studying artificial intelligence, working on technology that teaches machines to learn and think in ways that mimic human cognition. You know, just like when you read a list of 50000000 pictures + labels and you learn to categorize them through excruciating trial and error processes that sometimes end up in an electrified prod to the back and sometimes don't. Just like human cognition, and Yue is working on the vanguard of that.```
gollark: NO END!!!


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.