1993 Canadian Open – Men's Singles

Andre Agassi was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals this year.

Men's Singles
1993 Canadian Open
Champion Mikael Pernfors
Runner-up Todd Martin
Final score2–6, 6–2, 7–5

Mikael Pernfors won the title, defeating Todd Martin 2–6, 6–2, 7–5 in the final.

Seeds

  1. Pete Sampras (Third Round)
  2. Jim Courier (Third Round)
  3. Boris Becker (Third Round)
  4. Ivan Lendl (Quarterfinals)
  5. Michael Chang (Third Round)
  6. Petr Korda (Semifinals)
  7. MaliVai Washington (Second Round)
  8. Alexander Volkov (Quarterfinals)
  9. Wayne Ferreira (Third Round)
  10. Wally Masur (First Round)
  11. Andre Agassi (Quarterfinals)
  12. Henrik Holm (Third Round)
  13. Todd Martin (Final)
  14. Amos Mansdorf (First Round)
  15. David Wheaton (Second Round)
  16. Brad Gilbert (First Round)

Draw

Key

Finals

Semifinals Final
          
  Richey Reneberg 3 4  
13 Todd Martin 6 6  
13 Todd Martin 6 2 5
  Mikael Pernfors 2 6 7
6 Petr Korda 64 5  
  Mikael Pernfors 77 7  

Top Half

Section 1

First Round Second Round Third Round Quarterfinals
1 P Sampras 6 6  
  K Carlsen 6 6     K Carlsen 1 4  
  B Black 4 4   1 P Sampras 66 3  
  B Steven 7 6     B Steven 78 6  
  S Simian 5 2     B Steven 3 6 6
Q K Jones 2 0   15 D Wheaton 6 0 4
15 D Wheaton 6 6     B Steven 6 3 2
9 W Ferreira 6 6     R Reneberg 3 6 6
  C Adams 3 4   9 W Ferreira 77 6  
  L Mattar 66 r     T Woodbridge 65 3  
  T Woodbridge 78     9 W Ferreira 3 2  
  R Reneberg 6 6     R Reneberg 6 6  
  B Shelton 3 1     R Reneberg 6 6  
7 M Washington 3 2  

Section 2

First Round Second Round Third Round Quarterfinals
3 B Becker 3 6 6
Q K Evans 6 5 4 WC C Pridham 6 3 3
WC C Pridham 4 7 6 3 B Becker 5 63  
  D Rostagno 62 5   13 T Martin 7 77  
  G Stafford 77 7     G Stafford 7 2 1
WC A Sznajder 3 2   13 T Martin 5 6 6
13 T Martin 6 6   13 T Martin 7 6  
11 A Agassi 6 6   11 A Agassi 5 3  
  P Kühnen 2 4   11 A Agassi 6 6  
  P McEnroe 77 6     P McEnroe 1 4  
  R Agénor 63 2   11 A Agassi 77 6  
  A O'Brien 7 1 6 5 M Chang 63 3  
  T Ho 5 6 4   A O'Brien 2 3  
5 M Chang 6 6  

Section 3

First Round Second Round Third Round Quarterfinals
6 P Korda 6 6  
  J Morgan 6 2 2   J Bates 3 2  
  J Bates 2 6 6 6 P Korda 6 6  
Q C Wilkinson 6 0 3 12 H Holm 3 2  
  A Antonitsch 3 6 6   A Antonitsch 2 3  
  J Palmer 6 64 4 12 H Holm 6 6  
12 H Holm 4 77 6 6 P Korda 77 6  
14 A Mansdorf 3 3   4 I Lendl 64 1  
  A Krickstein 6 6     A Krickstein 4 6 7
  C Bergström 67 78 4 WC G Rusedski 6 3 5
WC G Rusedski 79 66 6   A Krickstein 79 1 2
WC S Lareau 6 6   4 I Lendl 67 6 6
  G Pozzi 3 2   WC S Lareau 2 2  
4 I Lendl 6 6  

Section 4

First Round Second Round Third Round Quarterfinals
8 A Volkov 6 4 6
WC D Nestor 7 67 2   J Yzaga 4 6 3
  J Yzaga 5 79 6 8 A Volkov 6 6  
Q M Hadad 6 6     J Hlasek 1 4  
  M Damm 2 0   Q M Hadad 2 4  
  J Hlasek 6 3 6   J Hlasek 6 6  
10 W Masur 4 6 3 8 A Volkov 2 1  
16 B Gilbert 4 64     M Pernfors 6 6  
Q J Stoltenberg 6 77   Q J Stoltenberg 4 4  
  M Pernfors 6 7     M Pernfors 6 6  
Q M Kaplan 2 5     M Pernfors 6 6  
  J Tarango 4 7 6 2 J Courier 3 2  
Q P Lundgren 6 5 3   J Tarango 4 4  
2 J Courier 6 6  
gollark: Anyway, phones aren't really designed for external antennas, especially since carrying radio-frequency signals down cables or whatever is hard.
gollark: Uncool watches do. Cool watches use atomic frequency standards.
gollark: I mean, they'll all be using some sort of *oscillator* thingy, but not necessarily an actual *crystal*.
gollark: Do you think they just have a crystal in there for every possible frequency I might set the CPU to?
gollark: Think about it. My computer's CPU has a clock/frequency generator, doesn't it, to... generate clock cycles?

References

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