2012 Quito Challenger – Singles

Sebastián Decoud was the defending champion, but lost in the second round.
João Souza won the title, defeating Guillaume Rufin 6–2, 7–6(7–4) in the final.

Singles
2012 Quito Challenger
Champion João Souza
Runner-up Guillaume Rufin
Final score6–2, 7–6(7–4)

Seeds

  1. Frederico Gil (First Round)
  2. Guillaume Rufin (Final)
  3. Martín Alund (Semifinals)
  4. João Souza (Champion)
  5. Eduardo Schwank (Quarterfinals)
  6. Víctor Estrella (Quarterfinals, retired because of a right elbow injury)
  7. Carlos Salamanca (First Round)
  8. Júlio César Campozano (Second Round)

Draw

Key

Finals

Semifinals Final
          
WC Nicolás Massú 3 2  
4 João Souza 6 6  
4 João Souza 6 77  
2 Guillaume Rufin 2 64  
3 Martín Alund 711 4 62
2 Guillaume Rufin 69 6 77

Top Half

First Round Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals
1/Q F Gil 77 5 4
  D Zivkovic 64 7 6   D Zivkovic 63 3  
Q MA Reyes-Varela 4 4   WC N Massú 77 6  
WC N Massú 6 6   WC N Massú 6 6  
Q Juan Carvajal 65 6 2 5 E Schwank 4 2  
  Chris Letcher 77 3 6   Chris Letcher 3 2  
  C Lindell 1 1r   5 E Schwank 6 6  
5 E Schwank 6 4   WC N Massú 3 2  
4 J Souza 77 77   4 J Souza 6 6  
  M Arévalo 64 64   4 J Souza 7 62 7
  N Barrientos 4 4     D Beretta 5 77 5
  D Beretta 6 6   4 J Souza 77 3  
WC Lucas Dages 2 2   6 V Estrella 64 0r  
  J Witten 6 6     J Witten 2 2  
  D Garza 4 2   6 V Estrella 6 6  
6 V Estrella 6 6  

Bottom Half

First Round Second Round Quarterfinals Semifinals
8 JC Campozano 77 64 7
  L Recouderc 62 77 5 8 JC Campozano 62 4  
  A Molteni 6 6     A Molteni 77 6  
WC José Chamba Gómez 0 0     A Molteni 2 66  
  Guillermo Durán 6 6   3 M Alund 6 78  
  K Kim 2 4     Guillermo Durán 77 64 1
  Maximiliano Estévez 4 1   3 M Alund 61 77 6
3 M Alund 6 6   3 M Alund 711 4 62
7 C Salamanca 64 7 4 2 G Rufin 69 6 77
  JS Cabal 77 5 6   JS Cabal 6 6  
  S Decoud 6 6     S Decoud 4 1  
WC Joseph Correa 1 2     JS Cabal 6 612 3
  M Demoliner 6 77   2 G Rufin 4 714 6
  G Rivera-Aránguiz 3 65     M Demoliner 1 4  
Q G Tošić 63 1   2 G Rufin 6 6  
2 G Rufin 77 6  
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gollark: You can run any quantum computing stuff on a regular computer. It just might be unusably slow.
gollark: This is done by making it so that they require large amounts of memory (I think this is mostly an issue for FPGAs though?) or basically just general purpose computation (regular CPUs are best at this) or changing the algorithm constantly so ASICs aren't economically viable.

References

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