Tennis at the 2011 Games of the Small States of Europe – Men's Doubles
Guillaume Couillard and Jean-René Lisnard were the defending champion but Lisnard decided not to participate.
Couillard plays alongside Thomas Oger, and they defeated Stefano Galvani and Domenico Vicini 6–3, 6–3 in the final.
Men's Doubles | |
---|---|
Tennis at the 2011 Games of the Small States of Europe | |
Champions | |
Runners-up | |
Final score | 6–3, 6–3 |
Seeds
Guillaume Couillard / Thomas Oger (Champions) Stefano Galvani / Domenico Vicini (Final)
Draw
Key
- Q = Qualifier
- WC = Wild Card
- LL = Lucky Loser
- Alt = Alternate
- SE = Special Exempt
- PR = Protected Ranking
- ITF = ITF entry
- JE = Junior Exempt
- w/o = Walkover
- r = Retired
- d = Defaulted
First Round | Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||||||||
1 | 6 | 6 | ||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1 | 3 | ||||||||||||||||||
0r | 1 | 6 | 6 | |||||||||||||||||
2 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 3 | ||||||||||||||||
6 | 6 | 6 | 1 | [6] | ||||||||||||||||
2 | 3 | 6 | [10] | |||||||||||||||||
gollark: Is anything below `ghc` in the stack implementation details to you?
gollark: The machine code for them is excessively complex too, now, but I suppose you mostly write Haskell and whatnot which is then compiled to that.
gollark: They have ridiculously complex manufacturing processes because the transistors are on the scale of a few hundred atoms, it's crazy.
gollark: Also, with your processor comment, you are kind of underselling the complexity involved. It's not separate transistors, they're all just made on large bits of silicon together and wired up. Billions of them per processor.
gollark: In the case of games, which are basically just *information*, though, you can both use it because it can be copied (assuming no DRM meddling).
References
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