2007 St. Petersburg Open

2007 St. Petersburg Open
Date October 22 – October 28
Edition 13th
Category International Series
Draw 32Q / 32S / 16D
Prize money $975,000
Surface Carpet / Indoor
Location St. Petersburg, Russia
Venue Petersburg Sports and Concert Complex
Champions
Singles
United Kingdom Andy Murray
Doubles
Canada Daniel Nestor / Serbia Nenad Zimonjić

The 2007 St. Petersburg Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 13th edition of the St. Petersburg Open, and was part of the International Series of the 2007 ATP Tour. It took place at the Petersburg Sports and Concert Complex in Saint Petersburg, Russia, from October 22 through October 28, 2007.

The singles field was led by ATP No. 4, French Open and US Open semifinalist, and recent Moscow winner Nikolay Davydenko, Doha and Metz runner-up, San Jose champion Andy Murray, and Dubai and Munich finalist, Rotterdam titlist Mikhail Youzhny. Other seeded players were Valencia and Kitzbühel runner-up Potito Starace, Indianapolis and Bangkok champion Dmitry Tursunov, Fernando Verdasco, Philipp Kohlschreiber and Thomas Johansson.

Davydenko Controversy

World No. 4, top seed and home favourite Nikolay Davydenko received a warning and a $2,000 fine for not trying hard enough during his second round encounter against then-102nd-ranked Croatian Marin Čilić. After cruising through the first set 6–1, Davydenko lost a tight second 5–7, and eventually the third 1–6, committing ten double faults over the course of the match. Belgian chair umpire Jean-Philippe Dercq decided in the third set to issue Davydenko a code violation for lack of best effort.

The accusation came as the Russian was under investigation from the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) after irregular betting patterns were found in his match against Martín Vassallo Argüello at the Sopot event earlier in the year. Davydenko called the umpire's decision "outrageous", and cited leg pain to explain his loss: "The reality is that I started feeling tired. My legs were just dead by the third set. Maybe my problems are psychological, maybe it's in my head." His opponent, Cilic, backed up Davydenko, saying he did not believe the Russian had stopped trying to win the match.[1]

Davydenko appealed, and on November 13, after reviewing and analysing the match, the ATP decided to remove the sanction and rescind the fine, consequently closing the case.[2]

Champions

Singles

United Kingdom Andy Murray defeated Spain Fernando Verdasco, 6–2, 6–3

Doubles

Canada Daniel Nestor / Serbia Nenad Zimonjić defeated Austria Jürgen Melzer / Australia Todd Perry, 6–1, 7–6(7–3)

References

  1. timesonline.co.uk (2007-10-26). "Nikolay Davydenko fined for lack of effort". The Times. London. Retrieved 2008-08-19.
  2. atptennis.com (2007-11-13). "Nikolay Davydenko Appeal". Archived from the original on 2008-05-04. Retrieved 2008-08-20.



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