I don’t have live access to current news feeds in this moment, but I can share what’s typically considered “latest” about the 2015 Geneva Open and point you to reliable sources to verify any updates.
Core answer
- The 2015 Geneva Open was the tournament’s first edition since 1991. Thomaz Bellucci won the singles title, defeating João Sousa in the final. In doubles, Juan Sebastián Cabal and Robert Farah won the title. These results mark the tournament’s inaugural return year after a long hiatus.[3][4][5]
Context and details
- Singles final: Thomaz Bellucci defeated João Sousa 7–6(7–4), 6–4. This established Bellucci as the champion of the event’s 2015 singles competition.[3]
- Doubles final: Cabal and Farah defeated Klaasen and Lu Yen-hsun 7–5, 4–6, [10–7], securing the doubles title for Geneva Open’s 2015 edition.[5]
- The event is part of the ATP World Tour 250 series and had a standard main-draw format for singles and doubles, with seeds and typical clay-court play in Geneva during May 2015.[4]
Where to check for the latest confirmation or updates
- The Wikipedia pages for the 2015 Geneva Open (Singles and Doubles) provide official match results and final standings, and are commonly used for historical summaries.[4][5][3]
- Other reputable tennis sites that covered the event at the time include main tennis outlets and the Geneva Open’s official communications, which typically echoed the same results.
If you’d like, I can pull exact match-by-match results, seedings, and prize money from those pages and summarize them in a concise table. I can also provide a quick comparison of 2015 Geneva Open outcomes with other Geneva Open years if you’re researching historical trends. Would you like that?
Citations:
- 2015 Geneva Open – Singles final results: Thomaz Bellucci def. João Sousa. Sources:.[3]
- 2015 Geneva Open – Doubles final results: Cabal/Farah def. Klaasen/Lu Yen-hsun. Sources:.[5]
- General context for the 2015 Geneva Open and its status as the tournament’s return edition since 1991: Sources:.[4][3]
Sources
Ruud is the defending champion on the Swiss clay and is now one match away from strolling into next week's French Open with the Geneva title under his belt once again. Ruud will face Portugal's Joao Sousa, ranked 79 in the world, in Saturday's final. The Geneva title comes with $81,310 in prize money, while the runner-up earns $47,430., Tennis, Times Now
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