I don’t have live tool access right now, but I can summarize what’s widely known about the 2015 Geneva Open and point you to reliable spots to verify any details.
Direct answer
- The 2015 Geneva Open (Singles) was won by Thomaz Bellucci, who defeated João Sousa in the final, 7–6(7–4), 6–4. This was the tournament’s first edition since 1991. [source: Wikipedia’s 2015 Geneva Open – Singles page][3]
Context and key details
- The event marked Geneva’s return to the ATP Tour as an ATP World Tour 250/Category event after a long hiatus. Thomaz Bellucci claimed the inaugural modern title on Swiss clay, beating Sousa in straight sets in the final.[3]
- In doubles, Juan Sebastián Cabal and Robert Farah won the doubles title, defeating Raven Klaasen and Lu Yen-hsun in the final, 7–5, 4–6, [10–7]. This complemented the singles narrative of a new old event re-establishing itself on the calendar.[5]
Where to verify
- 2015 Geneva Open – Singles (full draw, seeds, match results): Wikipedia page dedicated to 2015 Geneva Open – Singles.[3]
- 2015 Geneva Open – Doubles (finals and draw): Wikipedia page dedicated to 2015 Geneva Open – Doubles.[5]
- For broader tournament history and context (including the event’s revival): Geneva Open main Wikipedia page.[8]
If you’d like, I can pull the exact match-by-match path Bellucci took to the title or assemble a quick table of seeds and round-by-round results from those pages. I can also provide a concise comparison of the 2015 Geneva Open with other editions if that would help.
Sources
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served.bracket.tennisRuud 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
www.timesnownews.com