| Details | |
|---|---|
| Duration | January 2, 1989 – December 5, 1989 | 
| Edition | 20th | 
| Tournaments | 73 | 
| Achievements (singles) | |
| Most tournament titles |  Ivan Lendl (10) | 
| Most tournament finals |  Ivan Lendl (12) | 
| Prize money leader |  Ivan Lendl ($2,344,367) | 
| Points leader |  Ivan Lendl | 
| Awards | |
| Player of the year |  Boris Becker | 
| Doubles team of the year | |
| Most improved player of the year |  Michael Chang | 
| Comeback player of the year | .svg.png.webp) Goran Prpić | 
| ← 1988  1990 →  | |
Ivan Lendl finished the year ranked ATP world No. 1 for the fourth time in his career. Lendl won ten tournaments during the season, including a major at the Australian Open, and also finished runner-up at another major, the US Open.
Boris Becker was named the ATP Player of the Year. Becker won five tournaments during the season, including two majors at the Wimbledon Championships and the US Open.
The 1989 Nabisco Grand Prix was the only tennis circuit for male players held that year. It incorporated the four Grand Slam tournaments, one World Championship Tennis tournament and the Grand Prix tournaments.
Schedule
The table below shows the 1989 Nabisco Grand Prix (to become known in 1990 as the ATP Tour).
| Grand Slam events | 
| Grand Prix Masters | 
| Grand Prix | 
| Team events | 
January
February
March
| Week | Tournament | Champions | Runners-up | Semifinalists | Quarterfinalists | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 Mar | Eagle Classic (WCT) Scottsdale, Arizona, United States Hard – $297,500 – 32S/16D Singles – Doubles |  Ivan Lendl 6–2, 6–3 |  Stefan Edberg |  Emilio Sánchez  Amos Mansdorf | .svg.png.webp) Goran Ivanišević  Jim Courier  Brad Gilbert  Kevin Curren | 
|  Rick Leach  Jim Pugh 6–7, 6–3, 6–2, 2–6, 6–4 |  Paul Annacone .svg.png.webp) Christo van Rensburg | ||||
| 13 Mar | Newsweek Champions Cup Indian Wells, California, United States Hard – $510,000 – 56S/28D Singles – Doubles |  Miloslav Mečíř 3–6, 2–6, 6–1, 6–2, 6–3 |  Yannick Noah |  Jay Berger  Jimmy Connors |  Brad Gilbert  Andre Agassi  Tim Mayotte  Michael Chang | 
|  Boris Becker .svg.png.webp) Jakob Hlasek 3–6, 6–3, 6–4 |  Kevin Curren  David Pate | ||||
| 20 Mar | Lipton International Championships Key Biscayne, United States Hard – $745,000 – 128S/64D Singles – Doubles |  Ivan Lendl W/O |  Thomas Muster |  Kevin Curren  Yannick Noah |  Aaron Krickstein  Emilio Sánchez  Carl-Uwe Steeb  Jim Grabb | 
| .svg.png.webp) Jakob Hlasek  Anders Järryd 6–3 ret. |  Jim Grabb  Patrick McEnroe | 
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
| Week | Tournament | Champions | Runners-up | Semifinalists | Quarterfinalists | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 Dec | 1989 Nabisco Masters (doubles) London, Great Britain Grand Prix Masters Carpet (i) – $200,000 – 8D Doubles |  Jim Grabb  Patrick McEnroe 7–5, 7–5, 5–7, 6–3 | .svg.png.webp) John Fitzgerald  Anders Järryd | .svg.png.webp) Pieter Aldrich / .svg.png.webp) Danie Visser .svg.png.webp) Darren Cahill / .svg.png.webp) Mark Kratzmann | |
| 11 Dec | Davis Cup: Final Stuttgart, West Germany – carpet (i) |  West Germany 3–2 |  Sweden | ||
Grand Prix rankings
List of tournament winners
List of players and Grand Prix singles titles won, alphabetically by last name:
 Andre Agassi – Orlando (1) Andre Agassi – Orlando (1)
 Ronald Agénor – Athens (1) Ronald Agénor – Athens (1)
 Juan Aguilera – Bari (1) Juan Aguilera – Bari (1)
 José Francisco Altur – San Marino (1) José Francisco Altur – San Marino (1)
 Paul Annacone – Vienna (1) Paul Annacone – Vienna (1)
 Boris Becker – Milan, Philadelphia, Wimbledon, US Open, Paris Bercy (5) Boris Becker – Milan, Philadelphia, Wimbledon, US Open, Paris Bercy (5)
 Jay Berger – Charleston (1) Jay Berger – Charleston (1)
 Paolo Canè – Båstad (1) Paolo Canè – Båstad (1)
 Michael Chang – French Open, Wembley (2) Michael Chang – French Open, Wembley (2)
 Andrei Chesnokov – Nice, Munich (2) Andrei Chesnokov – Nice, Munich (2)
 Jimmy Connors – Toulouse, Tel Aviv (2) Jimmy Connors – Toulouse, Tel Aviv (2)
 Jim Courier – Basel (1) Jim Courier – Basel (1)
 Kevin Curren – Frankfurt (1) Kevin Curren – Frankfurt (1)
 Franco Davín – St. Vincent (1) Franco Davín – St. Vincent (1)
 Horacio de la Peña – Florence (1) Horacio de la Peña – Florence (1)
 Stefan Edberg – Tokyo, Season-Ending Championships (2) Stefan Edberg – Tokyo, Season-Ending Championships (2)
.svg.png.webp) Kelly Evernden – Wellington (1) Kelly Evernden – Wellington (1)
 Marcelo Filippini – Prague (1) Marcelo Filippini – Prague (1)
 Guy Forget – Nancy (1) Guy Forget – Nancy (1)
 Brad Gilbert – Memphis, Stratton Mountain, Livingston, Cincinnati, San Francisco (5) Brad Gilbert – Memphis, Stratton Mountain, Livingston, Cincinnati, San Francisco (5)
 Andrés Gómez – Boston, Barcelona (2) Andrés Gómez – Boston, Barcelona (2)
.svg.png.webp) Jakob Hlasek – Rotterdam (1) Jakob Hlasek – Rotterdam (1)
 Martín Jaite – Stuttgart, Madrid, São Paulo, Itaparica (4) Martín Jaite – Stuttgart, Madrid, São Paulo, Itaparica (4)
 Eric Jelen – Bristol (1) Eric Jelen – Bristol (1)
 Kelly Jones – Singapore City (1) Kelly Jones – Singapore City (1)
 Aaron Krickstein – Sydney, Los Angeles, Tokyo Indoors (3) Aaron Krickstein – Sydney, Los Angeles, Tokyo Indoors (3)
 Ramesh Krishnan – Auckland (1) Ramesh Krishnan – Auckland (1)
 Niclas Kroon – Brisbane (1) Niclas Kroon – Brisbane (1)
 Ivan Lendl – Australian Open, Scottsdale, Miami, Forest Hills, Hamburg, London, Canada, Bordeaux, Sydney Indoors, Stockholm (10) Ivan Lendl – Australian Open, Scottsdale, Miami, Forest Hills, Hamburg, London, Canada, Bordeaux, Sydney Indoors, Stockholm (10)
 Alberto Mancini – Monte Carlo, Rome (2) Alberto Mancini – Monte Carlo, Rome (2)
 Luiz Mattar – Guarujá, Rio de Janeiro (2) Luiz Mattar – Guarujá, Rio de Janeiro (2)
 Tim Mayotte – Washington, D.C. (1) Tim Mayotte – Washington, D.C. (1)
 John McEnroe – Lyon, Dallas, Indianapolis (3) John McEnroe – Lyon, Dallas, Indianapolis (3)
 Miloslav Mečíř – Indian Wells (1) Miloslav Mečíř – Indian Wells (1)
 Karel Nováček – Hilversum (1) Karel Nováček – Hilversum (1)
 Guillermo Pérez Roldán – Palermo (1) Guillermo Pérez Roldán – Palermo (1)
 Jim Pugh – Newport (1) Jim Pugh – Newport (1)
.svg.png.webp) Marc Rosset – Geneva (1) Marc Rosset – Geneva (1)
 Emilio Sánchez – Kitzbühel (1) Emilio Sánchez – Kitzbühel (1)
 Javier Sánchez – Bologna (1) Javier Sánchez – Bologna (1)
 Carl-Uwe Steeb – Gstaad (1) Carl-Uwe Steeb – Gstaad (1)
 Robert Van't Hof – Seoul (1) Robert Van't Hof – Seoul (1)
.svg.png.webp) Christo van Rensburg – Johannesburg (1) Christo van Rensburg – Johannesburg (1)
.svg.png.webp) Mark Woodforde – Adelaide (1) Mark Woodforde – Adelaide (1)
.svg.png.webp) Simon Youl – Schenectady (1) Simon Youl – Schenectady (1)
The following players won their first career title:
See also
References
- ↑ "ATP Year-end top 20". ATP. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
- ATP Archive 1989: Nabisco Grand Prix Tournaments:Accessed 22 October 2010.
- History Mens Professional Tours: Accessed 22 October 2010.
Further reading
- Collins, Bud (2010). The Bud Collins History of Tennis: An Authoritative Encyclopedia and Record Book (2nd ed.). New York: New Chapter Press. ISBN 9780942257700.
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