1997 ATP Tour
In-game article clicks load inline without leaving the challenge.
The 1997 ATP Tour was the elite tour for professional tennis organised by the ATP that year. The ATP Tour included the four Grand Slam tournaments, the ATP Tour World Championships, the ATP Super 9, the Championship Series and the World Series tournaments.
Schedule
The tables below summarises the results for the 1997 ATP Tour.
Key
| Grand Slam tournaments |
| ATP Tour World Championships |
| ATP Super 9 |
| ATP Championship Series |
| ATP World Series |
| Team events |
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
ATP rankings
Statistical information
List of players and singles titles won:
- Spain Julian Alonso – Santiago (1)
- Morocco Hicham Arazi – Casablanca (1)
- Spain Alberto Berasategui – Palermo (1)
- Sweden Jonas Björkman – Auckland, Indianapolis, Stockholm (3)
- United States Michael Chang – Memphis, Indian Wells Masters, Hong Kong, Orlando, Washington, D.C. (5)
- Spain Francisco Clavet – Mexico City, Bogotá (2)
- Spain Àlex Corretja – Estoril, Rome Masters, Stuttgart (3)
- Spain Albert Costa – Barcelona, Marbella (2)
- United States Jim Courier – Doha, Los Angeles, Beijing (3)
- Belgium Filip Dewulf – Kitzbühel (1)
- Czech Republic Slava Doseděl – Amsterdam (1)
- Sweden Thomas Enqvist – Marseille (1)
- Uruguay Marcelo Filippini – Atlanta, St. Poelten (2)
- Australia Richard Fromberg – Bucharest (1)
- Sweden Magnus Gustafsson – Singapore (1)
- United Kingdom Tim Henman – Sydney, Tashkent (2)
- Croatia Goran Ivanišević – Zagreb, Milan, Vienna (3)
- Sweden Thomas Johansson – Copenhagen, St. Petersburg (2)
- Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov – Halle, New Haven, Moscow (3)
- Germany Nicolas Kiefer – Toulouse (1)
- Czech Republic Petr Korda – Stuttgart Masters (1)
- Slovakia Ján Krošlák – Shanghai (1)
- Slovakia Karol Kučera – Ostrava (1)
- Brazil Gustavo Kuerten – French Open
- Netherlands Richard Krajicek – Rotterdam, Tokyo, Rosmalen (3)
- Spain Félix Mantilla – Bologna, Gstaad, Umag, San Marino, Bournemouth (5)
- Ukraine Andrei Medvedev – Hamburg Masters (1)
- Spain Carlos Moyá – Long Island (1)
- Austria Thomas Muster – Dubai, Miami Masters (2)
- Sweden Magnus Norman – Båstad (1)
- Australia Mark Philippoussis – Scottsdale, Munich, London (3)
- France Cédric Pioline – Prague (1)
- Australia Patrick Rafter – US Open (1)
- Chile Marcelo Ríos – Monte Carlo Masters (1)
- Switzerland Marc Rosset – Antwerp (1)
- United Kingdom Greg Rusedski – Nottingham, Basel (2)
- United States Pete Sampras – Australian Open, San Jose, Philadelphia, Wimbledon, Cincinnati Masters, Paris Masters, Season-Ending Championships, Grand Slam Cup (8)
- France Fabrice Santoro – Lyon (1)
- Armenia Sargis Sargsian – Newport (1)
- Netherlands Sjeng Schalken – Boston (1)
- Australia Jason Stoltenberg – Coral Springs (1)
- Sweden Mikael Tillström – Chennai (1)
- Australia Todd Woodbridge – Adelaide (1)
- United States Chris Woodruff – Canada Masters (1)
Titles won by nation:
- United States 16 (Doha, Australian Open, San Jose, Memphis, Philadelphia, Indian Wells Masters, Hong Kong, Orlando, Wimbledon, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Canada Masters, Cincinnati Masters, Beijing, Paris Masters, Season-Ending Championships)
- Spain 15 (Estoril, Barcelona, Rome Masters, Bologna, Gstaad, Stuttgart, Umag, San Marino, Long Island, Marbella, Bournemouth, Palermo, Mexico City, Bogotá, Santiago)
- Sweden 9 (Auckland, Marseille, Copenhagen, St. Petersburg, Chennai, Båstad, Indianapolis, Singapore, Stockholm)
- Australia 7 (Adelaide, Scottsdale, Munich, Coral Springs, London, US Open, Bucharest)
- United Kingdom 4 (Sydney, Nottingham, Tashkent, Basel)
- Netherlands 4 (Rotterdam, Tokyo, Rosmalen, Boston)
- Croatia 3 (Zagreb, Milan, Vienna)
- Russia 3 (Halle, New Haven, Moscow)
- Austria 2 (Dubai, Miami Masters)
- Czech Republic 2 (Amsterdam, Stuttgart Masters)
- France 2 (Prague, Lyon)
- Slovakia 2 (Shanghai, Ostrava)
- Uruguay 2 (Atlanta, St. Poelten)
- Armenia 1 (Newport)
- Belgium 1 (Kitzbühel)
- Brazil 1 (French Open)
- Chile 1 (Monte Carlo Masters)
- Germany 1 (Toulouse)
- Morocco 1 (Casablanca)
- Switzerland 1 (Antwerp)
- Ukraine 1 (Hamburg Masters)
The following players won their first career title:
- Spain Julian Alonso – Santiago
- Morocco Hicham Arazi – Casablanca
- Sweden Jonas Björkman – Auckland
- United Kingdom Tim Henman – Sydney
- Sweden Thomas Johansson – Copenhagen
- Germany Nicolas Kiefer – Toulouse
- Brazil Gustavo Kuerten – French Open
- Sweden Magnus Norman – Båstad
- France Fabrice Santoro – Lyon
- Armenia Sargis Sargsian – Newport
- Sweden Mikael Tillström – Chennai
- United States Chris Woodruff – Canada Masters