2022 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour


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The 2022 International Tennis Federation (ITF) Men's World Tennis Tour is an entry-level tour for Men's professional tennis. It is organized by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Challenger Tour. The Men's ITF World Tennis Tour includes tournaments with prize money of either $US15,000 or $25,000. The results of ITF tournaments are incorporated into the ATP ranking, which enables professionals to progress to the ATP Challenger Tour and ATP Tour, and ultimately the Grand Slams. The Tour offers approximately 530 tournaments across 60 countries.

2022 ITF Men's World Tennis Tour
Details
Duration3 January – December 2022
Edition25th
CategoriesM25 tournaments
M15 tournaments
Achievements (singles)
Most tournament titlesTunisia Skander Mansouri
Australia Dane Sweeny
China Bu Yunchaokete (6)
Most tournament finalsTunisia Skander Mansouri
Germany Timo Stodder (8)

2021

2023

Tournaments at $15,000 level include reserved main draw places for Top 100-ranked ITF World Tennis Tour Juniors.[1]

From 1 March, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine the ITF announced that players from Belarus and Russia could still play on the tour but would not be allowed to play under the flag of Belarus or Russia.[2]

Cancelled/postponed tournaments

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The following tournaments were formally announced by the ITF before being subsequently cancelled or postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic or other reasons.

Week of Tournament Status
January 3 Chiang Rai, Thailand
M15 – hard
Postponed to April 4
January 10 Chiang Rai, Thailand
M15 – hard
Postponed to April 11
January 17 Doha, Qatar
M15 – hard
Cancelled
Bressuire, France
M15+H – hard (i)
Chiang Rai, Thailand
M15 – hard
Postponed to April 18
January 24 Nußloch, Germany
M25 – carpet (i)
Cancelled
Doha, Qatar
M15 – hard
Chiang Rai, Thailand
M15 – hard
Postponed to April 25
January 31 Doha, Qatar
M15 – hard
Cancelled
April 4 Kazan, Russia
M25 – hard (i)
Cancelled due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
April 18 Vyshkovo, Ukraine
M15 – clay
May 9 Greenville, United States
M15 – hard
Cancelled
May 16 Skopje, North Macedonia
M15 – clay
Postponed to June 6
May 23 Cairo, Egypt
M15 – clay
Cancelled
Skopje, North Macedonia
M15 – clay
Postponed to June 13
Novomoskovsk, Ukraine
M15 – clay (i)
Cancelled due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
May 30 Novomoskovsk, Ukraine
M25 – clay (i)
June 6 Almada, Portugal
M25 – hard
Cancelled
Enköping, Sweden
M15 – clay
June 13 Almada, Portugal
M25 – hard
Enköping, Sweden
M15 – clay
June 20 Enköping, Sweden
M15 – clay
June 27 Enköping, Sweden
M15 – clay
July 25 Cancún, Mexico
M15 – hard
August 1 Cancún, Mexico
M15 – hard
August 8 Bad Waltersdorf, Austria
M25 – clay
October 10 Platja d'Aro, Spain
M25 – clay

Participating host nations

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Ranking points distribution

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Category W F SF QF R16 R32 Q Q2 Q1
↓   ATP Ranking Points   ↓
M25+H (S) / M25 (S) 25 16 8 3 1
M25+H (D) / M25 (D) 25 16 8 3
M15+H (S) / M15 (S) 15 8 4 2 1
M15+H (D) / M15 (D) 15 8 4 2
↓   ITF World Tennis Ranking Points   ↓
M25+H (S) 4 1
M25 (S) 3 1
M15+H (S) 3 1
M15 (S) 2 1
  • "+H" indicates that hospitality is provided.

Prize money distribution

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Category W F SF QF R16 R32
M25+H (S) / M25 (S) $3,600 $2,120 $1,255 $730 $430 $260
M25+H (D) / M25 (D) $1,550 $900 $540 $320 $180
M15+H (S) / M15 (S) $2,160 $1,272 $753 $438 $258 $156
M15+H (D) / M15 (D) $930 $540 $324 $192 $108
  • Doubles prize money per team

These tables present the number of singles (S) and doubles (D) titles won by each player and each nation during the season. The players/nations are sorted by:

  1. Total number of titles (a doubles title won by two players representing the same nation counts as only one win for the nation)
  2. A singles > doubles hierarchy
  3. Alphabetical order (by family names for players).

To avoid confusion and double counting, these tables should be updated only after all events of the week are completed.

Titles won by player

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Titles won by nation

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  1. ^ "Prize money increases approved on ITF Pro Circuit". www.itftennis.com. International Tennis Federation (ITF). 7 May 2015. Archived from the original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  2. ^ "ITF suspends Russia, Belarus from ITF membership and team competition". www.itftennis.com.