The 1983 Volvo Grand Prix was a professional tennis circuit held that year. It incorporated the four grand slam tournaments, the Grand Prix tournaments, and two team tournaments (the Davis Cup and the World Team Cup). The circuit was administered by the Men's International Professional Tennis Council (MIPTC).
Schedule
The table below shows the 1983 Volvo Grand Prix schedule (a precursor to the ATP Tour).
Key
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
January 1984
ATP rankings
<small>*The official ATP year-end rankings were listed from January 2, 1984.</small>
List of tournament winners
The list of winners and number of Grand Prix titles won, alphabetically by last name:
- John Alexander (1) Auckland
- Roberto Argüello (1) Venice
- Jimmy Arias (4) Florence, Rome, Indianapolis, Palermo
- Pablo Arraya (1) Bordeaux
- Mike Bauer (1) Adelaide
- Pat Cash (1) Brisbane
- José Luis Clerc (4) Guarujá, Boston, Washington, D.C., North Conway
- Jimmy Connors (4) Memphis, Las Vegas, Queen's Club, US Open
- Marty Davis (1) Cleveland
- Scott Davis (1) Maui
- Matt Doyle (1) Cologne
- Brad Drewett (1) South Orange
- John Fitzgerald (2) Newport, Stowe
- Vitas Gerulaitis (1) Basel
- Sammy Giammalva (1) Monterrey
- Andrés Gómez (1) Dallas
- Brian Gottfried (1) Vienna
- Heinz Günthardt (1) Toulouse
- José Higueras (3) La Quinta, Bournemouth, Stuttgart Outdoor
- Thomas Högstedt (1) Ferrara
- Aaron Krickstein (1) Tel Aviv
- Johan Kriek (3) Tampa, Bristol, Johannesburg
- Ivan Lendl (8) Masters, Detroit WCT, Milan, Houston WCT, Hilton Head WCT, Montreal, San Francisco, Tokyo Indoor
- Wally Masur (1) Hong Kong
- Gene Mayer (2) Rotterdam, Los Angeles
- Sandy Mayer (1) Gstaad
- John McEnroe (6) Philadelphia, Dallas WCT, Wimbledon, Forest Hills WCT, Sydney Indoor, Wembley
- Peter McNamara (1) Brussels
- Yannick Noah (3) Madrid, Hamburg, French Open
- Joakim Nyström (1) Sydney Outdoor
- Nduka Odizor (1) Taiwan
- VÃÂctor Pecci (1) Viña del Mar
- Raúl RamÃÂrez (1) Caracas
- Pedro Rebolledo (1) Bahia
- Nick Saviano (1) Nancy
- TomáÃ
¡ Ã
 mÃÂd (2) Munich, Hilversum
- Henrik Sundström (1) Nice
- Brian Teacher (2) Munich WCT, Columbus
- Eliot Teltscher (1) Tokyo Outdoor
- Guillermo Vilas (3) Richmond WCT, Delray Beach WCT, Kitzbüjel
- Mats Wilander (9) Monte Carlo, Lisbon, Aix-en-Provence, BÃÂ¥stad, Cincinnati, Geneva, Barcelona, Stockholm, Australian Open
The following players won their first title in 1983:
See also
Notes
References
Further reading
External links