Tim Essonne

The Tim Essonne is an international junior tennis tournament for players aged 12–14, held in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois. It is one of the most prestigious trophies in the U14 circuit of the Tennis Europe Junior Tour.[1]

The event has seen a number of its champions go on to become professionals, such as Richard Gasquet and Rafael Nadal who won the tournament in 1998 and 1999 respectively.[1][2] Other notable participations were Roger Federer in 1994 and Stefanos Tsitsipas in 2012.[3] Future World No. 1s Martina Hingis, Amélie Mauresmo, and Justine Henin also participated.[4]

History

The tournament was created in 1983, at the request of Jean-Paul Loth (then national technical director) and Albert Guilbert (president of the Ligue de l'Essonne).[5]

The competition has been classified as a grade 1 of the Tennis Europe Junior Tour, a rank it has held since its creation in 1983 thanks to the accommodation and catering offered to participants and coaches.[1][5] As a grade 1 tournament, Tim Essonne has a lot of points to offer in the U14 Junior Rankings; for instance, in 2017, Max Westphal from Esson went from 77th to 6th place in Europe after reaching the final.[1]

The tournament was initially called simply Tim, then Tim 91, and finally renamed Tim Essonne. Its success has continued to grow since its creation. In 35 years, the number of participating nations has increased from 5 to nearly 50.[5]

Singles Champions

Boys' and Girls Results[2]
Year Boys Girls
1983 Arnaud Boetsch Cécile Bourdais
1984 Guillaume Raoux Emmanuelle Derly
1986 Pierre-Olivier Citton Linda Niemantsverdriet
1987 Bart De Buyser Anna Földényi
1988 Filip Kaščák Lara Bitter
1989 Robert Witz Anne Pastor
1990 Johann Potron Rita Kuti-Kis
1991 Björn Rehnquist Martina Hingis
1992 Daniel Elsner Corinne Dauve
1993 Filip Anioła Zsófia Gubacsi
1994 Gasper Martinjak Elena Dementieva
1995 Tommy Robredo Jelena Pandžić
1996 Mickael Ali-Cayo Martina Babáková
1997 Stefan Wiespeiner Marie-Gaïané Mikaelian
1998 Richard Gasquet Matea Mezak
1999 Rafael Nadal Alexandra Orăşanu
2000 Alexandre Krasnoroutskiy Tsvetana Pironkova
2001 Kārlis Lejnieks Ekaterina Kosminskaya
2002 Kevin Botti Evgeniya Rodina
2003 Uladzimir Ignatik Elena Kulikova
2004 Yannik Reuter Petra Martić
2005 Mikhail Biryukov Yana Buchina
2006 Carlos Boluda-Purkiss Daria Gavrilova
2007 Evgeny Karlovskiy Daria Gavrilova
2008 Julien Delaplane Petra Uberalová
2009 Thomas Brechemier Estelle Cascino
2020 Cancelled
2011 Andrey Rublev Valentini Grammatikopoulou
2012 Kenneth Raisma Olga Fridman
2013 Corentin Moutet Markéta Vondroušová
2014 Rudolf Molleker Olesya Pervushina
2015 Adrian Andreev Taisiya Pachkaleva
2016 Lilian Marmousez Zheng Qinwen
2017 Jérôme Kym Maria Bondarenko
2018 Sean Cuenin Linda Nosková
2019 Gilles-Arnaud Bailly Tijana Sretenović
2020 Théo Papamalamis Shanice Roignot
2020 Cancelled
2022 Zangar Nurlanuly Ksenia Efremova
2023 Alexey Frolov Ksenia Efremova
2024 Eric Lorimer Xinran Sun
2025 Rafael Pagonis Grace Bernstein

Doubles champions

Year Boys Girls
2011 Bogdan Borza
Nicolae Frunză
Miriam Kolodziejova
Vendula Žovincová
2012 Dylan Bednarczyk
Kenneth Raisma
Barbora Miklová
Markéta Vondroušová
2013 Artem Dubrivnyy
Kacper Żuk
Anna Slováková
Markéta Vondroušová
2014 Dorian Bahloul
Youlian Iakovlev
Francesca Jones
Dalila Said
2015 Raphael Bonnet Flores
Allan Deschamps
Taisiya Pachkaleva
Anastasia Tikhonova
2016 Jean Marc Malkowski
Alexander Georg Mandma
Denisa Hindová
Tereza Vajsejtlová
2017 Jacobi Bain
Max Westphal
Maria Bondarenko
Milana Zhabrailova
2018 Sean Cuenin
William Jucha
Linda Fruhvirtová
Linda Nosková
2019 Yaroslav Demin
Grigory Shebekin
Valery Gynina
Malwina Rowińska
2020 Sam Pidoux
Janis Raffael Simmen
Hephzibah Oluwadare
Hannah Read
2021 Cancelled
2022 Tito Chávez
Eudald González
Ksenia Efremova
Marta Mariia Makarova
2023 Filip Ladman
Savva Rybkin
Victoria Luiza Barros
Sofia Kryvoruchko
2024 Alexey Ilin
Tsikhan Koran
Tea Kovačević
Xinran Sun
2025 Vencel Fazekas
Akhmadi Makhanov
Grace Bernstein
Milica Sakamoto Milojevic

Other notable participations

Other notable players[6]
Year Participant Nationality Round
1990 Iva Majoli  Croatia Semifinals
1992 Amélie Mauresmo  France Quarterfinals
1994 Justine Henin  Belgium Semifinals
1995 Nicolas Mahut  France Second round
1995 Marta Marrero  Spain Round of 16
1997 Gilles Simon  France Quarterfinals
1998 Tomáš Berdych  Czech Republic Second round
1999 Gaël Monfils  France Round of 16
2001 Adrian Mannarino  France Semifinals
2004 Pierre-Hugues Herbert  France Second round
2004 Grigor Dimitrov  Bulgaria Second round
2004 Simona Halep  Romania Round of 16
2006 Garbiñe Muguruza  Spain Second round
2007 Annika Beck  Germany Round of 16
2009 Daniil Medvedev  Russia Quarterfinals
2012 Stefanos Tsitsipas  Greece Second round

Organization

The Tim Essonne is one of the most important tournaments in its age category. Its sponsors and long-standing institutional partners are: The French Tennis Federation, the General Council of Essonne, the Departmental Youth and Sports Directorate, the commune of Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois. In addition, the tournament can also count on its numerous volunteers who have been present every year since its creation.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois: le tournoi Tim Essonne, une fabrique de champions" [Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois: the Tim Essonne tournament, a factory of champions]. www.leparisien.fr (in French). 4 March 2019. Archived from the original on 4 December 2021. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b "TIM ESSONNE - Palmarès de 1983 à 2023" [TIM ESSONNE - Prize list from 1983 to 2023]. www.tournoi.fft.fr (in French). Archived from the original on 26 October 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Nadal en 1999, Federer en 94... Les 40 ans du TIM Essonne démarrent ce jeudi" [Nadal in 1999, Federer in 94... The 40th anniversary of TIM Essonne starts this Thursday]. actu.fr (in French). 9 February 2023. Archived from the original on 11 February 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  4. ^ "C'est reparti pour un Tim" [Here we go again for a Tim]. www.essonne.fr (in French). 22 February 2022. Archived from the original on 30 October 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "L'histoire du Tim" [The history of a Tim]. www.essonne.fr (in French). Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  6. ^ "Ils ont participé au Tim Essonne" [They participated in the Tim Essonne]. www.tournoi.fft.fr (in French). Archived from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023..
  7. ^ "Comite du tournoi 2023" [Tournament Committee]. www.tournoi.fft.fr. Archived from the original on 8 February 2022. Retrieved 22 October 2023.