Elena Bovina and Justine Henin-Hardenne were the defending champions but none competed this year, as both players decided to priorize the singles competition.
Kim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama won the title by defeating Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Suárez 7–6(7–3), 6–2 in the final.[1]
Seeds
Draw
Key
Draw
Qualifiers
Qualifying seeds
Qualifiers
Sonya Jeyaseelan /
Tamarine Tanasugarn
Qualifying draw
References
- ^ "2003 Zurich WTA Singles Results". QuickFound - Tennis. 2003. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
Kim Cijsters happens to be # 2 at doubles also at this time; the player stopping her from being # 1 at doubles is her partner, Ai Sugiyama, so that is unlikely to change. Kim and Ai won the Zurich doubles title by defeating the other current great team, Virgina Ruano Pascual & Paola Suarez, 7-6(3), 6-2
External links
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Grand Slam events | |
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Tier I tournaments | |
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Tier II tournaments |
- Sydney (S, D)
- Paris (S, D)
- Antwerp (S, D)
- Dubai (S, D)
- Scottsdale (S, D)
- Amelia Island (S, D)
- Warsaw (S, D)
- Eastbourne (S, D)
- Stanford (S, D)
- San Diego (S, D)
- Los Angeles (S, D)
- New Haven (S, D)
- Shanghai (S, D)
- Leipzig (S, D)
- Filderstadt (S, D)
- Linz (S, D)
- Philadelphia (S, D)
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Tier III tournaments |
- Gold Coast (S, D)
- Doha (S, D)
- Memphis (S, D)
- Bogotá (S, D)
- Acapulco (S, D)
- Bol (S, D)
- Strasbourg (S, D)
- Birmingham (S, D)
- Vienna (S, D)
- 's-Hertogenbosch (S, D)
- Sopot (S, D)
- Bali (S, D)
- Tokyo (S, D)
- Luxembourg (S, D)
- Quebec City (S, D)
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Tier IV tournaments | |
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Tier V tournaments | |
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Team events | |
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