Kim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, however Clijsters did not compete.
Cara Black and Rennae Stubbs defeated Sugiyama and Liezel Huber in the final, 6–3, 7–6(7–5) to win the ladies' doubles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.[1]
Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Suárez had the chance to hold all four Grand Slam championship titles, but lost to Black and Stubbs in the semifinals, also snapping a streak of nine straight Grand Slam finals reached by Ruano Pascual and Suárez.
Seeds
Click on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.
Qualifying
Draw
Key
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
References
- ^ Barrett, John (2014). Wimbledon: The Official History (4th ed.). Vision Sports Publishing. ISBN 9-781909-534230.
External links
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Grand Slam events | |
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Tier I tournaments |
- Tokyo (S, D)
- Indian Wells (S, D)
- Key Biscayne (S, D)
- Charleston (S, D)
- Berlin (S, D)
- Rome (S, D)
- San Diego (S, D)
- Montreal (S, D)
- Moscow (S, D)
- Zürich (S, D)
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Tier II tournaments |
- Sydney (S, D)
- Paris (S, D)
- Antwerp (S, D)
- Dubai (S, D)
- Doha (S, D)
- Amelia Island (S, D)
- Warsaw (S, D)
- Eastbourne (S, D)
- Stanford (S, D)
- Los Angeles (S, D)
- New Haven (S, D)
- Beijing (S, D)
- Stuttgart (S, D)
- Linz (S, D)
- Philadelphia (S, D)
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Tier III tournaments |
- Gold Coast (S, D)
- Memphis (S, D)
- Bogotá (S, D)
- Acapulco (S, D)
- Strasbourg (S, D)
- Birmingham (S, D)
- 's-Hertogenbosch (S, D)
- Sopot (S, D)
- Cincinnati (S, D)
- Bali (S, D)
- Hasselt (S, D)
- Guangzhou (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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