2017 Aegon Classic Birmingham

(Redirected from 2017 Aegon Classic)

The 2017 Aegon Classic Birmingham was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 36th edition of the event, and a Premier tournament on the 2017 WTA Tour. It took place at the Edgbaston Priory Club in Birmingham, United Kingdom from 19 June until 25 June 2017. Petra Kvitová won the singles title.

2017 Aegon Classic Birmingham
Date19–25 June
Edition36th
CategoryWTA Premier
Draw32S / 16D
Prize money$846,000
SurfaceGrass
LocationBirmingham, United Kingdom
VenueEdgbaston Priory Club
Champions
Singles
Czech Republic Petra Kvitová
Doubles
Australia Ashleigh Barty / Australia Casey Dellacqua
← 2016 · Birmingham Classic · 2018 →

Points and prize money

edit

Point distribution

edit
Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Q Q2 Q1
Singles 470 305 185 100 55 1 25 / 18 13 1
Doubles 1

Prize money

edit
Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Q Q2 Q1
Singles $146,200 $77,850 $41,555 $22,310 $11,930 $5,735 $3,400 $1,815 $1,005
Doubles $45,620 $24,340 $13,310 $6,780 $3,675

Singles main draw entrants

edit

Seeds

edit
Country Player Rank1 Seed
  GER Angelique Kerber 1 1
  UKR Elina Svitolina 5 2
  SVK Dominika Cibulková 6 3
  GBR Johanna Konta 8 4
  FRA Kristina Mladenovic 13 5
  ESP Garbiñe Muguruza 15 6
  CZE Petra Kvitová 17 7
  CZE Barbora Strýcová 20 8
  AUS Daria Gavrilova 24 9
  • 1 Rankings as of June 12, 2017.

Other entrants

edit

The following players received wildcards into the main draw:

The following players received entry from the qualifying draw:

The following player received entry as a lucky loser:

Withdrawals

edit
Before the tournament

Retirements

edit

Doubles main draw entrants

edit

Seeds

edit
Country Player Country Player Rank1 Seed
  CZE Lucie Šafářová   CZE Barbora Strýcová 12 1
  USA Abigail Spears   SLO Katarina Srebotnik 38 2
  CAN Gabriela Dabrowski   CHN Xu Yifan 42 3
  AUS Ashleigh Barty   AUS Casey Dellacqua 51 4
  • 1 Rankings as of June 12, 2017.

Other entrants

edit

The following pair received a wildcard into the doubles main draw:

Withdrawals

edit
During the tournament

Finals

edit

Singles

edit

Doubles

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Vesnina withdrew in Birmingham due to injury and was initially replaced by Latvian Jeļena Ostapenko. However, when Ostapenko chose to withdraw due to her victory at the French Open, she was now replaced by Australian Ashleigh Barty.[1]

References

edit
edit