Date | R | Home v Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
07/24 03:55 | 24 | [68] Jeremy Chardy v Marcelo Tomas Barrios Vera [195] | 6-1,7-6 |
07/24 03:40 | 24 | [42] Nikoloz Basilashvili v Roberto Carballes Baena [90] | 6-3,6-2 |
07/24 03:25 | 24 | [40] Alexander Bublik v Daniil Medvedev [2] | 4-6,6-7 |
07/24 03:20 | 24 | [160] Sumit Nagal v Denis Istomin [197] | 6-4,6-7,6-4 |
07/24 02:00 | 24 | [120] Pedro Sousa v Alejandro Davidovich Fokina [35] | 3-6,0-6 |
07/24 02:00 | 24 | [61] Lorenzo Musetti v John Millman [44] | 3-6,4-6 |
Germany's Alexander Zverev defeated Karen Khachanov of the Russian Olympic Committee in the final, 6–3, 6–1, to win the gold medal in men's singles tennis at the 2020 Summer Olympics. It was both countries' first medals at the event since 2000, and Germany's first victory. In the bronze medal match, Spain's Pablo Carreño Busta defeated Serbia's Novak Djokovic, 6–4, 6–7(6–8), 6–3. En route to his bronze medal, Carreño Busta defeated the world's top-two ranked players – Djokovic and the ROC's Daniil Medvedev.
64 players from 31 nations competed.
Andy Murray was the two-time defending gold medalist, but withdrew before his first-round match due to a quadriceps strain.
World No. 1 Djokovic was attempting to win the fourth of five components of a potential Golden Slam (and to be the third man to do so across an entire career, after Andre Agassi and Rafael Nadal) and to complete the Career Super Slam (he would be the second man to achieve this, after Agassi), having already won the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon Championships that year, but he lost to Zverev in the semifinals. Djokovic would eventually complete the Career Golden Slam and Career Super Slam in 2024.
The medals for the competition were presented by Nenad Lalović, IOC Executive Board Member; Serbia; and the medalists' bouquets were presented by David Haggerty, ITF President; United States.