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2013 Sony Open Tennis – Men's singles

Andy Murray defeated David Ferrer in the final, 2–6, 6–4, 7–6(7–1) to win the men's singles tennis title at the 2013 Miami Open.[1] He saved a championship point en route to his second Miami Open title.[2]

Novak Djokovic was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the fourth round to Tommy Haas. Between 2011 and 2016, this was the only edition of the tournament that Djokovic did not win.

This was the first edition of the tournament not to feature an American in the quarterfinals, and also the first all-European quarterfinal lineup at the tournament.

Seeds

All seeds receive a bye into the second round.

  1. Serbia Novak Djokovic (fourth round)
  2. United Kingdom Andy Murray (champion)
  3. Spain David Ferrer (final)
  4. Czech Republic Tomáš Berdych (quarterfinals)
  5. Argentina Juan Martín del Potro (second round)
  6. France Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (fourth round)
  7. Serbia Janko Tipsarević (fourth round)
  8. France Richard Gasquet (semifinals)
  9. Croatia Marin Čilić (quarterfinals)
  10. Spain Nicolás Almagro (fourth round)
  11. France Gilles Simon (quarterfinals)
  12. Argentina Juan Mónaco (second round)
  13. Japan Kei Nishikori (fourth round)
  14. Canada Milos Raonic (third round, withdrew because of strep throat)
  15. Germany Tommy Haas (semifinals)
  16. Italy Andreas Seppi (fourth round)
  17. United States Sam Querrey (fourth round)
  18. Germany Philipp Kohlschreiber (second round)
  19. Ukraine Alexandr Dolgopolov (third round)
  20. United States John Isner (third round)
  21. Poland Jerzy Janowicz (second round)
  22. France Jérémy Chardy (second round)
  23. Germany Florian Mayer (second round)
  24. France Julien Benneteau (second round)
  25. Spain Fernando Verdasco (second round)
  26. South Africa Kevin Anderson (third round)
  27. Slovakia Martin Kližan (second round)
  28. Russia Mikhail Youzhny (third round)
  29. Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov (third round)
  30. Spain Feliciano López (withdrew because of a wrist injury)
  31. Spain Marcel Granollers (second round)
  32. Italy Fabio Fognini (third round)

Draw

Key

Finals

Top half

Section 1

Section 2

Section 3

Section 4

Bottom half

Section 5

Section 6

Section 7

Section 8

Qualifying

Seeds

  1. United States Michael Russell (first round)
  2. Germany Daniel Brands (qualifying competition, lucky loser)
  3. Russia Dmitry Tursunov (qualified)
  4. France Édouard Roger-Vasselin (qualifying competition, lucky loser)
  5. France Guillaume Rufin (qualified)
  6. Argentina Martín Alund (first round)
  7. Czech Republic Jan Hájek (qualified)
  8. United States Rajeev Ram (qualified)
  9. France Kenny de Schepper (first round)
  10. United States Tim Smyczek (qualified)
  11. Belgium Steve Darcis (first round)
  12. Ukraine Sergiy Stakhovsky (first round)
  13. Germany Matthias Bachinger (qualifying competition)
  14. Romania Adrian Ungur (first round)
  15. Netherlands Thiemo de Bakker (qualified)
  16. Australia Matthew Ebden (first round)
  17. Brazil Rogério Dutra da Silva (qualifying competition)
  18. Austria Andreas Haider-Maurer (qualifying competition)
  19. Germany Jan-Lennard Struff (qualifying competition)
  20. Germany Philipp Petzschner (first round)
  21. France Marc Gicquel (qualified)
  22. Germany Björn Phau (qualifying competition)
  23. Israel Dudi Sela (qualified)
  24. Italy Matteo Viola (qualifying competition)

Qualifiers

  1. Israel Dudi Sela
  2. France Marc Gicquel
  3. Russia Dmitry Tursunov
  4. Netherlands Thiemo de Bakker
  5. France Guillaume Rufin
  6. Belgium Olivier Rochus
  7. Czech Republic Jan Hájek
  8. United States Rajeev Ram
  9. Canada Frank Dancevic
  10. United States Tim Smyczek
  11. Romania Marius Copil
  12. United States Robby Ginepri

Lucky losers

  1. Germany Daniel Brands
  2. France Édouard Roger-Vasselin

Draw

Key

First qualifier

Second qualifier

Third qualifier

Fourth qualifier

Fifth qualifier

Sixth qualifier

Seventh qualifier

Eighth qualifier

Ninth qualifier

Tenth qualifier

Eleventh qualifier

Twelfth qualifier

References

  1. ^ "Andy Murray secures world No2 slot with Miami final win over David Ferrer". Guardian. 1 April 2013. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  2. ^ "Murray edges Ferrer in Miami". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2023-08-23.