Hopman Cup

{{Short description|International tennis tournament}}

{{EngvarB|date=April 2018}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2018}}

{{Infobox sports league

| title = Hopman Cup

| current_season = 2025 Hopman Cup

| last_season =

| upcoming_season = 2025 Hopman Cup

| logo =

| caption = 2018 Logo

| pixels = 200px

| sport = Tennis

| founded = {{start date |df=y|1989}}

| venue = Burswood Dome (1989–2012)
Perth Arena (2013–2019)
Nice Lawn Tennis Club (2023)
Fiera del Levante (2025)

| teams = 8 (1989,1996–2019,2025–)
12 (1990–1995)
6 (2023)

| country = Australia (1989–2019)
France (2023)
Italy (2025)

| competitors = ITF member nations

| champion = Croatia

(2nd title)

| champ_season = Croatia (2023)

| most_champs = United States (6 titles)

| website = {{official URL}}

}}

{{Tennis tournaments}}

The Hopman Cup is an international tennis tournament that plays mixed teams (one male and one female) on a country-by-country basis.{{Cite web|url=http://hopmancup.com/?id=103&NewsId=354|title=Hopman Cup | 29 December – 5 January 2019}} It was first held in Perth, Western Australia each year from 1989 to 2019, played on indoor hardcourt, before being replaced on the calendar in 2020 by the now defunct ATP Cup.{{cite web |url=https://www.itftennis.com/media/4229/2020-itf-agm-agenda-eng.pdf |title=ITF – AGM Agenda – Virtual Meeting |date=21 November 2020 |publisher=ITF |page=69 |access-date=30 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210119112948/https://www.itftennis.com/media/4229/2020-itf-agm-agenda-eng.pdf |archive-date=19 January 2021 |url-status=live }} The tournament was played in an eight-team format, with the exception for the years 1990-1995, with twelve teams competing. It returned in July 2023 in Nice, France, played on outdoor clay, with six teams invited to participate.{{Cite news |last=Fraser |first=Stuart |date=6 September 2022 |title=World's top men and women set to compete alongside each other in new mixed tournament |newspaper=The Times |language=en |url=https://www.thetimes.com/sport/tennis/article/world-s-top-men-and-women-set-to-compete-alongside-each-other-in-new-mixed-tournament-shtt85hfb |url-status=live |archive-url=https://archive.today/20220906173316/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/world-s-top-men-and-women-set-to-compete-alongside-each-other-in-new-mixed-tournament-shtt85hfb |archive-date=6 September 2022 |issn=0140-0460}} In 2025, the Hopman Cup will take place in Bari, Puglia, Italy, from July 16 to 20 at the Fiera del Levante, continuing its tradition of showcasing top international mixed-team competition.

Format

Unlike other major international team tennis tournaments such as the Davis Cup and the Fed Cup, which are for men or women only, the Hopman Cup is a mixed competition in which male and female players are on combined teams and represent their countries. Players are invited to attend and national coaches are not involved in selecting teams.

The tournament is a sanctioned official event in the calendar of the International Tennis Federation (ITF) but, while individual player results are tallied, they are not regarded as official ATP matches or included in the calculation of ATP or WTA rankings.

Eight nations are selected annually to compete in the Hopman Cup. The "last" team may be decided by play-offs between several nations before competition begins. For the 2007 Hopman Cup however, this did not occur, due to the Asian Qualifying Tournament creating the eighth team.

Each team consists of one male player and one female player. Each match-up between two teams at the event consists of:

  • one women's singles match
  • one men's singles match
  • one mixed doubles match

The eight competing teams are separated into two groups of four (with two teams being seeded) and face-off against each of the other three teams in their group in a round-robin format. The seedings ensure that each group has approximately similar strength. The top team in each group then meet in a final to decide the champions.

If a player is injured then a player of a lower ranking of that nation may be the substitute.

The winning team receives a silver cup perpetual trophy and through 2013 the winning team members were presented with distinctive individual trophies in the shape of a tennis ball.

History

The Hopman Cup was created in 1989. The championship is named in honour of Harry Hopman (1906–1985), an Australian tennis player and coach who guided the country to 15 Davis Cup titles between 1938 and 1969. From the time the Hopman Cup was founded in 1989, it was attended each year by Hopman's widow, his second wife Lucy, who travelled to the tournament from her home in the United States until she died in 2018.[https://web.archive.org/web/20090324143142/http://hopmancup.com/?id=801 The Harry Hopman Legacy], Hyundai Hopman Cup website (archived), 24 March 2009.

The 2005/06 Hopman Cup was the first elite-level tennis tournament in which the system was introduced allowing players to challenge point-ending line calls similar to that in clay court tournaments. The challenged calls are immediately reviewed on a large monitor using Hawk-Eye technology. Up to and including 2012, the venue was the Burswood Dome at the Burswood Entertainment Complex. The 20th Hopman Cup, in 2008, was intended to be the last held at the Burswood Dome, however this was extended until 2012 when the new Perth Arena was due for completion. From 2013 to 2019, it was played at the Perth Arena.{{cite web|first1=Joseph|last1=Sapienza|date=20 April 2010|title=Perth Arena to ensure Hopman Cup stays in WA|url=http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/perth-arena-to-ensure-hopman-cup-stays-in-wa-20100420-srev.html|publisher=WA Today}}

From 2014 to 2019, the Hopman Cup tournament director was Paul Kilderry after the resignation of Steve Ayles.{{cite web|date=17 October 2013|title=Kilderry new Hopman Cup tournament director|url=http://www.tennis.com.au/news/2013/10/17/kilderry-new-hopman-cup-tournament-director|publisher=Tennis Australia}}{{cite web|first1=Courtney|last1=Walsh|date=17 October 2013|title=Sam Stosur's manager rises in Hopman Cup shake-up|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/tennis/sam-stosurs-manager-rises-in-hopman-cup-shake-up/news-story/f47872ec0271d9e81640cb0fdde280c2|work=The Australian}} Previously, the former Australian tennis player Paul McNamee, who played a key role in the founding of the championships, was the tournament director.

In 2019 for the 31st edition of the tournament, a record crowd of 14,064 witnessed the 2019 Hopman Cup match between United States and Switzerland.{{cite news|url=https://www.smh.com.au/sport/tennis/after-two-decades-in-the-spotlight-roger-and-serena-meet-on-court-20190102-p50p5z.html|title=After two decades in the spotlight, Roger and Serena meet on court|newspaper=smh.com.au|first=Ben|last=Rothenberg|date=2019-01-02|access-date=2019-01-03}} Roger Federer and Belinda Bencic won, with Federer becoming the first player to win the tournament three times.{{Cite web|date=2019-01-05|title=Federer wins Hopman Cup for record 3rd time|url=https://www.espn.com/tennis/story/_/id/25689839/roger-federer-wins-hopman-cup-switzerland-record-3rd|access-date=2021-09-25|website=ESPN.com}} He and Belinda Bencic became the first pairing to successfully defend the title, having won it the previous year.{{Cite web|date=5 January 2019|title=Swiss bliss: Federer and Bencic claim historic title|url=https://hopmancup.com/2019/01/swiss-bliss-federer-and-bencic-claim-historic-win/}}

The Hopman Cup was not held in 2020 (it was replaced in the tennis calendar until 2022 by the now defunct ATP Cup).{{Cite news|date=2019-03-28|title=Tennis: Hopman Cup ends after three decades as Perth made ATP Cup host|work=Reuters|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-tennis-atp-idUSKCN1R90PW|access-date=2021-09-25}} ITF president David Haggerty later announced the tournament would return in 2021.{{Cite news|date=2019-10-09|title=Exclusive: Hopman Cup set to return in 2021 – ITF President|work=Reuters|url=https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-tennis-hopman-exclusive-idUKKBN1WO259|access-date=2021-09-25}} After the tournament was unable to be held in 2021, he announced it would return in 2022 instead.{{Cite web|last=Fest|first=Sebastian A.|title=The International Tennis Federation's plans: 11-day tournament in Paris 2024, advance gender equality with Hopman Cup 2022 and ATP to understand Djokovic's PTPA|url=https://www.infobae.com/aroundtherings/articles/2021/07/31/the-international-tennis-federations-plans-11-day-tournament-in-paris-2024-advance-gender-equality-with-hopman-cup-2022-and-atp-to-understand-djokovics-ptpa/|access-date=2021-09-25|website=infobae|date=31 July 2021 |language=}} In December 2021, it was announced that the tournament would return, and will be played in Nice in 2023.{{Cite web|date=9 December 2021|title=Tennis: Nice accueillera la Hopman cup à partir 2023|url=https://www.nicematin.com/tennis/tennis-nice-accueillera-la-hopman-cup-a-partir-2023-732565|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211214093735/https://www.nicematin.com/tennis/tennis-nice-accueillera-la-hopman-cup-a-partir-2023-732565|archive-date=14 December 2021|access-date=14 December 2021|website=nice-matin|language=fr}} The 2023 and 2024 editions would contract to six teams before expanding back to the original eight-team format in 2025.{{cite web|url=https://www.itftennis.com/en/news-and-media/articles/hopman-cup-to-return-at-nice-lawn-tennis-club-in-2023/#:~:text=Six%20teams%20will%20compete%20in,Davis%20Cup%20captain%2C%20Harry%20Hopman.|title=HOPMAN CUP TO RETURN IN NICE, FRANCE IN 2023}}

In March 2024, it was decided that the Hopman Cup would not be held that year due to the 2024 Summer Olympics and would return in 2025.{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/hopmancup/status/1765014400883183702|title=2024 Hopman Cup Cancelled Tweet}} In April 2025, it was made public that the tournament would be held from July 16-20, 2025 at the Fiera del Levante in Bari, Puglia, Italy.{{Cite web |title=Hopman Cup – JULY 16TH TO 20TH 2025 |url=https://hopmancup.com |access-date=2025-04-03 |language=en-US}}

Telecasts

The Hopman Cup was originally broadcast by the Seven Network until 1994, then by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1995–2010). From 2011, a five-year deal to broadcast the competition was signed by Network Ten, a deal that ended abruptly in November 2013. The Seven Network's 7mate channel subsequently picked up the telecasting rights.[http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/-/wa/19905735/7mate-to-serve-up-hopman-cup-action/ "7mate to serve up Hopman Cup action"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131123013923/http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/-/wa/19905735/7mate-to-serve-up-hopman-cup-action/ |date=23 November 2013 }}, The West Australian, 19 November 2013. The Nine Network broadcast the tournament in 2019. In 2025, the official broadcaster was SuperTennis TV.

Records and statistics

=Finals by year=

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:90%"
Year

!Winners

!Score

!Runners-up

!Female champion

!Male champion

!Female finalist

!Male finalist

1989

| {{hopman|CZE|name=Czechoslovakia}}

| align=center|2–0

| {{hopman|AUS}}

| align=center|Helena Suková

| align=center|Miloslav Mečíř

| align=center|Hana Mandlíková

| align=center|Pat Cash

1990

| {{hopman|ESP}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|Arantxa Sánchez Vicario

| align=center|Emilio Sánchez

| align=center|Pam Shriver

| align=center|John McEnroe

1991

| {{hopman|SFR Yugoslavia}}

| align=center|3–0

| {{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|Monica Seles

| align=center|Goran Prpić

| align=center|Zina Garrison

| align=center|David Wheaton

1992

| {{hopman|SUI}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|CZE|name=Czechoslovakia}}

| align=center|Manuela Maleeva

| align=center|Jakob Hlasek

| align=center|Helena Suková

| align=center|Karel Nováček

1993

| {{hopman|GER}}

| align=center|2–0

| {{hopman|ESP}}

| align=center|Steffi Graf

| align=center|Michael Stich

| align=center|Arantxa Sánchez

| align=center|Emilio Sánchez

1994

| {{hopman|CZE}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|GER}}

| align=center|Jana Novotná

| align=center|Petr Korda

| align=center|Anke Huber

| align=center|Bernd Karbacher

1995

| {{hopman|GER}} (2)

| align=center|2–0

| {{hopman|UKR}}

| align=center|Anke Huber

| align=center|Boris Becker

| align=center|Natalia Medvedeva

| align=center|Andrei Medvedev

1996

| {{hopman|CRO}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|SUI}}

| align=center|Iva Majoli

| align=center|Goran Ivanišević

| align=center|Martina Hingis

| align=center|Marc Rosset

1997

| {{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|RSA}}

| align=center|Chanda Rubin

| align=center|Justin Gimelstob

| align=center|Amanda Coetzer

| align=center|Wayne Ferreira

1998

| {{hopman|SVK}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|FRA}}

| align=center|Karina Habšudová

| align=center|Karol Kučera

| align=center|Mary Pierce

| align=center|Cédric Pioline

1999

| {{hopman|AUS}}

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|SWE}}

| align=center|Jelena Dokić

| align=center|Mark Philippoussis

| align=center|Åsa Carlsson

| align=center|Jonas Björkman

2000

| {{hopman|RSA}}

| align=center|3–0

| {{hopman|THA}}

| align=center|Amanda Coetzer

| align=center|Wayne Ferreira

| align=center|Tamarine Tanasugarn

| align=center|Paradorn Srichaphan

2001

| {{hopman|SUI}} (2)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|Martina Hingis

| align=center|Roger Federer

| align=center|Monica Seles

| align=center|Jan-Michael Gambill

2002

| {{hopman|ESP}} (2)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|Arantxa Sánchez Vicario (2)

| align=center|Tommy Robredo

| align=center|Monica Seles (2)

| align=center|Jan-Michael Gambill (2)

2003

| {{hopman|USA}} (2)

| align=center|3–0

| {{hopman|AUS}}

| align=center|Serena Williams

| align=center|James Blake

| align=center|Alicia Molik

| align=center|Lleyton Hewitt

2004

| {{hopman|USA}} (3)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|SVK}}

| align=center|Lindsay Davenport

| align=center|James Blake (2)

| align=center|Daniela Hantuchová

| align=center|Karol Kučera

2005

| {{hopman|SVK}} (2)

| align=center|3–0

| {{hopman|ARG}}

| align=center|Daniela Hantuchová

| align=center|Dominik Hrbatý

| align=center|Gisela Dulko

| align=center|Guillermo Coria

2006

| {{hopman|USA}} (4)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|NED}}

| align=center|Lisa Raymond

| align=center|Taylor Dent

| align=center|Michaëlla Krajicek

| align=center|Peter Wessels

2007

| {{hopman|RUS}}

| align=center|2–0

| {{hopman|ESP}}

| align=center|Nadia Petrova

| align=center|Dmitry Tursunov

| align=center|Anabel Medina Garrigues

| align=center|Tommy Robredo

2008

| {{hopman|USA}} (5)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|SRB|2004}}

| align=center|Serena Williams (2)

| align=center|Mardy Fish

| align=center|Jelena Janković

| align=center|Novak Djokovic

2009

| {{hopman|SVK}} (3)

| align=center|2–0

| {{hopman|RUS}}

| align=center|Dominika Cibulková

| align=center|Dominik Hrbatý (2)

| align=center|Dinara Safina

| align=center|Marat Safin

2010

| {{hopman|ESP}} (3)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|GBR}}

| align=center|María JM Sánchez

| align=center|Tommy Robredo (2)

| align=center|Laura Robson

| align=center|Andy Murray

2011

| {{hopman|USA}} (6)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|BEL}}

| align=center|Bethanie Mattek-Sands

| align=center|John Isner

| align=center|Justine Henin

| align=center|Ruben Bemelmans

2012

| {{hopman|CZE}} (2)

| align=center|2–0

| {{hopman|FRA}}

| align=center|Petra Kvitová

| align=center|Tomáš Berdych

| align=center|Marion Bartoli

| align=center|Richard Gasquet

2013

| {{hopman|ESP}} (4)

| align=center|2–1

| {{hopman|SRB}}

| align=center|Anabel Medina Garrigues

| align=center|Fernando Verdasco

| align=center|Ana Ivanovic

| align=center|Novak Djokovic (2)

2014

| {{hopman|FRA}}

| align=center| 2–1

|{{hopman|POL}}

| align=center|Alizé Cornet

| align=center|Jo-Wilfried Tsonga

| align=center|Agnieszka Radwańska

| align=center|Grzegorz Panfil

2015

| {{hopman|POL}}

| align=center| 2–1

|{{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|Agnieszka Radwańska

| align=center|Jerzy Janowicz

| align=center|Serena Williams

| align=center|John Isner

2016

| {{hopman|AUS}} (2)

| align=center| 2–0

|{{hopman|UKR}}

| align=center|Daria Gavrilova

| align=center|Nick Kyrgios

| align=center|Elina Svitolina

| align=center|Alexandr Dolgopolov

2017

| {{hopman|FRA}} (2)

| align=center| 2–1

|{{hopman|USA}}

| align=center|Kristina Mladenovic

| align=center|Richard Gasquet

| align=center|CoCo Vandeweghe

| align=center|Jack Sock

2018

| {{hopman|SUI}} (3)

| align=center| 2–1

|{{hopman|GER}}

| align=center|Belinda Bencic

| align=center|Roger Federer (2)

| align=center|Angelique Kerber

| align=center|Alexander Zverev

2019

| {{hopman|SUI}} (4)

| align=center| 2–1

|{{hopman|GER}}

| align=center| Belinda Bencic (2)

| align=center| Roger Federer (3)

| align=center|Angelique Kerber (2)

| align=center|Alexander Zverev (2)

|2020–22colspan="7" style="background:#f5f5f5; text-align:center;" | No competition
2023

| {{hopman|CRO}} (2)

| align=center| 2–0

|{{hopman|SUI}}

| align=center| Donna Vekić

| align=center| Borna Ćorić

| align=center|Céline Naef

| align=center|Leandro Riedi

|2024colspan="7" style="background:#f5f5f5; text-align:center;" | No competition

{{cite web|title=Hyundai Hopman Cup |url=http://beta.itftennis.com/about/itf-events/hopman-cup/overview.aspx |work=itftennis.com |access-date=15 January 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120203021147/http://beta.itftennis.com/about/itf-events/hopman-cup/overview.aspx |archive-date=3 February 2012 }}{{cite web|title=Honour Roll – Champions |url=http://hopmancup.com/Results/Hopman-Cup-Champions.html |work=hopmancup.com |access-date=15 January 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120109233448/http://www.hopmancup.com/Results/Hopman-Cup-Champions.html |archive-date=9 January 2012 }}

=Performance by team=

class=wikitable
CountryYears wonRunners-up
{{hopman|USA}}1997, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011 (6)1990, 1991, 2001, 2002, 2015, 2017 (6)
{{hopman|ESP}}1990, 2002, 2010, 2013 (4)1993, 2007 (2)
{{hopman|SUI}}1992, 2001, 2018, 2019 (4)1996, 2023 (2)
{{hopman|SVK}}1998, 2005, 2009 (3)2004 (1)
{{hopman|CZE}}
{{hopman|TCH}}
1989, 1994, 2012 (3)1992 (1)
{{hopman|GER}}1993, 1995 (2)1994, 2018, 2019 (3)
{{hopman|AUS}}1999, 2016 (2)1989, 2003 (2)
{{hopman|FRA}}2014, 2017 (2)1998, 2012 (2)
{{hopman|CRO}}1996, 2023 (2)
{{hopman|RSA}}2000 (1)1997 (1)
{{hopman|RUS}}2007 (1)2009 (1)
{{hopman|POL}}2015 (1)2014 (1)
{{hopman|SFR Yugoslavia}}1991 (1)
{{hopman|SRB}}2008, 2013 (2)
{{hopman|UKR}}1995, 2016 (2)
{{hopman|SWE}}1999 (1)
{{hopman|THA}}2000 (1)
{{hopman|ARG}}2005 (1)
{{hopman|NED}}2006 (1)
{{hopman|GBR}}2010 (1)
{{hopman|BEL}}2011 (1)

  • Consecutive titles
  • All-time: 2, United States, 20032004; Switzerland, 20182019
  • Consecutive finals appearances
  • All-time: 4, United States, 20012004

=Participation details=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:80%"
bgcolor=

! width=130|Nation

! 1989

! 1990

! 1991

! 1992

! 1993

! 1994

! 1995

! 1996

! 1997

! 1998

! 1999

! 2000

! 2001

! 2002

! 2003

! 2004

! 2005

! 2006

! 2007

! 2008

! 2009

! 2010

! 2011

! 2012

! 2013

! 2014

! 2015

! 2016

! 2017

! 2018

! 2019

! 2023

! Total

align=left|{{hopman|ARG}}bgcolor=afeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR5
align=left rowspan="2"|{{hopman|AUS}}bgcolor=thistle rowspan="2"|Fbgcolor=yellow rowspan="2"|SFbgcolor=ffebcd rowspan="2"|QFbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|1Rbgcolor=ffebcd rowspan="2"|QFbgcolor=yellow rowspan="2"|SFbgcolor=ffebcd rowspan="2"|QFbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=lime rowspan="2"|Wbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=thistle rowspan="2"|Fbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee |RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"|RRbgcolor=afeeee rowspan="2"| RRrowspan="2"| -rowspan="2"| 31
bgcolor=lime |W
align=left|{{hopman|AUT}}bgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|RR5
align=left|{{hopman|BEL}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR8
align=left|{{hopman|BUL}}bgcolor=afeeee|RR– |
| –1
align=left|{{hopman|CAN}}LQbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR4
align=left|{{hopman|CHN}}LQbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|CIS}}bgcolor=ffebcd|QFalign=center colspan=28|Defunct1
align=left|{{hopman|TPE}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|CRO}}align=center colspan=4|Competed as {{flagicon|YUG}}bgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|W4
align=left|{{hopman|CZE}}align=center colspan=4|Competed as {{flagicon|TCH}}bgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR12
align=left nowrap|{{hopman|TCH}}bgcolor=lime|W bgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=thistle|Falign=center colspan=28|Defunct4
align=left|{{hopman|DEN}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|FRA}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=ffecbd|QFbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=ffecbd|QFbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=ffecbd|QFbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR25
align=left|{{hopman|GER}}bgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=thistle|F18
align=left|{{hopman|GBR}}bgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR9
align=left|{{hopman|GRE}}LQbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|HUN}}bgcolor=afeeee|RR1
align=left|{{hopman|IND}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|ISR}}bgcolor=afeeee|1R1
align=left|{{hopman|ITA}}bgcolor=ffecbd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee| RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR10
align=left|{{hopman|JPN}}bgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1RLQLQbgcolor=afeeee|RR6
align=left|{{hopman|KAZ}}align=center colspan=3|Competed as {{flagicon|URS}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|NED}}bgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|F8
align=left|{{hopman|NZL}}bgcolor=afeeee|1R1
align=left|{{hopman|PAR}}LQ1
align=left|{{hopman|POL}}bgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=lime|W2
align=left|{{hopman|ROU}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRLQbgcolor=afeeee|RR3
align=left|{{hopman|RUS}}align=center colspan=3|Competed as {{flagicon|URS}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR8
align=left|{{hopman|SRB}}align=center colspan=3|Competed as {{flagicon|YUG}}bgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|F3
align=left nowrap|{{hopman|SCG}}colspan="3" |Competed as {{Flagicon|YUG}}bgcolor=afeeee|RRcolspan="14"|Defunct1
align=left|{{hopman|SVK}}align=center colspan=4|Competed as {{flagicon|TCH}}bgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=lime|W8
align=left|{{hopman|RSA}}bgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR10
align=left|{{hopman|URS}}bgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFalign=center colspan=29|Defunct2
align=left|{{hopman|ESP}}bgcolor=lime|W bgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR18
align=left|{{hopman|SWE}}bgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR9
align=left|{{hopman|SUI}}bgcolor=yellow|SFbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=lime|W bgcolor=thistle|F13
align=left|{{hopman|THA}}bgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RR2
align=left|{{hopman|UKR}}align=center colspan=3|Competed as {{flagicon|URS}}bgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=thistle|F4
align=left|{{hopman|USA}}bgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=ffebcd|QFbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=lime|Wbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=thistle|Fbgcolor=afeeee|RRbgcolor=afeeee|RR30
align=left|{{hopman|UZB}}align=center colspan=3|Competed as {{flagicon|URS}}bgcolor=afeeee|RR1
align=left|{{hopman|YUG}}bgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=afeeee|1Rbgcolor=lime|Walign=center colspan=28|Defunct3
align=left|{{hopman|ZIM}}LQLQ2
Total || 8 || 12 || 12 || 12 || 12 || 12 || 12 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 8 || 6

=Statistics by team=

After 2019 edition

Note 1: Teams with index 2 include results only of lower placed team of every appearance in the tournament in instances where two teams from the same country entered the tournament, while team with no index includes results of higher placed team only.

Note 2: Considering there is an extremely high frequency of retirements due to various reasons w.o. wins/defeats are counted in all statistics.

Note 3: "Y Ent" statistic is not complete. Information about Asian Hopman Cup, a qualifying tournament that ran from 2006 until 2009 and granted the winners entry into the Hopman Cup the following year, is missing.

bgcolor="#f7f8ff" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" border="1" style="font-size: 95%; border: gray solid 1px; border-collapse: collapse;text-align:center;"

|+

| style="background: #ffffff;" width="20" | Italic

| bgcolor="#ffffff" style=text-align:left | non-existing teams (3)

style="background: #CCFFCC;" width="20" |

| bgcolor="#ffffff" style=text-align:left rowspan="2" | {{nowrap|most (best or worst) in category & best and worst %}}
in last 2 columns highlighted are best and worst +/- ratio

style="background: #FFBBBB;" width="20" |

{{srn}}

class="wikitable sortable static-row-numbers" style="text-align:center"
class=static-row-header

! rowspan="2"|Hopman Cup team
(41 teams + 3Czechoslovakia, Soviet Union/CIS, Yugoslavia SFR. dissolved)

! colspan="2"|TOP 4Since 1996 competition has group stage (2 groups) format where 1st team from each group advances to finals.
Column "All" contains placements in top 2 of each group (meaning top 4; reason below) since 1996 + semi-final appearances before that period; between 1989 and 1995 competition had knockout tournament format, and column "SF" contains semi-final appearances from that period only.
On multiple occasions 2nd placed team in the group replaced that group's 1st placed team in the finals due to latter's retirement.

! rowspan="2"|{{nowrap|{{Tooltip|Y Ent|Years entered}}}}
Years Entered is a number of times a team has entered qualifications (qualifying tournament) for the tournament, play-off tie or played in the actual tournament; in other words participated in any way in the tournament.
Y Ent >= Y Pld.

! rowspan="2"|{{nowrap|{{Tooltip|Y Pld|Years played}}}}
Years played is a number of times a team has played in the actual tournament. Sometimes, despite the fact they lost in the play-off tie, a team would play in the official tournament as a replacement due to retirement of other team. Those instances are noted after plus sign as "partial participations" since those teams were (in all cases) unable to qualify for the finals.
Y Pld <= Y Ent.

! rowspan="2" data-sort-type="number"|{{Tooltip|RoW|Longest Run of Wins by tie}}
RoW / Hopman Cup RoW includes qualification play-off ties. RoW including qualifying tournament ties if better than HC RoW is indicated in () parentheses alongside the HC RoW.

! rowspan="2" data-sort-type="number"|{{Tooltip|W%|Win percentage}}

! rowspan="2"|{{nowrap|{{Tooltip|T Pld|Ties Played}}}}
Does not include qualification play-off ties nor qualifying tournament ties.

! rowspan="2"|{{Tooltip|W|Ties Won}}

! rowspan="2"|{{Tooltip|L|Ties Lost}}

! rowspan="2" data-sort-type="number"|{{Tooltip|{{nowrap|Q PO}}
W-L|Qualification play-off win–loss}}

! colspan="2"|{{Tooltip|AHC|Asian Hopman Cup qualifying tournament}}Asian Hopman Cup was a qualifying tournament that ran from 2006 until 2009 and granted the winners entry into the Hopman Cup the following year.

All

! {{Tooltip|SF|Semi-finals}}

! data-sort-type="number"|W-L

! data-sort-type="number"|{{Tooltip|T|Titles}}

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|ARG}}10

|5

5

|3

0.2914410

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|AUS}}123

|style="background: #CCFFCC;"|31

style="background: #CCFFCC;"|31

|4

0.469142style="background: #FFBBBB;"|49

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|AUS}} 200

|1

1

|—

0.33312

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|AUT}}21

|1

1

|5

0.551165

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|BEL}}30

|7

7

|2

0.52211110

|1–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|BUL}}10

|1

1

|2

0.67321

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|CAN}}20

|4

3+1

|2

0.401046

|0–1

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|CHN}}00

|2

1

|0

style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0.00303

|0–1

|

0
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|TPE}}00

|2

2

|1 (3)

0.17615

|0–0

|

style="background: #CCFFCC;"|2
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|CRO}}20

|3

3

|4

0.601064

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|CZE}}Does not include Czechoslovakia results (see Czechoslovakia note).73

|12

12

|6

0.54651916

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|TCH}}Out of 5 players that played for Czechoslovakia at Hopman Cup 4 were Czech. The team that won Czechoslovakia's only title included Slovak player.33

|4

4

|4

0.731183

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|DEN}}00

|1

1

|1

0.33312

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|FRA}}113

|24

24

|5

0.52643331

|1–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|GER}}10style="background: #CCFFCC;"|6

|18

18

|6

0.49532627

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|GBR}}30

|9

9

|3

0.4122913

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|GRE}}10

|2

1

|2

0.66321

|0–1

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|HUN}}00

|1

1

|1

0.33312

|1–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|IND}}20

|2

2

|2 (5)

0.50633

|0–0

|

1
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|ISR}}00

|1

1

|0

style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0.00101

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|ITA}}20

|10

10

|3

0.3327918

|1–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|JPN}}00

|6

4+1

|1

0.14716

|style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0–2

|

0
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|KAZ}}10

|2

2

|2 (3)

0.33624

|0–0

|

1
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|NED}}10

|8

8

|4

0.3116511

|style="background: #CCFFCC;"|2–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|NZL}}00

|1

1

|0

style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0.00101

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|PAR}}00

|1

0

|0

000

|0–1

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|Philippines}}00

|1

0

|0

000

|0–0

|

0
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|POL}}20

|2

2

|3

style="background: #CCFFCC;"|0.75862

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|ROU}}00

|3

2

|1

0.33624

|0–1

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|RUS}}Does not include Soviet Union and CIS results (see Soviet Union & CIS note).30

|8

8

|6

0.42261115

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|SRB}}Includes Serbia and Montenegro results (1 appearance) because only players from Serbia represented the team.40

|4

4

|5

0.7114104

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|SVK}}40

|8

8

|7

0.56271512

|1–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|RSA}}50

|10

10

|4

0.58261511

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|South Korea}}00

|2

0

|0

000

|0–0

|

0
style=text-align:left|{{nowrap|{{hopman|URS}} & {{hopman|CIS}}Out of 3 players that played for Soviet Union and CIS at Hopman Cup 2 were Russian.}}00

|3

3

|1

0.25413

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|ESP}}93

|17

17

|6

0.60472819

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|SWE}}31

|9

9

|3

0.3719712

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|SUI}}83

|12

12

|6

0.70372611

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|THA}}10

|4

4

|3

0.43734

|1–0

|

0
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|UKR}}21

|4

4

|3

0.641174

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|USA}}style="background: #CCFFCC;"|182

|30

30

|style="background: #CCFFCC;"|9

0.57style="background: #CCFFCC;"|92style="background: #CCFFCC;"|5240

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|UZB}}00

|1

1

|1

style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0.00303

|1–0

|

0
style=text-align:left|{{hopman|YUG}}, SFRPlayers from Croatia, Serbia and Slovenia represented SFR Yugoslavia at Hopman Cup.11

|3

3

|4

0.67642

|0–0

|—

style=text-align:left|{{hopman|ZIM}}00

|2

0+1

|0

style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0.00101

|style="background: #FFBBBB;"|0–2

|—

;Notes

{{Reflist|group="N"}}

Asian Hopman Cup

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed"
style="text-align:left; background:#FFFFFF" |2006{{Cite web|url=http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/sport/archives/2006/11/26/2003338037|title = Taiwanese pair win place in Asian Hopman Cup final|work=Taipei Times|date = 26 November 2006}}
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

| Host: India

| Winner: India

| Participants: China, Chinese Taipei, India, Japan, Philippines, Thailand

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|Group A

Group BFinal
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|1. India (RR W-L: 2–0; match W-L: 6–0)
2. China (RR W-L: 1–1; match W-L: 2–4)
3. Japan (RR W-L: 0–2; match W-L: 1–5)

|1. Chinese Taipei (RR W-L: 2–0; match W-L: 6–0)
2. Thailand (RR W-L: 1–1; match W-L: 2–4)
3. Philippines (RR W-L: 0–2; match W-L: 1–5)

|India d Chinese Taipei 3–0

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|India d China 3–0
India d Japan 3–0
China d Japan 2–1

|Chinese Taipei d Thailand 3–0
Chinese Taipei d Philippines 3–0
Thailand d Philippines 2–1

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed"
style="text-align:left; background:#FFFFFF" |2007{{cite web |url=http://asiantennis.com/factsheets/ASIAN%20HOPMAN%20CUP/Round%20Robin%20Table%20ASIAN%20HOPMAN%20CUP%202008.pdf |title=Archived copy |website=asiantennis.com |access-date=11 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120401015613/http://asiantennis.com/factsheets/ASIAN%20HOPMAN%20CUP/Round%20Robin%20Table%20ASIAN%20HOPMAN%20CUP%202008.pdf |archive-date=1 April 2012 |url-status=dead}}
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

| Host: Thailand

| Winner: Chinese Taipei

| Participants: China, Chinese Taipei, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Uzbekistan

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|Group A

Group BFinal
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|1. Thailand (RR W-L: 2–0; match W-L: 5–0)
2. South Korea (RR W-L: 1–1; match W-L: 3–2)
3. China (RR W-L: 0–2; match W-L: 0–6)

|1. Chinese Taipei (RR W-L: 2–0; match W-L: 5–1)
2. Japan (RR W-L: 1–1; match W-L: 3–3)
3. Uzbekistan (RR W-L: 0–2; match W-L: 1–5)

|Chinese Taipei d Thailand 2–1

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|Thailand d South Korea 2–0
Thailand d China 3–0
South Korea d China 3–0

|Chinese Taipei d Japan 2–1
Chinese Taipei d Uzbekistan 3–0
Japan d Uzbekistan 2–1

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed"
style="text-align:left; background:#FFFFFF" |2008{{cite web |url=http://www.asiantennis.com/latest/Asian%20hopman%20Cup%202008/DRAW%20HOPMAN%20CUP%202008.pdf |title=Archived copy |website=www.asiantennis.com |access-date=11 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425112949/http://www.asiantennis.com/latest/Asian%20hopman%20Cup%202008/DRAW%20HOPMAN%20CUP%202008.pdf |archive-date=25 April 2012 |url-status=dead}}
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

| Host: Kazakhstan

| Winner: Chinese Taipei

| Participants: China, Chinese Taipei, India, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Thailand

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|Group A

Group BFinal
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|1. Chinese Taipei (RR W-L: 2–0; match W-L: 6–0)
2. India (RR W-L: 1–1; match W-L: 2–4)
3. South Korea (RR W-L: 0–2; match W-L: 1–5)

|1. Kazakhstan (RR W-L: 2–0; match W-L: 5–1)
2. Thailand (RR W-L: 1–1; match W-L: 3–3)
3. China (RR W-L: 0–2; match W-L: 1–5)

|Chinese Taipei d Kazakhstan 2-0{{cite web|url=https://www.tennislive.co.uk/wta-women/asian-hopman-cup-astana-2008/|title=Asian Hopman Cup Astana 2008}}{{cite web|url=https://matchstat.com/tennis/tournaments/m/Asian%20Hopman%20Cup%20-%20Astana/2008|title=Asian Hopman Cup - Astana}}

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|Chinese Taipei d India 3–0
Chinese Taipei d South Korea 3–0
India d South Korea 2–1

|Kazakhstan d Thailand 2–1
Kazakhstan d China 3–0
Thailand d China 2–1

class="wikitable collapsible collapsed"
style="text-align:left; background:#FFFFFF" |2009
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

| Host: Kazakhstan

| Winner: Kazakhstan

| Participants: China, Chinese Taipei, India, Kazakhstan, Thailand

bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|Group A

Group BFinal
bgcolor="#FFFFFF"

|

|

|Kazakhstan d Chinese Taipei 2-1{{cite web| url=https://www.thestar.com.my/sport/other-sport/2009/11/19/kazakhstan-beat-taiwan-to-make-hopman-cup-debut/|title=Kazakhstan beat Taiwan to make Hopman Cup debut|website=www.thestar.com.my|date=19 November 2009}}

References

{{Reflist}}