2001 Toyota Princess Cup
0 sources
2001 Toyota Princess Cup
Summary
2001 Toyota Princess Cup is a tennis tournament edition[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of tennis_tournament_edition entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup is located in Tokyo[3].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup is in the country of Japan[4].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's image is recorded as Jelena Dokic.jpg[5].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's instance of is recorded as tennis tournament edition[6].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's instance of is recorded as Toyota Princess Cup[7].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's follows is recorded as 2000 Toyota Princess Cup[8].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's followed by is recorded as 2002 Toyota Princess Cup[9].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's location is recorded as Ariake Coliseum[10].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's part of is recorded as 2001 WTA Tour[11].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's part of is recorded as WTA Tier II tournaments[12].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's edition number is recorded as 5[13].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's has part is recorded as 2001 Toyota Princess Cup – singles[14].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's has part is recorded as 2001 Toyota Princess Cup – doubles[15].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's start time is recorded as +2001-09-15T00:00:00Z[16].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's sport is recorded as tennis[17].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's organizer is recorded as Women's Tennis Association[18].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's surface played on is recorded as hardcourt surface[19].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's topic's main category is recorded as Category:2001 Toyota Princess Cup[20].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's prize money is recorded as {'unit': 'Q4917', 'amount': '+565000'}[21].
- 2001 Toyota Princess Cup's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/1239phpc[22].
Why It Matters
2001 Toyota Princess Cup ranks in the top 6% of tennis_tournament_edition entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23]