2007 Next Generation Adelaide International
0 sources
2007 Next Generation Adelaide International
Summary
2007 Next Generation Adelaide International is an Australian Hard Court Championships[1]. It draws 3 Wikipedia views per month (australian_hard_court_championships category, ranking #2 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International is located in South Australia[3].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International is in the country of Australia[4].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's instance of is recorded as Australian Hard Court Championships[5].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's instance of is recorded as Brisbane International (men)[6].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's instance of is recorded as tennis tournament edition[7].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's edition number is recorded as 30[8].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's has part is recorded as 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International – singles[9].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's has part is recorded as 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International – doubles[10].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's start time is recorded as +2006-12-31T00:00:00Z[11].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's point in time is recorded as +2007-00-00T00:00:00Z[12].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -34.93, 'lon': 138.59972}[13].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's sport is recorded as tennis[14].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03d885f[15].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's organizer is recorded as Association of Tennis Professionals[16].
- 2007 Next Generation Adelaide International's topic's main category is recorded as Category:2007 Next Generation Adelaide International[17].
Why It Matters
2007 Next Generation Adelaide International draws 3 Wikipedia views per month (australian_hard_court_championships category, ranking #2 of 3).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18]