The defending champions were Jonas Björkman and Max Mirnyi; however, they lost in the quarterfinals against Mahesh Bhupathi and Radek Štěpánek.
Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won the title, defeating ninth seeds Lukáš Dlouhý and Pavel Vízner in the final.[1]
This French Open saw the introduction of a final set tie-break in this category.
Seeds
Draw
Key
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Bottom half
Section 3
Section 4
References
External links
 | 
|---|
| Grand Slam events |  | 
|---|
| ATP Masters Series |  | 
|---|
| ATP International Series Gold |  | 
|---|
| ATP International Series | 
- Doha (S, D)
 
- Adelaide (S, D)
 
- Chennai (S, D)
 
- Sydney (S, D)
 
- Auckland (S, D)
 
- Viña del Mar (S, D)
 
- Zagreb (S, D)
 
- Delray Beach (S, D)
 
- Marseille (S, D)
 
- Costa do Sauípe (S, D)
 
- San Jose (S, D)
 
- Buenos Aires (S, D)
 
- Las Vegas (S, D)
 
- Valencia (S, D)
 
- Houston (S, D)
 
- Casablanca (S, D)
 
- Estoril (S, D)
 
- Munich (S, D)
 
- Pörtschach (S, D)
 
- Halle (S, D)
 
- Queen's (S, D)
 
- 's-Hertogenbosch (S, D)
 
- Nottingham (S, D)
 
- Gstaad (S, D)
 
- Newport (S, D)
 
- Båstad (S, D)
 
- Los Angeles (S, D)
 
- Amersfoort (S, D)
 
- Indianapolis (S, D)
 
- Umag (S, D)
 
- Washington (S, D)
 
- Sopot (S, D)
 
- New Haven (S, D)
 
- Beijing (S, D)
 
- Bucharest (S, D)
 
- Bangkok (S, D)
 
- Mumbai (S, D)
 
- Metz (S, D)
 
- Stockholm (S, D)
 
- Moscow (S, D)
 
- St. Petersburg (S, D)
 
- Lyon (S, D)
 
- Basel (S, D)
  
  | 
|---|
| Team events |  | 
|---|
 | 
 
 | 
|---|
| Pre Open Era | 
- 1925
 
- 1926
 
- 1927
 
- 1928
 
- 1929
 
- 1930
 
- 1931
 
- 1932
 
- 1933
 
- 1934
 
- 1935
 
- 1936
 
- 1937
 
- 1938
 
- 1939
 
- 1940–1945 (WWII)
 
- 1946
 
- 1947
 
- 1948
 
- 1949
 
- 1950
 
- 1951
 
- 1952
 
- 1953
 
- 1954
 
- 1955
 
- 1956
 
- 1957
 
- 1958
 
- 1959
 
- 1960
 
- 1961
 
- 1962
 
- 1963
 
- 1964
 
- 1965
 
- 1966
 
- 1967
  
  | 
|---|
| Open Era |  | 
|---|