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ATP Washington

Latest videos, kyrgios survives 5 match points, advances to semis after beating tiafoe at citi open, ymer overcomes murray to reach second round at the citi open.

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Coco Gauff defeats Maria Sakkari in Washington for her fourth title. Dan Evans wins the men’s final

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, celebrates after defeating Maria Sakkari, of Greece, in the women's singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, celebrates after defeating Maria Sakkari, of Greece, in the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, holds the trophy as she celebrates after defeating Maria Sakkari, of Greece, in the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Daniel Evans, of Britain, holds the trophy after defeating Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, in the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Maria Sakkari, of Greece, wipes her eye after the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. Sakkari was defeated by Coco Gauff, of the United States. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Daniel Evans, of Britain, celebrates after defeating Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, in the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

The stadium is empty as rain falls to delay the the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament between Daniel Evans, of Britain, and Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, kisses the trophy after defeating Maria Sakkari, of Greece, in the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, celebrates after a point against Maria Sakkari, of Greece, during the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Maria Sakkari, of Greece, celebrates after a point against Coco Gauff, of the United States, during the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Maria Sakkari, of Greece, cannot get to a serve by Coco Gauff, of the United States, during the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Daniel Evans, of Britain, reacts after a point against Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, during the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, hits the ball back against Maria Sakkari, of Greece, during the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Coco Gauff, of the United States, hits the ball back to Maria Sakkari, of Greece, during the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

CORRECTS THAT SAKKARI IS FROM GREECE, NOT GERMANY - Maria Sakkari, of Greece, returns a shot to Coco Gauff, of the United States, during the women’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Elena Kagan watches and Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, and Daniel Evans, of Britain, during the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Daniel Evans, of Britain, hits the ball back against Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, during the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Daniel Evans, of Britain, left, shakes hands with Tallon Griekspoor, of the Netherlands, after Evans won the men’s singles final of the DC Open tennis tournament Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Away from a tennis court, Coco Gauff is still, in some ways, a typical teen, rolling her eyes at receiving FaceTime calls from a younger sibling — “I’m at press right now, Bro” — and her father — “Oh, my God” — while two versions of the DC Open trophy she earned Sunday sat on the table in front of her.

With a racket in her hand, Gauff is not typical at all, as her success so far shows. And after the disappointment of a first-round exit at Wimbledon last month, the 19-year-old from Florida appears back to her best as the start of the U.S. Open approaches later this month.

Surging at the end of each set, Gauff defeated Maria Sakkari 6-2, 6-3 in the Washington final for the fourth WTA Tour singles title of her career. Gauff is the youngest women’s champion of the hard-court tournament in the nation’s capital and the first player since Caroline Wozniacki in 2009 to win four WTA tournaments as a teenager.

“I would say,” said Gauff, who is ranked No. 7 and was seeded No. 3, “I’m heading in the right direction.”

Well, there’s an understatement.

“She’s already near the top, but there is a lot of room to get better,” said Gauff’s new coach, Pere Riba, who was joined on her team by consultant Brad Gilbert in Washington. “I’m happy, of course, that she won the tournament. I’m more happy about the way she did it. Her energy and attitude are more important for the long term.”

Poland's Iga Swiatek in action during her match against Coco Gauff of the United States at the Italian Open tennis tournament at Rome's Foro Italico, Thursday, May 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

What a week it was, though.

Gauff, the runner-up at the 2022 French Open , didn’t drop at set and ceded just 19 total games across four matches.

At night, Dan Evans became, at age 33, the oldest men’s champion in Washington since Jimmy Connors was 35 in 1988 by beating Tallon Griekspoor 7-5, 6-3 in a final delayed by more than two hours in the second set because of a thunderstorm.

It was the second ATP Tour title for Evans, who was just 8-18 in 2023 before the DC Open and now will rise from No. 30 to a career-high No. 21 in the rankings Monday.

“I had to keep telling myself it was match-by-match and not so long ago I wasn’t playing great,” he said. “It was a good effort mentally to just stay in the present and keep fighting for each point. And I did a great job of that this week.”

This was the first year the tournament was a combined ATP-WTA 500 event. Despite equal billing, the prize money wasn’t the same — and won’t be until 2027. Gauff earned $120,150; Evans received $353,445.

In addition to the No. 9-ranked Sakkari, Gauff eliminated defending champion Liudmila Samsonova and Tokyo Olympics gold medalist Belinda Bencic.

“The caliber of players I have beat this week was probably the strongest out of all of the tournaments I’ve played,” said Gauff, who hit seven aces Sunday while improving to 4-1 in singles finals.

This was her second title of 2023, alongside one in Auckland, New Zealand, in January.

One big key this time was an improved forehand, long considered a weak point. Pere focused on altering her footwork so she would be in a better position to strike that shot and use it to attack.

“We all know that her forehand was always her weaker shot. I feel like now she’s improving that. She’s making more balls. She’s working on that,” said Sakkari, a 28-year-old from Greece who reached two Grand Slam semifinals in 2021. “Mentally she looks a lot more mature. She knows what she’s doing on the court.”

Sakkari, who beat top-seeded Jessica Pegula on Saturday, fell to 1-7 in finals.

“I’m not going to lie,” Sakkari said, wiping away tears. “It’s pretty disappointing.”

Sakkari broke to open the second set when Gauff dumped a drop shot into the net. Gauff put her hands on her head, walked to the sideline and hit her equipment bag with her racket. Soon, it was 2-0.

But Sakkari double-faulted to get broken to 3-all, and her groundstroke errors kept coming, too, often followed by a glance at her coach, Tom Hill.

Gauff noticed. She figured it was because she kept Sakkari from preying on her forehand.

“Consistently this week, I have ‘beaten’ that scouting report, and I think that’s why the players tend to get a little more frustrated,” Gauff said. “Almost all week, every player that I played has been looking at their box, because I truly think that the plan that they had I was able to kind of combat. Today, she clearly had a plan, and I kind of just made that plan fizzle out a little bit.”

A moment later, her phone buzzed. It was “Bro.”

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

HOWARD FENDRICH

Australian Nick Kyrgios wins Washington Open, securing first ATP Tour title in three years

Nick Kyrgios poses and smiles with the Washington Open trophy

An emotional Nick Kyrgios has spoken of his struggles to discover his best form after ending a three-year title drought with victory in the Citi Open final in Washington.

Key points:

  • Kyrgios took just 81 minutes to defeat Japan's Yoshihito Nishioka 6-4 6-3
  • He held serve 64 times throughout the tournament without being broken
  • It was Kyrgios's seventh ATP title and first since he won in Washington in 2019

Kyrgios took just 81 minutes to defeat Japanese giant-killer Yoshihito Nishioka 6-4 6-3 in Sunday's final to claim his first ATP Tour title since winning at the same event in 2019.

The 27-year-old then backed up his win by claiming the doubles title alongside American Jack Sock — his third doubles success of the year.

Shortly after lifting the men's singles trophy, Kyrgios combined with Sock to defeat Ivan Dodig and Austin Krajicek 7-5 6-4.

The sensational week in the American capital continues a career-best year for Kyrgios after reaching his first career grand slam final at Wimbledon, where he lost to Novak Djokovic.

Despite not earning any rankings points at Wimbledon due to the ATP's objection to a ban on Russian and Belarusian players, Kyrgios's win in Washington lifts him to 37th on the world rankings.

Ahead of big events in Montreal and Cincinnati, it means Kyrgios is closing in on an all-important seeding for the US Open starting on August 29 in New York.

"To see where I was at last year to now, it's just an incredible transformation," Kyrgios said in a post-match interview.

"I just came out with great energy. I knew that I had experience on my side today. I love this court, I've played so many good matches here, so I'm just really happy with myself.

"I've been in some really dark places. Just to be able to turn it around … there are so many people who have helped me get there.

"I've shown some serious strength to just continue and persevere and get through all those times and be able to still perform and win tournaments like this one."

Kyrgios's serve was imperious throughout the tournament, getting through 64 matches in the tournament without being broken once.

The 27-year-old fired down 12 aces in Sunday's final against Nishioka, also hitting 32 winners in a confident display to secure his seventh career title.

Having won the doubles title in Atlanta last week with fellow Australian Thanasi Kokkinakis, Kyrgios then went back-to-back partnering Sock in a straight-sets win over Dodig and Krajicek.

As in his singles win, Kyrgios and Sock held serve throughout the final, winning 95 per cent of points on their first serve in the 79-minute victory.

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  • United States

ATP Tour professional men’s tennis tournament coming to Sioux Falls in October

atp tour washington

The ATP professional men’s tennis tour is coming to South Dakota for the first time in October when Huether Family Match Pointe on the Sanford Sports Complex hosts the MarketBeat Open presented by USTA Northern. 

The MarketBeat Open, an ATP 75 event, will bring some of the best players in the world to Sioux Falls for a tournament that has added importance on the ATP Tour calendar. The USTA Pro Circuit is using a four-tournament swing this fall where the American with the highest ranking point total will earn the United States’ wild card into the 2025 Australian Open main draw. The MarketBeat Open will be the first of four tournaments where players can earn the Australian Open wild card.

“The added Australian Open wild card tie-in is really exciting and should draw a lot of the top American players,” Tournament Director and Match Pointe Executive Director Mark Vellek said via a press release. “This is an unprecedented event for this part of the country and is going to be amazing to showcase in Sioux Falls.”

USTA Northern, which played a role in bringing the tour to Sioux Falls, is also excited to help fill the void of professional tennis in the upper Midwest.

“We are incredibly excited to help bring this first-of-its-kind tennis tournament to Sioux Falls,” MarketBeat Founder and CEO Matt Paulson said in the release. “We think this event will elevate the visibility of Sioux Falls on the national stage and bring additional tourism revenue to the city.”

The MarketBeat Open will have a 32-player singles draw as well as a 16-team doubles draw. There will also be a 16-player singles qualifying tournament at the beginning of the week from which four players will earn main draw qualifier spots.  

Day one of the MarketBeat Open will be Kids Day which will give kids 18 and under free admission. 

The tournament has one wild card position into the singles main draw and one into the doubles draw which it will award in the fall. Organizers also get one wild card to give into the singles qualifying draw. The qualifying wild card will be awarded to the South Dakota Adult Open men’s open singles champion, which will be held July 19-21 in Sioux Falls.

“The qualifying wild card presented a unique opportunity to have a local tie-in,” Vellek said in the release. “The South Dakota Adult Open is a long-standing amateur tournament here and has really taken off the past few years with increased prize money so the winner of that tournament each year is certainly the caliber of player worthy of having an opportunity to compete in the qualifying.” 

The player field will be determined 21 days ahead of the start of the event. Tickets for the MarketBeat Open will go on sale August 26, which is the first day of the US Open. 

MarketBeat Open tournament schedule

  • October 20 – Singles Qualifying
  • October 21 – Singles Qualifying/Singles First Round
  • October 22 – Singles First Round/Doubles First Round
  • October 23 – Singles Round of 16/Doubles First Round
  • October 24 – Singles Round of 16/Doubles Quarterfinals
  • October 25 – Singles Quarterfinals/Doubles Semifinals
  • October 26 – Singles Semifinals/Doubles Championship
  • October 27 – Singles Championship

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Tennis

Tennis Australia sends ATP Tour warning over Saudi Arabia Masters tournament

TOPSHOT - Poland's Iga Swiatek serves against China's Qinwen Zheng during their women's singles match at the United Cup tennis tournament in Perth on January 3, 2024. (Photo by COLIN MURTY / AFP) / -- IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE -- (Photo by COLIN MURTY/AFP via Getty Images)

In a thinly veiled warning that could portend an increasingly nasty battle between two of the most powerful entities in tennis, the owners of the Australian Open have notified the leadership of the men’s tour that they would consider any attempt to schedule a tournament in Saudi Arabia during the first week of the season as a request for a potential “breach” of an existing contract between the two organizations.

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Tennis Australia sent the message last week, in a letter notifying the ATP Tour that it had decided not to bid to host the proposed event . However, the Australians also used the letter, a copy of which The Athletic has reviewed, to outline their staunch opposition to the ATP Tour’s plans. They sought to make it clear that the tour should seriously consider the consequences of its efforts to disrupt a professional tennis calendar that now kicks off entirely in Australia and New Zealand, headlined by the United Cup, a mixed-team international event that began last season and attracts some of the top players in the world.

“Tennis Australia has an existing agreement with the ATP and the WTA for the United Cup in Week 1, which is active through 2029 with options to extend,” Jayne Hrdlicka and Craig Tiley, the chair and chief executive of Tennis Australia, wrote in the letter dated April 24. “The players value the event, as does Tennis Australia.”

“We do not enter agreements lightly and neither do we take lightly being asked to breach an existing agreement.” 

The letter is the latest salvo in a 10-month battle that began as a fight about the start of the season but has turned into a duel over control of the sport between the Grand Slams and the ATP and WTA tours.

The Grand Slams favor a streamlined elite tennis tour with 14 events, including the Grand Slams, that keeps in place a schedule that climaxes four times a year with their tournaments, both geographically and in terms of the court surfaces. The existing ATP and WTA tours are trying to maintain something like the status quo, only more of it, with one more big tournament and some more money, thanks to a significant investment from Saudi Arabia , which is vying to become the host of that tournament.

atp tour washington

The battle has dominated off-the-court conversations and turned what had, for years, been largely polite interchanges among the eight entities that oversee the professional game into a fierce, existential fight for control of the sport and the billions of dollars it produces .

It is playing out at a crucial moment for the game as it transitions from two decades of growth thanks, in large part, to stars such as Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams, who have retired or are on the way there. 

With all their careers ending in the coming years, the sport’s leaders know they need to market a new generation of stars and make it easier for fans to make sense of the hundreds of tournaments that happen each year while also meeting player demands for a schedule that does not overtax their bodies and allows them to share in the sport’s riches the way elite athletes in other realms do.

At the moment, the fight over the start of the season is the primary battleground.

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Inside tennis' corridors of power: A fractured hall of mirrors where nothing is as it seems

In the letter to the ATP, Tiley and Hrdlicka, who announced in February she would step down as the chief executive of Virgin Australia Airlines, argued that maintaining the schedule is in the best interests of the health and financial wellbeing of the players and the sport . There’s also the matter of the massive financial windfall and media interest that it provides for its organization in the run-up to its signature event.

“We have worked hard to establish an Australian January as one of the most lucrative months of the year for the players,” Tiley and Hrdlicka wrote. They argued that the warm-up events to the Australian Open, including the United Cup, allow players to get into peak condition for one of the four biggest events of the year as most of them adjust to the Southern Hemisphere and a radically different time zone.

“The Australian Open cannot be moved,” they wrote, “so having an event in another geographic region — with an eight-hour time zone difference, different climactic conditions and a 15-hour flight — is clearly damaging to player preparation for a Grand Slam.”

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They added that the current format allows fans to easily digest the start of the year and suggested that starting in Saudi Arabia, with a tournament one level below a Grand Slam, would only add to fan confusion. Under that proposal, the players — and the watching tennis world — would head to Saudi Arabia, then head to Australia, then head back to the Middle East in February for existing tournaments in Doha and Dubai.

“As a sport, our goal should be to simplify the structure of the tour in the eyes of the fans, dramatically improve the fan narrative and better leverage the Grand Slams to drive viewership of the tour. All of that is compromised with an event in Week 1 — hurting our ability as a sport to better remunerate the players.”

The ATP has said little of its plans regarding the specifics of the new tournament, which is likely to begin in 2027. The request for bids did not specify the exact timing of the tournament but rather stated that it would be held during a 60-day window in January or February. The new tournament is a significant part of its plans to bring what it has said could be roughly $1billion of new investment into tennis. 

Inside Saudi Arabia’s growing influence in sport

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The leaders of the women’s circuit, the WTA, have largely been in lockstep with the ATP in its efforts to head off the effort from the Grand Slams to create the slimmed-down premium tour, which would lessen the importance of the vast majority of ATP and WTA tournaments. However, a new men’s event in the first week that threatens the viability of the United Cup — which offers a combined prize money pot of $10million — would jeopardize one of the most lucrative events of the year for female players.

The WTA did not participate in the request for proposals for a new tournament, under which Saudi Arabia stated its interest in hosting a Masters 1000 for men and women. The owners of the top women’s tournaments would have to approve such a move, and the WTA does not see an open spot in its calendar. It does not want to ask its players to play more than they already do.

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How to fix tennis

Three people who participated in the discussions, who have spoken on condition of anonymity to describe the private talks, said the bickering about the first week of the season has been a fight for leverage in the larger battle about whether to create a premium tour.

The ATP, with the tacit approval of the WTA, is unwilling to abandon the possibility of holding the new tournament in January until the Grand Slams promise not to devalue tour events by creating a new premium tour. Tennis Australia and the other three Grand Slams are unwilling to give up the push for the premium tour without an assurance that the ATP and WTA will not disrupt the current rhythm of the schedule. 

There is an obvious compromise, the people say — holding the new Masters 1000 in February, after the Australian Open. However, with tensions still rising, the environment is not conducive to reaching a middle ground.

(Top photo: Colin Murty/AFP via Getty Images)

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Matthew Futterman

Matthew Futterman is an award-winning veteran sports journalist and the author of two books, “Running to the Edge: A Band of Misfits and the Guru Who Unlocked the Secrets of Speed” and “Players: How Sports Became a Business.”Before coming to The Athletic in 2023, he worked for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Star-Ledger of New Jersey and The Philadelphia Inquirer. He is currently writing a book about tennis, "The Cruelest Game: Agony, Ecstasy and Near Death Experiences on the Pro Tennis Tour," to be published by Doubleday in 2026. Follow Matthew on Twitter @ mattfutterman

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Men's Singles  (Completed) -

Final F - [9] D. Evans (GBR) d [12] T. Griekspoor (NED) 75 63

Semifinals SF - [12] T. Griekspoor (NED) d [1] T. Fritz (USA) 36 63 62 SF - [9] D. Evans (GBR) d [5] G. Dimitrov (BUL) 63 76(4)

Quarterfinals QF - [1] T. Fritz (USA) d J. Thompson (AUS) 63 63 QF - [9] D. Evans (GBR) d [2] F. Tiafoe (USA) 64 75 QF - [5] G. Dimitrov (BUL) d [13] U. Humbert (FRA) WO QF - [12] T. Griekspoor (NED) d [16] J. Wolf (USA) 75 64

Third Round R16 - [5] G. Dimitrov (BUL) d E. Ruusuvuori (FIN) 64 63 R16 - [13] U. Humbert (FRA) d Y. Watanuki (JPN) 60 62 R16  - [16] J. Wolf (USA) d M. Mmoh (USA) 64 76(5) R16 - [1] T. Fritz (USA) d [15] A. Murray (GBR) 67(2) 63 64 R16 - [2] F. Tiafoe (USA) d [Q] J. Shang (CHN) 62 63 R16 - [9] D. Evans (GBR) d A. Shevchenko 64 63 R16 - J. Thompson (AUS) d [11] C. Eubanks (USA) 62 62 R16 - [12] T. Griekspoor (NED) d [WC] G. Monfils (FRA) 64 16 63

Second Round R32  - [2] F. Tiafoe (USA) d A. Karatsev 76(5) 76(5) R32  - M. Mmoh (USA) d [4] H. Hurkacz (POL) 63 67(4) 76(4) R32  - [5] G. Dimitrov (BUL) d M. McDonald (USA) 76(6) 62 R32  - A. Shevchenko d [8] S. Korda (USA) 57 76(4) 64 R32  - E. Ruusuvuori (FIN) d [10] Y. Nishioka (JPN) 67(5) 64 62 R32  - [Q] J. Shang (CHN) d [14] [WC] B. Shelton (USA) 62 36 63 R32 - [1] T. Fritz (USA) d [Q] Z. Svajda (USA) 63 63 R32 - Y. Watanuki (JPN) d [3] F. Auger-Aliassime (CAN) 76(10) 76(3) R32 - [WC] G. Monfils (FRA) d [6] A. Bublik (KAZ) 63 64 R32 - J. Thompson (AUS) d [7] A. Mannarino (FRA) 75 64 R32 - [9] D. Evans (GBR) d G. Barrere (FRA) 26 60 63 R32 - [11] C. Eubanks (USA) d [LL] S. Shimabukuro (JPN) 63 64 R32 - [12] T. Griekspoor (NED) d L. Broady (GBR) 64 62 R32 - [13] U. Humbert (FRA) d T. Kokkinakis (AUS) 76(6) 16 64 R32 - [15] A. Murray (GBR) d B. Nakashima (USA) 76(5) 64 R32 - [16] J. Wolf (USA) d R. Albot (MDA) 61 63

First Round R64  - [Q] Z. Svajda (USA) d M. Purcell (AUS) 46 76(2) 75 R64  - B. Nakashima (USA) d A. Vukic (AUS) 76(5) 76(9) R64  - [LL] S. Shimabukuro (JPN) d [PR] L. Harris (RSA) 64 63 R64  - J. Thompson (AUS) d [WC] K. Anderson (RSA) 64 67(1) 61 R64  - T. Kokkinakis (AUS) d T. Daniel (JPN) 26 64 64 R64 - M. Mmoh (USA) d [Q] B. Klahn (USA) 63 63 R64 - R. Albot (MDA) d M. Giron (USA) 63 57 75 R64 - L. Broady (GBR) d C. Moutet (FRA) 76(0) 64 R64 - [WC] G. Monfils (FRA) d [Q] B. Fratangelo (USA) 63 64 R64 - M. McDonald (USA) d D. Schwartzman (ARG) 63 63 R64 - E. Ruusuvuori (FIN) d C. Lestienne (FRA) 64 64 R64 - Y. Watanuki (JPN) d Y. Wu (CHN) 14 Retired R64 - A. Shevchenko d M. Cressy (USA) 63 76(8) R64 - G. Barrere (FRA) d [Q] S. Mochizuki (JPN) 64 67(7) 63 R64 - [Q] J. Shang (CHN) d E. Gomez (ECU) 63 63 R64 - A. Karatsev d [Q] K. Pannu (NZL) 76(3) 61

Women's Singles (Completed) -

Finals F - [3] C. Gauff (USA) d. [4] M. Sakkari (GRE)  62 63

Semifinals  SF - M. Sakkari (GRE) d J. Pegula (USA) 63 46 62 SF - C. Gauff (USA) d L. Samsonova 63 63

Quarterfinals QF - [1] J. Pegula (USA) d. [WC] E. Svitolina (UKR)  46 63 64 QF - [4] M. Sakkari (GRE) d. [7] M. Keys (USA) 63 63 QF - [3] C. Gauff (USA) d. [6] B. Bencic (SUI)  61 62 QF - [8] L. Samsonova d. M. Kostyuk (UKR) 64 62

Second Round R16 - [WC] E. Svitolina (UKR) d. [5] D. Kasatkina  62 62 R16 - [7] M. Keys (USA) d. J. Brady (USA)  64 60 R16 - [6] B. Bencic (SUI) d. [Q] L. Davis (USA)  61 64 R16 - [3] C. Gauff (USA) d. [Q] H. Baptiste (USA)  61 64 R16 - [8] L. Samsonova d. S. Cirstea (ROU)  61 63 R16 - M. Kostyuk (UKR) d [2] C. Garcia (FRA) 62 63 R16 - J. Pegula (USA) d [LL] P. Stearns (USA) 63 64 R16 - [4] M. Sakkari (GRE) d. [Q] L. Fernandez (CAN) 75 62

First Round R32 - [Q] H. Baptiste (USA) d K. Pliskova (CZE) 61 06 63 R32 - M. Keys (USA) d Q. Zheng (CHN) 75 61 R32 - S. Cirstea (ROU) d P. Martic (CRO) 63 76(13) R32 - J. Brady (USA) d A. Kalinina (UKR) 62 61 R32 - [Q] L. Fernandez (CAN) d B. Pera (USA) 63 75 R32 - [LL] P. Stearns (USA) d [Q] M. Frech (POL) 61 64 R32 - [WC] E. Svitolina (UKR) d. V. Azarenka  76(2) 64 R32 - [5] D. Kasatkina d. E. Mertens (BEL)  63 75 R32 - [6] B. Bencic (SUI) d. A. Potapova  65 RET R32 - [Q] L. Davis (USA) d. S. Stephens (USA)  76(8) 36 61 R32 - [8] L. Samsonova d. [WC] D. Collins (USA)  61 63 R32 - M. Kostyuk (UKR) d. [WC] B. Andreescu (CAN)  26 63 76(5)

Men's Doubles (Completed) -

Final F - M. Gonzalez (ARG) / A. Molteni (ARG) d [WC] M. McDonald (USA) / B. Shelton (USA) 67(4) 62 10-6

Semifinals SF - [WC] M. McDonald (USA) / B. Shelton (USA) d [3] L. Glasspool (GBR) / H. Heliovaara (FIN) 36 63 12-10 SF - M. Gonzalez (ARG) / A. Molteni (ARG) d S. Gille (BEL) / J. Vliegen (BEL) 76(6) 76(4)

Quarterfinals QF - M. Gonzalez (ARG) / A. Molteni (ARG) d [WC] D. Evans (GBR) / A. Murray (GBR) 76(7) 16 10-8 QF - [3] L. Glasspool (GBR) / H. Heliovaara (FIN) d H. Hurkacz (POL) / F. Tiafoe (USA) 63 76(5) QF - [WC ] M. McDonald (USA) / B. Shelton (USA) d J. Cabal (COL) / M. Ebden (AUS) 64 36 10-8 QF - S. Gille (BEL) / J. Vliegen (BEL) d J. Murray (GBR) / M. Venus (NZL) 76(4) 46 10-8

First Round R16 - J. Cabal (COL) / M. Ebden (AUS) d [1] R. Ram (USA) / J. Salisbury (GBR) 36 61 10-7 R16 - S. Gille (BEL) / J. Vliegen (BEL) d [4] M. Arevalo (ESA) / J. Rojer (NED) 76(6) 64 R16 - [3] L. Glasspool (GBR) / H. Heliovaara (FIN) d F. Martin (FRA) / H. Nys (MON) 36 62 12-10 R16 - [WC] M. McDonald (USA) / B. Shelton (USA) d [Q] A. Bublik (KAZ) / T. Griekspoor (NED) 64 76(4) R16 - [WC] D. Evans (GBR) / A. Murray (GBR) d [2] A. Krajicek (USA) / M. Pavic (CRO) 63 64 R16 - H. Hurkacz (POL) / F. Tiafoe (USA) d C. Eubanks (USA) / S. Korda (USA) 26 76(9) 10-7 R16 - J. Murray (GBR) / M. Venus (NZL) d G. Dimitrov (BUL) / N. Mahut (FRA) 67(3) 63 10-5 R16 - M. Gonzalez (ARG) / A. Molteni (ARG) d R. Haase (NED) / N. Mektic (CRO) 67(5) 76(7) 10-8

Women's Doubles (Completed) -

Finals - Results F - L. Siegemund (GER) / V. Zvonareva d. A. Guarachi (CHI) / M. Niculescu (ROU)  64 64

Semifinals SF - L. Siegemund (GER) / V. Zvonareva d. L. Kichenok (UKR) / N. Kichenok (UKR) 61 63 SF - A. Guarachi (CHI) / M. Niculescu (ROU) d. [2] S. Aoyama (JPN) / G. Dabrowski (CAN ) 63 61

Quarterfinals QF - L. Kichenok (UKR) / N. Kichenok (UKR) d [ALT] M. Ninomiya (JPN) / S. Santamaria (USA) 76(2) 63 QF - L. Siegemund (GER) / V. Zvonareva d N. Melichar-Martinez (USA) / E. Perez (AUS) 64 36 106 QF - S. Aoyama (JPN) / G. Dabrowski (CAN) d [OSE] J. Brady (USA) / M. Keys (USA) 61 36 107 QF - A. Guarachi (CHI) / M. Niculescu (ROU) d H. Chan (TPE) / G. Olmos (MEX) WO

First Round R16 - [WC] C. Ngounoue (USA) / A. Parks (USA) d A. Danilina (KAZ) / U. Eikeri (NOR) 61 64 R16 - N. Melichar-Martinez (USA) / E. Perez (AUS) d [OSE] A. Blinkova / V. Gracheva (FRA) 76(3) 57 106 R16 - L. Kichenok (UKR) / N. Kichenok (UKR) d. [4] M. Kato (JPN) / A. Sutjiadi (INA)  64 63 R16 - J. Brady (USA) / M. Keys (USA) d. P. Martic (CRO) / M. Sakkari (GRE)  63 16 10-2 R16 - L. Siegemund (GER) / V. Zvonareva d. T. Mihalikova (SVK) / Z. Yang (CHN)  26 63 10-7 R16 - A. Guarachi (CHI) / M. Niculescu (ROU) d. L. Marozava / I. Gamarra Martins (BRA)  76(4) 75 R16 - [3] H. Chan (TPE) / G. Olmos (MEX) d. [WC] H. Baptiste (USA) / S. Stephens (USA)  WO R16 - [2] S. Aoyama (JPN) / G. Dabrowski (CAN) d. I. Neel (EST) / E. Routliffe (NZL)  63 62

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Sports on TV for Friday, May 17

The Associated Press

May 16, 2024, 5:50 PM

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(All times Eastern)

Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts

Friday, May 17

AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL (MEN’S)

FS2 — AFL: Carlton at Sydney

5:30 a.m. (Saturday)

FS2 — AFL: Richmond at Brisbane

AUTO RACING

ESPNU — Formula 1: Practice, Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola, Italy

FS1 — NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series: Practice, North Wilkesboro Speedway, North Wilkesboro, N.C.

FS1 — NASCAR Cup Series: Practice, North Wilkesboro Speedway, North Wilkesboro, N.C.

FS1 — NASCAR Cup Series: Qualifying, North Wilkesboro Speedway, North Wilkesboro, N.C.

FS1 — NHRA: Qualifying, Route 66 Raceway, Elwood, Ill. (Taped)

6:25 a.m. (Saturday)

ESPN2 — Formula 1: Practice, Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola, Italy

COLLEGE BASEBALL

BTN — Nebraska at Michigan St.

ACCN — Wake Forest at NC State

BTN — Illinois at Purdue

SECN — Arkansas at Texas A&M

PAC-12N — Oregon St. at Arizona

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: Utah vs. South Carolina, Regional, Durham, N.C.

SECN — NCAA Tournament: Florida Gulf Coast at Florida, Regional

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: SE Louisiana vs. Clemson, Regional, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: UCF vs. Auburn, Regional, Tallahasse, Fla.

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: Michigan vs. Kentucky, Regional, Stillwater, Okla.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: Penn St. vs. Texas, Regional, College Station, Texas

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: Chattanooga at Florida St., Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: San Diego St. vs. Virginia Tech, Regional, Los Angeles

SECN — NCAA Tournament: Jackson St. at LSU, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: Mississippi vs. Baylor, Regional, Lafayette, La.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: Cleveland St. at Oklahoma, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: Saint Mary’s (Cal) at Stanford, Regional

GOLF — Ladies European Tour: The Amundi German Masters, Second Round, Golf & Country Club Seddiner See, Michendorf, Germany

ESPN2 — PGA Tour: The PGA Championship, Second Round, Valhalla Golf Club, Louisville, Ky. (ESPN BET)

ESPN — PGA Tour: The PGA Championship, Second Round, Valhalla Golf Club, Louisville, Ky.

ESPN2 — PGA Tour: The PGA Championship, Second Round, Valhalla Golf Club, Louisville, Ky. (No Laying Up)

GOLF — LPGA Tour: The Mizuho Americas Open, Second Round, Liberty National Golf Course, Jersey City, N.J.

6 a.m. (Saturday)

GOLF — Ladies European Tour: The Amundi German Masters, Third Round, Golf & Country Club Seddiner See, Michendorf, Germany

HORSE RACING

FS2 — NYRA: America’s Day at the Races

IIHF HOCKEY (MEN’S)

NHLN — World Championship Group Stage: Germany vs. Kazakhstan, Group B, Ostrava, Czech Republic

NHLN — World Championship Group Stage: Poland vs. U.S., Group B, Ostrava, Czech Republic

NHLN — World Championship Group Stage: Latvia vs. Sweden, Group B, Ostrava, Czech Republic

MLB BASEBALL

MLBN — Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs

APPLETV+ — Tampa Bay at Toronto

APPLETV+ — Minnesota at Cleveland

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Cincinnati at LA Dodgers OR Colorado at San Francisco

NBA BASKETBALL

ESPN — Eastern Conference Semifinal: New York at Indiana, Game 6

TNT — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Florida at Boston, Game 6

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Florida at Boston, Game 6 (BetCast)

TNT — Western Conference Semifinal: Dallas at Colorado, Game 6

TRUTV — Western Conference Semifinal: Dallas at Colorado, Game 6 (BetCast)

RUGBY (MEN’S)

FS2 — NRL: Newcastle at Gold Coast

SOCCER (MEN’S)

FS2 — CPL: Atletico Ottawa at Pacific FC

TENNIS — Italian Open-ATP Semifinal

TENNIS — Italian Open-ATP Double Semifinals

WNBA BASKETBALL

ION — Washington at Connecticut

ION — Seattle at Minnesota

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ATP men’s tennis tour coming to Sioux Falls

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — The professional men’s tennis tour is coming to South Dakota for the first time.

The ATP men’s tennis tour is coming to Sioux Falls in October of 2024 when the Huether Family Match Pointe on the Sanford Sports Complex hosts the MarketBeat Open presented by USTA Northern.

“We are incredibly excited to help bring this first-of-its-kind tennis tournament to Sioux Falls,” MarketBeat Founder and CEO Matt Paulson said in a news release. “We think this event will elevate the visibility of Sioux Falls on the national stage and bring additional tourism revenue to the city.”

The MarketBeat Open, an ATP 75 event, will bring some of the best players in the world to Sioux Falls. The MarketBeat Open will have a 32-player singles draw as well as a 16-team doubles draw.

The player field will be determined 21 days ahead of the start of the event. Tickets for the MarketBeat Open will go on sale August 26, which is the first day of the US Open.

Here’s what the tournament schedule will look like:

  • October 20 – Singles Qualifying
  • October 21 – Singles Qualifying/Singles First Round
  • October 22 – Singles First Round/Doubles First Round
  • October 23 – Singles Round of 16/Doubles First Round
  • October 24 – Singles Round of 16/Doubles Quarterfinals
  • October 25 – Singles Quarterfinals/Doubles Semifinals
  • October 26 – Singles Semifinals/Doubles Championship
  • October 27 – Singles Championship

Tournament Director and Match Pointe Executive Director Mark Vellek said the event is “unprecedented” for this part of the country.

Match Pointe will turn two of its 10 courts into stadium show courts on which the entire tournament will be played. Given the size of the venue, fans will have a unique opportunity of getting a courtside view of all the action.

“One of the unique challenges of holding this event is turning our facility into something it’s not on a day-to-day basis,” Vellek said in a news release. “There won’t be a bad seat in the house, and everyone will have an incredible up-close seat to the action. One of our primary goals of this event is to have the players that are competing engage in the community as much as possible. This is going to be a special week.”

KELOLAND News will have more coverage of the tennis tournament announcement on air and online.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to KELOLAND.com.

ATP men’s tennis tour coming to Sioux Falls

IMAGES

  1. [WATCH] ATP Washington 2021: Live Stream, Schedule, How to Watch Citi

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  2. Washington D.C. Entry List

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  3. ATP Washington

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  4. 2015 Citi Open

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  5. ATP World Tour Citi Open in Washington

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  6. ATP Tour: Erőtenisz Washingtonból

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COMMENTS

  1. Washington

    Co-founded by Arthur Ashe, Donald Dell, and John A. Harris, in 1969, the tournament is the fourth-longest running pro tennis event in the U.S. and the longest-running tournament in a public park. Official tennis tournament profile of Washington on the ATP Tour. Featuring news, who played, past champions, prize money, and more.

  2. Washington

    ATP Tour Scores ATP Tour; Challenger; Results Archive; ATP WTA Live; Stats Landing; Leaderboards; Serve Tracker; Performance Zone; Win/Loss; Stats #1s; Rankings ... Washington Overview Results Draws Tournament Acapulco Adelaide 1 Adelaide 2 Antwerp Astana ...

  3. Home

    Welcome to the official website of the Mubadala Citi DC Open 2023, the only combined ATP-WTA 500-level tennis tournament in the world. Stay updated with the latest news, schedule, player profiles, and ticket information.

  4. Washington

    ATP Tour Scores Results Archive; ATP WTA Live; Stats Landing; Leaderboards

  5. Washington Open (tennis)

    The Washington Open (branded as the Mubadala Citi DC Open for sponsorship reasons and sometimes called the DC Open) is an annual professional outdoor hardcourt tennis tournament played at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Rock Creek Park in Washington, D.C. The event is categorized as an ATP 500 event on the ATP Tour and a WTA 500 event on the WTA Tour.

  6. Match Schedule

    ATP Tour Official Tournament English. English; Menu. Close. Buy tickets Tickets. Tickets Single Session ... ATP Stars Visit White House In Washington. Aug 06, 2023 Griekspoor Upsets Fritz To Reach Washington Final. Aug 05, 2023 Maria Sakkari and Coco Gauff Punch Their Tickets into Sunday's Final ...

  7. Event Info

    Held annually in Rock Creek Park since its founding, the Mubadala Citi DC Open is also the longest-running pro tennis event to be held in an equal-access public park. American Andre Agassi holds the record for most titles in the US capital, winning five (1990-91, 1995, 1998-99.) Past champions also include Ken Rosewall, Jimmy Connors, Chris ...

  8. Dan Evans wins his second career ATP title by beating Tallon Griekspoor

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Dan Evans won his second ATP Tour title by beating Tallon Griekspoor 7-5, 6-3 in a rain-interrupted DC Open final on Sunday. Evans, a 33-year-old from Britain, saved four break points in the last game before ending the match with a service winner. He is the oldest champion in Washington since Jimmy Connors was 35 when he won ...

  9. Live Scores

    ATP Tour Official Tournament English. English; Menu. Close. Buy tickets Tickets. Tickets Single Session ... ATP Stars Visit White House In Washington. Aug 06, 2023 Griekspoor Upsets Fritz To Reach Washington Final. Aug 05, 2023 Maria Sakkari and Coco Gauff Punch Their Tickets into Sunday's Final ...

  10. ATP Washington 2022

    31/07/2022 at 14:50. Get updates on the latest ATP Washington 2022 action and find articles, videos, commentary and analysis in one place. Eurosport is your go-to source for Tennis news.

  11. WTA returns to Washington D.C. this summer for combined tournament

    WASHINGTON, D.C. --The Citi Open ®, Washington, D.C.'s premier tennis tournament since 1969 and the fifth largest tennis event in the United States, has announced it will again host a WTA tournament in conjunction with its current ATP event.The Citi Open tournament is one of only five combined tour events in the country, featuring competition from both the ATP and WTA.

  12. 2021 Citi Open

    The 2021 Washington Open (called the Citi Open for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts.It was the 52nd edition of the Washington Open. The event was part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2021 ATP Tour and part of the US Open Series leading up to the US Open grand slam in September. The Washington Open took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis ...

  13. Citi Open 2022 Scores

    WASHINGTON DC, UNITED STATES. Aug 1 - Aug 7, 2022 ... ATP Tour US Open Series Billie Jean King Cup International Tennis Hall of Fame Women's Sports Foundation World TeamTennis International Tennis Integrity Agency ... WTA AND THE WTA LOGO ARE TRADEMARKS OF THE WTA TOUR, INC. ...

  14. Coco Gauff defeats Maria Sakkari in Washington for her fourth title

    Surging at the end of each set, Gauff defeated Maria Sakkari 6-2, 6-3 in the Washington final for the fourth WTA Tour singles title of her career. Gauff is the youngest women's champion of the hard-court tournament in the nation's capital and the first player since Caroline Wozniacki in 2009 to win four WTA tournaments as a teenager.

  15. Evans Hits New Heights With Washington Title

    Daniel Evans won his second ATP Tour title on Sunday at the Mubadala Citi DC Open with a rain-interrupted victory against Tallon Griekspoor. The British 12th seed won his first ATP 500 crown — the biggest triumph of his career — with a 7-5, 6-3 result, fuelled by late surges in each set. Now 2-2 in tour-level finals, the 33-year-old's ...

  16. Washington

    7008. Career Win/Loss. 83%. Service Games Won. 86%. Official ATP tennis live scores, results, draws, daily schedule, seeds for men's professional tennis tournaments on the ATP Tour.

  17. Australian Nick Kyrgios wins Washington Open, securing first ATP Tour

    Kyrgios took just 81 minutes to defeat Japanese giant-killer Yoshihito Nishioka 6-4 6-3 in Sunday's final to claim his first ATP Tour title since winning at the same event in 2019.

  18. Washington Open draw: Rafael Nadal, Cameron Norrie, Nick ...

    Rafael Nadal will make his Washington Open debut on Wednesday and the 20-time Grand Slam winner finds himself in the same half of the draw as the likes of Cameron Norrie, Nick Kyrgios, Grigor Dimitrov and Dan Evans. ... ATP Tour . Washington Open draw: Rafael Nadal, Cameron Norrie, Nick Kyrgios in same half as young stars headline bottom half ...

  19. 2024 ATP Tour

    The 2024 ATP Tour is the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2024 tennis season. The 2024 ATP Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments, supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF), the ATP Finals, the ATP Masters 1000, the United Cup (organized with the WTA), the ATP 500 series and the ATP 250 ...

  20. ATP Tour professional men's tennis tournament coming to Sioux Falls

    The MarketBeat Open, an ATP 75 event, will bring some of the best players in the world to Sioux Falls for a tournament that has added importance on the ATP Tour calendar.

  21. Queen's Club to stage women's event next year in run ...

    LONDON — The Queen's Club will stage a women's tennis tournament next year for the first time in more than a half-century, though it may prove to be a one-off. The WTA event will take place ...

  22. Mubadala Citi DC Open

    Follow the latest scores, order of play and draw information for Mubadala Citi DC Open 2024: WTA 500 tournament played in WASHINGTON DC, DC, UNITED STATES.

  23. Tennis Australia sends ATP Tour warning over Saudi Arabia Masters

    The ATP, with the tacit approval of the WTA, is unwilling to abandon the possibility of holding the new tournament in January until the Grand Slams promise not to devalue tour events by creating a ...

  24. 2024 ATP Finals

    The 2024 ATP Finals (also known as the 2024 Nitto ATP Finals for sponsorship reasons) will be a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Inalpi Arena in Turin, Italy, from 10 to 17 November 2024.It will be the season-ending event for the highest-ranked singles players and doubles teams on the 2024 ATP Tour.. This will be the 55th edition of the tournament (50th in doubles ...

  25. Order of Play

    ATP Tour Official Tournament English. English; Menu. Close. Buy tickets Tickets. Tickets Single Session ... ATP Stars Visit White House In Washington. Aug 06, 2023 Griekspoor Upsets Fritz To Reach Washington Final. Aug 05, 2023 Maria Sakkari and Coco Gauff Punch Their Tickets into Sunday's Final ...

  26. Results

    ATP Tour Official Tournament English. English; Menu. Close. Buy tickets Tickets. Tickets Single Session ... ATP Stars Visit White House In Washington. Aug 06, 2023 Griekspoor Upsets Fritz To Reach Washington Final. Aug 05, 2023 Maria Sakkari and Coco Gauff Punch Their Tickets into Sunday's Final ...

  27. Sports on TV for Friday, May 17

    GOLF — Ladies European Tour: The Amundi German Masters, Second Round, Golf & Country Club Seddiner See, Michendorf, Germany ... TENNIS — Italian Open-ATP Double Semifinals. WNBA BASKETBALL. 7: ...

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  29. ATP men's tennis tour coming to Sioux Falls

    The ATP men's tennis tour is coming to Sioux Falls in October of 2024 when the Huether Family Match Pointe on the Sanford Sports Complex hosts the MarketBeat Open presented by USTA Northern.