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The Rise Of Rinderknech & Bonzi: Get To Know France's Newest Top 100 Stars

  • Posted: Aug 14, 2021

It did not take long for Arthur Rinderknech and Benjamin Bonzi to discover their passions for tennis. From the moment they both picked up their first racquets at the age of six, the Frenchmen instantly knew they wanted to pursue professional careers.

Now, with their dreams realized, the 26-year-old Rinderknech and 25-year-old Bonzi have announced their arrivals in 2021. Two of the newest members of the Top 100 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, they are proving that it’s never too late to crash the party.

Rinderknech, a native of Gassin along the French Riviera, has the game in his DNA. Both parents played professionally and a young Arthur was drawn to the court from a young age. Despite being better at soccer in his early teens, he says tennis was a natural choice. His journey would take him from the south of France to the U.S., where he shined in four years at Texas A&M University, before turning pro.

“It’s a very special achievement, but this is not the end of my journey,” said Rinderknech, who cracked the Top 100 on 19 July. “It is something that no one will be able to take away from me. Doing it in a few weeks window with a good friend like Bonzi is also really cool, because we have been with each other [in the FedEx ATP Rankings] week-in and week-out for a few months now. So achieving this goal together is really great as French players. I want to thank my team and all the people that continue to help me along the way to get better every day.”

Bonzi, meanwhile, has an equally unique path to the professional circuit. His older cousin played at the local club in their hometown of Nimes, and a six-year-old Benjamin didn’t want to be left out. He would soon take his bicycle to the club every day for lessons, as his passion for the game blossomed. He eventually made the move to Paris to train at the French federation. After nearly five years battling on the ATP Challenger Tour, Bonzi’s Top 100 arrival, at the age of 25, is even more special.

“It’s cool to have more French players in the Top 100,” said Bonzi, who made his Top 100 debut on 2 August. “With Arthur, we played a lot of tournaments together this year and it’s been kind of a race between us. We always have the same results and we reached the Top 100 at the same time. I’m happy for him, but this is not the end of the race between us.”

Top 100 Debuts In 2021

Player Debut Date
Sebastian Korda 1 February
Aslan Karatsev 22 February
Lorenzo Musetti 22 March
Carlos Alcaraz 24 May
Arthur Rinderknech 19 July
Brandon Nakashima 2 August
Benjamin Bonzi 2 August
Jenson Brooksby 9 August

In 2021, all eyes have been on the stars of tomorrow as they realize their potential on the ATP Tour. The Top 100 of the FedEx ATP Rankings has featured a new wave of #NextGenATP breakthroughs, with the likes of Sebastian Korda, Lorenzo Musetti, Carlos Alcaraz, Brandon Nakashima and Jenson Brooksby all making their debuts amidst great fanfare.

While this fresh crop of stars has certainly made their mark, Rinderknech and Bonzi are carving their own paths. All roads to the Top 100 are created differently.

Get To Know Arthur
Under the guidance of longtime coach Sebastien Villette, the 26-year-old Rinderknech is setting an example for all international players that have made the decision to take the college route in the United States. A former Top 10 junior in France, he admits he wasn’t ready to take the next step at age 18.

“I started really early and naturally loved being on the court,” Rinderknech reflected. “My dad (Pascal) was Top 50 in France and my mom (Virginie Paquet) was almost Top 200 on the WTA Tour, but she had a knee injury and had to stop. For me, I was playing pretty well in France in juniors but I was honest with myself and I knew how hard it is on the tour. I was 18 years old and I wasn’t sure I wanted to start playing as a professional. But I wanted to go to the states and enjoy what I do, and at the same time study because you never know what will happen. You could get injured tomorrow, so it was good to get my diploma. I really enjoyed my four years at Texas A&M.”

Rinderknech

Rinderknech starred for the Aggies, earning all-American honours in three years at College Station. With former World No. 12 and longtime Texas A&M coach Steve Denton guiding the young Frenchman, he believes that his college experience not only helped him develop his game between the lines, but mature off the court as well. Rinderknech graduated in 2018 with a degree in business.

“Steve was No. 12 in the world and knows what’s going on and can help me to improve. And for academics, I wanted to be pushed. I wanted a school that is recognized in Europe as well, because I will spend my life there. It was a really good combo and I wouldn’t change anything if I could do it again. When I graduated, I knew I was ready and motivated to turn pro and see what I could achieve.

“When you’re a foreigner in college and you go to the other side of the world to learn a new language and a new culture, that helps you on the pro circuit. When you’re traveling alone, you can be more focused and just try your best. It also helped me not get upset over the little things.”

It may have taken him a couple years to find his footing on tour, but Rinderknech has taken the pro circuit by storm in 2020 and 2021. The Frenchman dominated in his first full season on the ATP Challenger Tour a year ago, posting a 22-12 record and lifting a pair of trophies. His maiden title would come on home soil on the hard courts of Rennes in February, just prior to the COVID-19 shutdown. It was was followed by another crown just weeks later in Calgary, Canada.

Rinderknech would take his talents to the next level in 2021, following a season-opening third Challenger title in Istanbul. He would go on to reach four ATP Tour quarter-finals, before breaking through on the clay of Kitzbuhel last month with his first tour-level semi-final. Moreover, he would secure two Top 20 wins over Jannik Sinner and Roberto Bautista Agut along the way.

Now, up to a career-high No. 79 in the FedEx ATP Rankings, Rinderknech is poised to make his mark on the Grand Slam stage in New York. A debut appearance at the US Open is just weeks away.

Get To Know Benjamin
Bonzi’s path to the Top 100 has been just as unique. Once one of the top juniors in France, the Nimes native has since navigated a long and arduous road to join the elite club.

With the support of his father Philippe, who works for the auto manufacturer Renault, and mother Dominique, an accountant, a teenage Benjamin would travel from tournament to tournament throughout France as he sought to discover his path as a junior. He would soon move to Paris to train at the French federation, before embarking on a professional career at the age of 19.

But as fast as Bonzi began to ascend the FedEx ATP Rankings, rising to the Top 200 as a 21-year-old, he struggled to maintain his form. His confidence waned and he admits his mentality was not in the right place.

“It feels great to be Top 100, but it’s been a long journey to get here and I’ve been through some very tough moments,” said Bonzi. “To be here now and playing good tennis has not been easy, but it’s a great feeling. I exploded at 21, but I had some personal problems and lost some confidence. There were two years that were not so good and I dropped down in the [FedEx ATP Rankings]. I decided to change everything. I changed the people around me and moved to a different city to train. For me, everything changed at this moment and it has paid off right now.”

Bonzi

Bonzi rediscovered his passion for the game in 2019, as he overhauled his team, moved his training base and found the right mentality alongside new coach Lionel Zimbler. The transformation was abrupt and critical in order for the Frenchman to take the next step in his career. Not only has Zimbler guided his charge from a tactical side, but most importantly he helped him find a newfound serenity on the court.

“The most important thing is that my mentality is better than it was three years ago. I started with a new coach in October 2019 and that’s when I changed everything. We tried a new way to work and a new approach. The tennis is important, but out of everything in life, working on the serenity and the mental aspect has helped me the most.”

Bonzi reached his first ATP Challenger final in Drummondville, Canada, in 2018, but it would be three years before he lifted his maiden trophy. That special moment arrived in February, when the 25-year-old dominated on the hard courts of Potchefstroom, South Africa. Just two months later, he would add his second crown – and first on clay – in Ostrava, Czech Republic. And it all culminated in July with a third Challenger title of the year in Segovia, Spain, where he would punch his ticket to the Top 100.

Bonzi

Bonzi says that the best advice he’s received is: “If you worked for it and deserve it, it will come.” After years of knocking on the door, the Frenchman has quickly become one of the more feared competitors on tour in 2021. A ruthless force on the ATP Challenger Tour, he has led the circuit in match wins throughout the year, boasting a 34-11 record. His three titles are tied for the tour lead.

The 25-year-old, who grew up idolizing Roger Federer and nearly faced the Swiss legend at Wimbledon in 2018, falling one win short of a second round encounter, hopes to take his talents to the next level on the ATP Tour. He is already making strides towards that goal, having reached the second round at Roland Garros 2020, which was followed by a first ATP Masters 1000 match win in Paris. And he would earn one of the biggest wins of his burgeoning career at the ATP 250 stop in Montpellier earlier this year, upsetting former World No. 10 Lucas Pouille.

Bonzi is also carrying the momentum from a strong run on the lawns of Wimbledon, having reached the second round as a qualifier. There, he pushed former World No. 3 Marin Cilic to four sets. The Frenchman will look to continue to impress under the bright lights of New York, as one of the players to watch at US Open qualifying later this month.

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'Flawless' Opelka Rides Big-Man Tennis Into Toronto SFs

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

Big-serving Reilly Opelka’s strong week continued Friday in Toronto as he downed 10th seed Roberto Bautista Agut 6-3, 7-6(1) at the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers to advance to his second ATP Masters 1000 semi-final. Playing ‘Big Man Tennis’, the American thundered 18 aces, crushed massive forehands and even produced scorching backhand winners to overwhelm the diminutive Spaniard.

The 23-year-old Opelka saved one match point in his third-round win over Lloyd Harris and backed up against Bautista Agut by winning 85 per cent (35/41) of his first-service points to advance in 83 minutes.

“To beat Roberto Bautista Agut shows you are at a high level,” Opelka said in his on-court interview. “He is pretty consistent, so if you aren’t at a high level, you don’t have a shot against him. I came into the match with confidence and played flawlessly today.”

Opelka’s previous best result this season came at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia, in which he also advanced to the semi-finals at the Masters 1000 clay-court event in Rome. Having now matched this, the two-time tour-level titlist will next face third seed Stefanos Tsitsipas after the Greek defeated Casper Ruud.

“[Tsitsipas] has got a great serve,” Opelka said. “He has the best forehand in the world right now and he moves very well. It is very hard to find his backhand, he moves to the left to cover it. He hits forehands from every part of the court, is aggressive and competes well.”

With victory, Opelka has levelled his ATP Head2Head Series with Bautista Agut at 2-2. If countryman John Isner can overcome 11th seed Gael Monfils later on Friday, it will be the first time that two Americans have advanced to the last four in Canada since Michael Chang and Chris Woodruff did in 1997 in Montreal.

[WATCH LIVE 1]

In a tight first set, in which both players dominated on serve, Opelka took the one break point that was on offer in the set when he found the feet of Bautista Agut, who was unable to find the court with his volley. From 3-1 ahead, Opelka served consistently as he closed out the set to lead.

The second set followed a similar pattern, with 17 points in a row going with serve as both struggled to impact the match on return. In the tie-break, Opelka raised his level, striking the ball with great power, sealing his victory with a forehand winner.

Bautista Agut was aiming to reach the semi-finals at a tour-level event for the first time since he enjoyed a run to the last four in Miami in March. The World No. 17 has reached finals at the Open Sud de France in Montpellier and the Qatar ExxonMobil Open in Doha this year.

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Tsitsipas Cruises Past Ruud To Reach Toronto SFs

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

Third seed Stefanos Tsitsipas’ season continued to go from strength to strength on Friday in Toronto. The Greek recorded a 45th tour-leading victory of the year to defeat the in-form Casper Ruud 6-1, 6-4 to reach the semi-finals at the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers.

The 23-year-old, who rose to a career-high No. 3 in the FedEx ATP Rankings on Monday, served well throughout and hit the ball with great power and depth to advance to his seventh ATP Masters 1000 semi-final in 74 minutes.

”It is very nice to see myself perform at this level,” Tsitsipas said in his on-court interview. “I was sticking close to the baseline and coming in, taking the ball early. It was my intention from the very beginning, and it worked perfectly.

“Playing against a guy like him, who gets every single ball back, is always very challenging. There is some sort of concentration levels you have to reach to perform to your best. These kinds of matches always teach me things that I can expose for next time.”

Tsitsipas is aiming to win his third tour-level title of the season this week in Toronto. The 23-year-old, currently second in the FedEx ATP Race To Turin, captured his first Masters 1000 crown in Monte-Carlo in April and lifted the Open Parc Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes Lyon trophy in May.

The Roland Garros finalist has fond memories in Toronto. In 2018, Tsitsipas overcame four Top 10 opponents as he enjoyed a dream breakthrough run to the final. Tsitsipas will next face either 10th seed Roberto Bautista Agut or American Reilly Opelka as he tries to advance to the championship match in Canada again.

Tsitsipas made a fast start against Ruud, dominating the longer rallies and stepping inside the baseline as he closed points out at the net to race 5-0 ahead. The Greek committed just four unforced errors in the first set to lead as Ruud struggled to find his rhythm.

[WATCH LIVE 1]

However, the Norwegian improved at the start of the second set as he started to use his forehand to move Tsitsipas around the court. After earning a break point in the second game, Ruud was unable to capitalise as he fired long. This hold further fuelled Tsitsipas, who then broke at 4-4 before serving out to secure his victory. The Greek has now tied their ATP Head2Head series at 1-1, gaining revenge from his defeat to Ruud in Madrid in May.

Ruud was bidding to earn the 100th tour-level win of his career on Friday and 14th straight victory, having won three consecutive clay-court titles in Bastad, Gstaad and Kitzbühel in recent weeks.

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Felix’s Intense Drills: ‘Keep The Focus’

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

The serve is the only shot over which a player has total control. That’s why TopCourt ambassador Felix Auger-Aliassime says that it’s worth spending time to perfect.

”You can really take the time to perfect your serve, work on it and repeat it so it becomes something really consistent and precise,” he says.

The Canadian looks to hit 60%-70% of all shots with his forehand, a strategy that is easier to follow when your serve is working and setting up the point.

Let Felix guide you to the path of success with his favourite drills, which can be found at TopCourt.

“These drills are meant to be tough, they are meant to challenge you. Don’t get frustrated if you miss. Keep the focus, keep the intensity. Give your best effort.”

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Felix Auger-Aliassime

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Learn more from Auger-Aliassime at TopCourt

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Tennis World Mourns Loss Of Craig Miller

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

Former Australian Open doubles semi-finalist Laurie Warder has paid tribute to Craig A. Miller after his compatriot lost a battle with throat cancer last weekend. A former World No.64 in doubles in 1984, Miller was 58.

A junior boys’ singles champion at the 1980 Australian Open, where he defeated Wally Masur in the final, Miller teamed with Warder to reach the semi-finals in main draw doubles two years later. The Aussie duo lost to eventual champions Paul Annacone and Christo Van Rensburg at Kooyong.

“That was our highlight playing together,” Warder said. “We played a lot of junior tennis together, but he ended up way too good for me.

“He was a great guy… He was in Sydney and moved to Melbourne. We played a lot of golf together. Golf and family brought him through [his cancer treatment]. He was a member down at the National [Golf Club] and every time he was feeling better he’d go and play.”

Miller’s wife Trish and family shared news of his passing in a statement. “It is with great sadness that we advise that Craig passed away… He was surrounded with love from family and died peacefully. He endured a massive, courageous fight and is now playing golf in a happier place, free from pain and torment,” the statement read.

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Mektic/Pavic Save Match Point Against Familiar Foes In Toronto

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic have dominated the ATP Tour in 2021, but on Thursday they barely escaped their opener against Britons Daniel Evans and Neal Skupski.

The Croatian stars saved a match point at 9/10 in the Match Tie-break before rallying past Evans and Skupski 3-6, 7-5, 13-11 to reach the quarter-finals of the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers. It was their third victory of the year against Evans and Skupski, with the previous two coming in the Miami and Monte Carlo finals.

Mektic kept his cool when serving down match point, delivering a big serve to get out of trouble. The top seeds, who have won nine titles this year — including the doubles gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics — will next play Dutchman Matwe Middelkoop and Australian Luke Saville.

[WATCH LIVE 2]

The second and third seeds also advanced to the last eight. Second seeds Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah eliminated Russian singles stars Karen Khachanov and Andrey Rublev 6-3, 6-4, while third seeds Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury ousted Kazakshtani Andrey Golubev and German Andreas Mies 6-3, 6-2.

In other action, Russian Aslan Karatsev and Serbian Dusan Lajovic beat fifth seeds Lukasz Kubot and Marcelo Melo 6-4, 6-4, and Belgians Sander Gille and Joran Vliegen battled past Dutchman Wesley Koolhof and American Austin Krajicek 7-6(5), 2-6, 10-8.

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Day 5 Preview: Ruud Ready To Send A Message Against Tsitsipas

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

Stefanos Tsitsipas reached his very first ATP Masters 1000 semi-final on hard-courts at the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers in 2018. Will he reach another one on Friday, or will Casper Ruud send a message of intent to the rest of the field with an upset? 

The 23-year-old Greek and the 22-year-old Norwegian are both contenders in the FedEx Race To Turin, with Tsitsipas sitting in second position and Ruud occupying eighth place. But while both players have recorded big results on hard courts, it’s been their clay-court achievements that have caught the attention in 2021. 

Ruud will come into the matchup with a 1-0 ATP Head2Head lead over World No. 3 Tsitsipas after defeating him in straight sets on the clay courts of Madrid. He is on a 12-match winning streak after winning three consecutive clay-court titles, but the Norwegian is eager to prove he is more than a one-surface threat.

After his win over Dusan Lajovic, Ruud signed the camera with the words ‘Hard Court’ and a smiley face – sending a message to the rest of the field that he means business in Toronto.

“I have seen a lot of people probably questioning my ability to play on hard court, so just thought it was funny to write a little note,” Ruud said after the match.

“Even though I played most of my best results on clay, my best Slam result is from this year’s Australian Open [fourth round]. I think it’s a surface that also can suit my game well, even though this year has been mainly clay, clay, clay all the year. I’m motivated to come back to the hard courts.”

Tsitsipas reached his first Grand Slam final at Roland Garros (l. to Djokovic) and won his first ATP Masters 1000 at Monte-Carlo earlier in the season. But the Greek player’s hard-court resume is nothing to scoff at: he won four of his seven titles on the surface, including the biggest of his career at the 2019 Nitto ATP Finals. He is seeking his seventh ATP Masters 1000 semi-final – and his fourth on hard courts – in Toronto.

The winner of Tsitsipas and Ruud will next face either 10th seed Roberto Bautista Agut or Reilly Opelka. The Spaniard, who edged past Diego Schwartzman in the previous round, owns a 2-1 Head2Head record over the American, who defeated Lloyd Harris in three sets.

Also in action, John Isner will aim to continue his red-hot momentum as he faces the resurgent Gael Monfils for the 13th time in their careers. Monfils won back-to-back matches for the first time all year to reach his first quarter-final since February of 2020, while Isner is seeking to extend an eight-match winning streak that includes his sixth Truist Atlanta Open title. 

[WATCH LIVE 1]

Top seed Daniil Medvedev will take on seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz for a place in the semi-finals. The Russian was runner-up to Rafael Nadal in Montreal in 2019, and he will be aiming to do one better as he seeks his fourth ATP Masters 1000 title in Toronto. Medvedev will be out for revenge against the Pole after he lost a five-set match in the fourth round at Wimbledon this year in the pair’s only prior ATP Head2Head meeting.

Click here for the full Day 5 order of play. 

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Medvedev Downs Duckworth For Toronto Quarter-Final Berth

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

Top seed Daniil Medvedev has fended off a late-match surge from James Duckworth and punched his ticket to the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers quarter-finals on Thursday.

Quick out of the blocks in attack and a brick wall in defence, the 25-year-old gave the Australian few chances at making any real inroads until the closing stages as he clinched the pair’s first ATP Head2Head encounter 6-2, 6-4.

A runner-up at the event in Montreal two years ago, the Russian continued his affinity for North American hard courts to reach his eighth ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final. He awaits the winner of his Wimbledon conqueror – seventh seed Hubert Hurkacz – or Georgian Nikoloz Basilashvili.

Duckworth was enjoying an equal career-best run at an ATP Masters 1000 event, having won through two rounds of qualifying before posting impressive straight-sets wins over Taylor Fritz and last week’s Citi Open champion Jannik Sinner. But a first victory over a Top 10 opponent in nine attempts proved a bridge too far against Medvedev.

[WATCH LIVE 1]

“He was playing good, especially in the beginning. I managed to get a few tight games, managed to get ahead. I think he lost his rhythm a little bit so that was well my fault also,” Medvedev said. “I managed to be ahead throughout the rest of the match and then – it’s very normal, it’s the same for everybody when your back’s against the wall – I served for the match, he played much better than before.

“He managed to be the closer and well played from him because it’s putting pressure on your opponent. I managed to keep this pressure out there and really happy with the win.”

Having undergone eight surgeries throughout his career, Duckworth left with much to celebrate in what was shaping as his finest season. For his feats this week, he was projected to crack the Top 70 for the first time. 

The 29-year-old Australian held his own when the rallies extended beyond five shots but Medvedev consistently did the damage early as he claimed 46 points to his opponent’s 24 in rallies that lasted less than five shots. The Russian won 84 per cent of first-serve points and 12 of his 20 winners were aces.

 

The World No. 2’s only wobble came as he served for the match at 5-2. Duckworth elevated his game to summon his first break point and he and converted it to extend his stay before Medvedev closed it out at the second time of asking.

“When you face someone for the first time it’s a bit tougher and we’d never practised together so I didn’t know what to expect,” Medvedev said. “Sometimes you just need to find things during the match. Even when you play someone for the 10th time every day is different so it’s always about finding the right spot during the match.”

In the final match of the night, seventh seed Hurkacz held off Georgian Basilashvili in two hours and 38 minutes to book his place in the quarter-finals. The World No. 13 secured his third ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final, all on North American hard courts, having progressed as far at Indian Wells two years ago and after his title run in Miami this year.

In a dominant night on serve, Hurkacz finished with 30 winners of which 23 were aces. He won 88 per cent of first-serve points and saved six of seven break points. 

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Medvedev & Tsitsipas Lead In Cincy; All You Need To Know

  • Posted: Aug 13, 2021

After its one-year stint in New York City in 2020, the Western & Southern Open returns to its home in Cincinnati, Ohio. There will be plenty of action in store as 15 players inside the Top 20 of the FedEx ATP Rankings are set to hit the courts at the Lindner Family Tennis Center.

Daniil Medvedev leads the field as he seeks his second Cincinnati trophy. The World No. 2 made a big breakthrough on these courts in 2019 as he lifted his first ATP Masters 1000 trophy (d. Goffin). It was one of four consecutive finals he reached that year in North America, including his first at the Grand Slam level later on at the US Open. The Russian will return to Cincy seeking his fourth Masters 1000 crown, and his 12th tour-level title. 

Fellow Grand Slam finalists Stefanos Tsitsipas, Alexander Zverev and Matteo Berrettini will also be in action, alongside Nitto ATP Finals contenders Andrey Rublev, Casper Ruud, Hubert Hurkacz and Aslan Karatsev. #NextGenATP stars Jannik Sinner and Felix Auger-Aliassime will also feature.

This year’s Western & Southern Open holds one additional twist. For the first time since the ATP Tour resumed from its pandemic suspension in August 2020, FedEx ATP Rankings points will be added and dropped per traditional methodology (beginning 23 August). 

Here’s all you need to know about the Western & Southern Open: what is the schedule, where to watch, who has won, when is the draw and more. 

Established: 1899

Tournament Dates: 15-22 August 2021

Tournament Director: J. Wayne Richmond

Draw Ceremony: Friday, 13 August

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Schedule (View On Official Website)
* Qualifying: Saturday, 14 August – Sunday, 15 August at 10:00am
* Main Draw: Sunday, 15 August – Friday, 22 August, 11:00am & 7:00pm; Saturday not before 1:00pm & 6:00pm 
* Doubles Final: Sunday, 15 August at 12:00pm
* Singles Final: Sunday, 15 August not before 4:30pm

How To Watch
Watch Live On Tennis TV 
TV Schedule

Venue: Linder Family Tennis Center

Prize Money: USD $4,845,025 (Total Financial Commitment: USD $5,404,435) 

View Who Is Playing, Past Champions, Seeds, Points & Prize Money Breakdown

Honour Roll (Open Era)
Most Titles, Singles: Roger Federer (7)
Most Titles, Doubles: Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan, Daniel Nestor (5)
Oldest Champion: Ken Rosewall, 35, in 1970
Youngest Champion: Boris Becker, 17, in 1985
Highest-Ranked Champion: No. 1 John McEnroe in 1981; Andre Agassi in 1995; Pete Sampras in 1997, 1999; Gustavo Kuerten in 2001; Roger Federer in 2005, 2007, 2009, 2012; Novak Djokovic in 2020
Lowest-Ranked Champion (since 1979): No. 23 Peter Fleming in 1979
Last Home Champion: Andy Roddick in 2006
Most Match Wins: Roger Federer (47)

2020 Finals
Singles: [1] Novak Djokovic (SRB) d Milos Raonic (CAN) 16 63 64   Read & Watch
Doubles: Pablo Carreno Busta (ESP) / Alex de Minaur (AUS) d Jamie Murray (GBR) / Neal Skupski (GBR) 62 75  Read More 

Social
Hashtag: #CincyTennis

Facebook: @cincytennis
Twitter: @CincyTennis
Instagram: @cincytennis

Did You Know?
The Cincinnati tournament has come a long way from its humble roots, first played at the Avondale Athletic Club more than a century ago, to the grand-scale ATP Masters 1000 event it is today. Past champions include all-time greats like Ivan Lendl, Stefan Edberg, Pete Sampras, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic. 

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