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Tennis tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Madrid Open (Spanish: Masters de Madrid; formerly known as the Madrid Masters, and currently known as the Mutua Madrid Open for sponsorship reasons) is an annual professional tennis tournament held in Madrid, Spain. It is played on clay courts at the Caja Mágica in Manzanares Park, San Fermín, and is held in late April and early May. The tournament is an ATP Masters 1000 event on the ATP Tour and a WTA 1000 event on the WTA Tour. The tournament is traditionally played on a red clay surface, though it was played on blue clay courts in 2012.[1]
Mutua Madrid Open | |||||||||
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Tournament information | |||||||||
Founded | 2002 | ||||||||
Editions | 22 (2024) | ||||||||
Location | Madrid Spain | ||||||||
Venue | Madrid Arena (2002–2008) La Caja Mágica (since 2009) | ||||||||
Surface | Hard – indoors (2002–2008) Clay – outdoors (since 2009) | ||||||||
Website | mutuamadridopen.com | ||||||||
Current champions (2024) | |||||||||
Men's singles | Andrey Rublev | ||||||||
Women's singles | Iga Świątek | ||||||||
Men's doubles | Sebastian Korda Jordan Thompson | ||||||||
Women's doubles | Cristina Bucșa Sara Sorribes Tormo | ||||||||
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Ion Țiriac, a Romanian billionaire businessman and former ATP professional, was the owner of the tournament between 2009 and 2021.[2] According to Digi Sport which interviewed Țiriac in 2019, the tournament brings to the city of Madrid annual benefits exceeding €107 million.[3] In 2021, Țiriac sold the tournament to New York–based IMG for approximately €390 million.
From its inauguration as a men's only event in 2002, the tournament was classified as one of the ATP Masters Series tournaments, where it replaced the now-defunct Eurocard Open in Stuttgart. It was held from 2002 to 2008 in the Madrid Arena as the first of two Master's indoor hard court late-season events that preceded the ATP Tour Finals (also indoors). It was replaced on the Masters schedule by the Shanghai Masters after the 2008 season. In 2009, the tournament was reborn under new ownership with a new location, new surface, and new time slot. It expanded to include a premier women's contest (replacing the tournament in Berlin) and shifted to an earlier period of the tennis season to become the second Master's tournament of the spring European clay-court swing (replacing the Hamburg Open). The event moved outdoors to Park Manzanares, where a new complex with a retractable-roof equipped main court was constructed, the Caja Magica.
Țiriac announced in April 2019 that he has extended his sponsorship contract of the Mutua Madrid Open for 10 additional years, until 2031.[4] Because he agreed to continue in Madrid, Țiriac will receive more than 30 million euros from the city of Madrid in the coming years.[3] Feliciano López was announced as the Madrid tournament director, commencing 2019.[5]
Starting in 2021, the women's tournament, part of the WTA tour, expanded to become a two-week tournament.[6] By December of the same year, it was announced Tiriac sold the event to IMG, which is now the new organizator and has already planned an expansion of courts, including a new stadium for over 10,000 people, to be built by partly draining the lake circling Caja Magica.[7]
In June 2022 ATP announced some changes to the ATP calendar for the coming year. The ATP Masters 1000 event in Madrid along with those in Shanghai and in Rome would now be held over two weeks starting in 2023, thus becoming 12 day events just like the Masters 1000 events in Indian Wells and Miami.[8]
Tiriac proposed and implemented in 2012 a new color of blue clay for all the courts' surfaces, motivating that it would supposedly be better visually, especially for viewers on television (analogous to some hardcourt surface events migrating to blue from various previous color schemes). Some speculated that the adaptation of blue colour was a nod to the titular sponsor of the tournament, the Spanish insurance giant Mutua Madrileña. This controversial change was subsequently granted and began to be used in the 2012 edition of the tournament.[9] In 2009 one of the outer tennis courts had already been made of the new surface for the players to test it. Manuel Santana, the Open's director, had assured that aside from the colour, the surface kept the same properties as the traditional red clay.[10]
On 1 December 2011, Țiriac confirmed that the blue clay surface was officially approved for the 2012 edition of the tournament, in both the ATP and WTA circuits.[11]
However, after the event took place in 2012, threats of future boycotts from some players, especially Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic (who both lost on the blue surface), led the tournament to return to the traditional red clay for the 2013 season.[12] This was due to the blue clay being more slippery than regular clay.[13]
Roger Federer is the only male player to win the tournament on three different surfaces: hard courts (2006), red clay (2009), and blue clay (2012). Serena Williams is the only female player to win the tournament on two different surfaces: blue clay (2012) and red clay (2013).
Year | Champions | Runners-up | Score |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | Dinara Safina (1/1) | Caroline Wozniacki | 6–2, 6–4 |
2010 | Aravane Rezaï (1/1) | Venus Williams | 6–2, 7–5 |
2011 | Petra Kvitová (1/3) | Victoria Azarenka | 7–6(7–3), 6–4 |
2012 | Serena Williams (1/2) | Victoria Azarenka | 6–1, 6–3 |
2013 | Serena Williams (2/2) | Maria Sharapova | 6–1, 6–4 |
2014 | Maria Sharapova (1/1) | Simona Halep | 1–6, 6–2, 6–3 |
2015 | Petra Kvitová (2/3) | Svetlana Kuznetsova | 6–1, 6–2 |
2016 | Simona Halep (1/2) | Dominika Cibulková | 6–2, 6–4 |
2017 | Simona Halep (2/2) | Kristina Mladenovic | 7–5, 6–7(5–7), 6–2 |
2018 | Petra Kvitová (3/3) | Kiki Bertens | 7–6(8–6), 4–6, 6–3 |
2019 | Kiki Bertens (1/1) | Simona Halep | 6–4, 6–4 |
2020 | Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic | ||
2021 | Aryna Sabalenka (1/2) | Ashleigh Barty | 6–0, 3–6, 6–4 |
2022 | Ons Jabeur (1/1) | Jessica Pegula | 7–5, 0–6, 6–2 |
2023 | [c] Aryna Sabalenka (2/2) | Iga Świątek | 6–3, 3–6, 6–3 |
2024 | Iga Świątek (1/1) | [c] Aryna Sabalenka | 7–5, 4–6, 7–6(9–7) |
Player(s) | Record | Year(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Most titles | ||||
Men's singles | Rafael Nadal | 5 |
2005, 2010, 2013–14, 2017 | |
Women's singles | Petra Kvitová | 3 |
2011, 2015, 2018 | |
Men's doubles | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
5 |
2006–07, 2010–11, 2013 | |
Daniel Nestor[i] | 2002, 2004–05, 2009, 2014 | |||
Women's doubles | Sara Errani Roberta Vinci |
2 |
2012, 2014 | |
Victoria Azarenka[ii] | 2011, 2023 | |||
Most finals | ||||
Men's singles | Rafael Nadal | 8 |
2005, 2009–11, 2013–15, 2017 | |
Women's singles | Simona Halep | 4 |
2014, 2016–17, 2019 | |
Most consecutive titles | ||||
Men's singles | Rafael Nadal | 2 |
2013–14 | |
Carlos Alcaraz | 2022–23 | |||
Men's doubles | Mark Knowles Daniel Nestor |
2004–05 | ||
Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
2006–07, 2010–11 | |||
Most consecutive finals | ||||
Men's singles | Rafael Nadal | 3 |
2009–11, 2013–15 |
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