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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260518T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260607T235959
DTSTAMP:20260606T010719
CREATED:20260316T234007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260604T120312Z
UID:3496-1779062400-1780876799@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2026 French Open
DESCRIPTION:Updated on June 2\, 2026\n\n\nThe tennis world turns its gaze toward the iconic red clay of Paris as the 125th edition of the French Open (Roland-Garros) takes center stage. Officially scheduled from May 18 to June 7\, 2026\, the world’s premier clay-court championship marks an absolute turning point in modern tennis history. Coming off a historic 2025 tournament that witnessed a dramatic shift in power\, the 2026 edition promises unmatched drama\, supreme tactical chess\, and the relentless physical trial that only the Parisian clay can demand. \n\n\n\n1. Tournament Essentials: Dates and Venue\n\n\n\nThe tournament grounds remain anchored at the historic Stade Roland-Garros\, located in the 16th arrondissement of Paris. Famed for its highly demanding surface\, terre battue (crust/red clay)\, the complex is defined by three primary show courts: the legendary Court Philippe-Chatrier (equipped with its state-of-the-art retractable roof)\, the electric Court Suzanne-Lenglen\, and the picturesque\, semi-sunken Court Simonne-Mathieu surrounded by botanical greenhouses. \n\n\n\nThe standard operational timeline partitions the event into two distinct phases: \n\n\n\n\nOpening Week (Qualifying Rounds): Monday\, May 18 – Friday\, May 22\, 2026. This period gives lower-ranked competitors a platform to fight their way into the coveted main draw slots.\n\n\n\nMain Draw Competition: Sunday\, May 24 – Sunday\, June 7\, 2026. The true battleground where elite tennis professionals vie for sports immortality.\n\n\n\n\n2. Definitive Main Draw Schedule\n\n\n\nThe structure of the main tournament is meticulously orchestrated to deliver high-stakes matches across multiple draws concurrently. Organizers have established a firm order of play\, highlighted by the popular night sessions on Court Philippe-Chatrier. \n\n\n\nWeek 1: Groundwork and Early Elimination Rounds\n\n\n\nThe opening phase of the main draw is a relentless gauntlet designed to trim the field from 128 hopefuls down to the final 16. \n\n\n\n\nSunday\, May 24 – Tuesday\, May 26: First Round (Men’s and Women’s Singles). Each day features three premium day matches followed by a single “Great Match” night session on Philippe-Chatrier starting no earlier than 8:15 PM.\n\n\n\nWednesday\, May 27 – Thursday\, May 28: Second Round (Singles competition continues\, while Men’s and Women’s Doubles draws commence on outer courts). Night sessions continue under the Chatrier lights.\n\n\n\nFriday\, May 29 – Saturday\, May 30: Third Round. The tournament intensity sharpens as seeded players begin colliding directly to secure spots in the second week.\n\n\n\n\nWeek 2: Prestige Clashes and the Championship Climax\n\n\n\nAs the calendar turns to June\, the event transforms into a stadium-focused\, high-stakes broadcast spectacle. Courts Suzanne-Lenglen and Simonne-Mathieu shift to secondary roles as the ultimate prizes narrow down. \n\n\n\n\nSunday\, May 31 – Monday\, June 1: Fourth Round (Round of 16). The final sixteen single competitors go head-to-head. Junior and wheelchair divisions begin their early rounds on the outer courts.\n\n\n\nTuesday\, June 2 – Wednesday\, June 3: Quarterfinals. The final eight remaining singles stars lock horns during elite day sessions and high-profile night sessions.\n\n\n\nThursday\, June 4: Mixed Doubles Final & Women’s Singles Semifinals. The first grand trophy of the tournament is awarded\, followed by two back-to-back showcases determining the women’s finalists.\n\n\n\nFriday\, June 5: Men’s Singles Semifinals. Two blockbuster matches on Court Philippe-Chatrier. The first begins at 2:30 PM\, with the second marquee match following at 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSaturday\, June 6: Men’s Doubles Final & Women’s Singles Final. A monumental day starting with the gentlemen’s doubles showcase at 11:00 AM\, leading into the crowning of the Women’s Singles Champion at 3:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSunday\, June 7: Women’s Doubles Final & Men’s Singles Final. The tournament concludes with the ladies’ doubles finale at 11:00 AM\, setting the stage for the definitive Men’s Singles Championship match at 3:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\n3. The Shockwave: Carlos Alcaraz’s Heartbreaking Withdrawal\n\n\n\nThe overriding narrative heading into the 2026 tournament was completely upended by a seismic medical update from the men’s camp. Carlos Alcaraz—the two-time defending champion who won an absolute epic in 2025—was forced to officially withdraw from the tournament due to a severe right wrist injury. \n\n\n\nThe injury\, identified as a complex combination of chronic tendon inflammation and cartilage damage\, initially flared up during the Barcelona Open. Despite extensive medical care and resting through the Madrid Open\, tests conducted immediately before Rome confirmed that his wrist could not handle the physical trauma of five-set clay tennis. Standing at a gala where he received the prestigious Laureus Sportsman of the Year award\, Alcaraz was spotted wearing a heavy\, supportive brace on his hitting wrist. \n\n\n\nThe young Spaniard released a statement expressing his deep disappointment: \n\n\n\n\n“After the results of the tests carried out\, we have decided that the most prudent thing to do is to be cautious and not participate in Rome or Roland-Garros as we wait to evaluate the progress so we can decide when to return to the court. This is a difficult time for me\, but I am sure we will come out of it stronger.” \n\n\n\n\nAlcaraz’s absence leaves an monumental power vacuum in the men’s draw\, completely shifting the burden of favoritism and blowing the championship race wide open. \n\n\n\n4. Stars to Watch and Core Storylines\n\n\n\nWith the reigning men’s king sidelined\, the storylines at Porte d’Auteuil have twisted into fascinating new directions. \n\n\n\nRe-shaping the Men’s Hierarchy\n\n\n\nIn Alcaraz’s absence\, the spotlight shines intensely on world No. 1 Jannik Sinner. Sinner\, who suffered a devastating 2025 final loss to Alcaraz in a 5-hour and 29-minute marathon\, enters Paris with an intense desire for redemption. Securing the Coupe des Mousquetaires would effectively allow Sinner to conquer his final major surface frontier. However\, a surging youth movement led by the highly physical Alexander Zverev\, Czech sensation Jakub Menšík\, and Italy’s Matteo Arnaldi ensures that the path to the trophy will be anything but a cakewalk. \n\n\n\nThe Women’s Throne: Swiatek vs. The Field\n\n\n\nOn the women’s side\, the focus centers entirely on Iga Świątek’s quest to reclaim her clay kingdom. After dominating Paris with consecutive titles from 2022 through 2024\, Świątek’s iron grip on the tournament was shattered in 2025 when Coco Gauff staged a historic run to claim her first-ever French Open title. \n\n\n\nŚwiątek enters the 2026 draw with an intense desire to re-establish her dominance\, though she faces a brutally competitive field. Gauff arrives with the calm confidence of a defending champion\, while dangerous ball-strikers like Aryna Sabalenka and a highly focused Marta Kostyuk pose massive threats to any tactical game plan on clay. \n\n\n\nThe Dark Horses and Rising Prodigies\n\n\n\n\nDiana Shnaider: The powerful left-hander has completely disrupted the women’s seedings\, showcasing a heavy\, looping topspin forehand that feels tailor-made for high-bouncing clay conditions.\n\n\n\nMirra Andreeva: No longer just a teenage prodigy\, Andreeva’s brilliant court-craft and defensive sliding abilities make her a legitimate elite contender down the stretch.\n\n\n\nFlavio Cobolli: A fierce competitor whose raw athleticism and sliding precision have transformed him into a brutal out for anyone in the men’s draw.\n\n\n\nMaja Chwalińska: The ultimate feel-player\, utilizing a brilliant variety of slices\, drop shots\, and unique angles to thoroughly disrupt the rhythm of heavy baseliners.\n\n\n\n\n5. Historic 2026 Prize Money Distribution\n\n\n\nThe 2026 French Open has established an all-time financial milestone\, unveiling a record-shattering total prize pool of €61\,723\,000. This represents a substantial 9.53% increase compared to the 2025 financial figures (€56\,352\,000). \n\n\n\nA major focus of the 2026 financial restructuring was providing a financial safety net for lower-ranked players. Tournament organizers directed massive percentage increases toward the qualifying phases and the opening three rounds of the main draw. For example\, a first-round exit now guarantees a player €87\,000 (an 11.5% jump)\, which provides vital funding for independent players to maintain their coaching teams and travel logistics throughout the grueling season. \n\n\n\nDespite these record figures\, an undercurrent of tension remains behind the scenes. Elite players continue to lobby the tournament board\, noting that the distributed prize pool represents roughly 15% of Roland-Garros’ total operational revenue—still well below the 22% target player unions are actively pushing for across Grand Slam events. \n\n\n\nThe precise round-by-round payout allocations for the 2026 edition are structured as follows: \n\n\n\nMain Draw Singles (Men & Women – Equal Distribution)\n\n\n\nRound ReachedPrize Money (EUR)Champion€2\,800\,000Runner-up€1\,400\,000Semifinalist€750\,000Quarterfinalist€470\,000Round of 16 (Round 4)€285\,000Round of 32 (Round 3)€187\,000Round of 64 (Round 2)€130\,000Round of 128 (Round 1)€87\,000\n\n\n\nMain Draw Doubles (Per Team)\n\n\n\nRound ReachedPrize Money (EUR)Champions€600\,000Finalists€300\,000Semifinalists€150\,000Quarterfinalists€82\,000Round of 16 (Round 3)€45\,000\n\n\n\nQualifying Singles (Men & Women)\n\n\n\nStage Cleared / ExitPrize Money (EUR)Qualifying Round 3 (Q3)€48\,000Qualifying Round 2 (Q2)€33\,000Qualifying Round 1 (Q1)€24\,000\n\n\n\n6. Technical Analysis: The Science of Red Clay\n\n\n\nTo understand why Roland-Garros consistently produces some of the most shocking upsets and grueling physical battles in sports\, one must understand the unique mechanics of terre battue. \n\n\n\nVISUAL CROSS-SECTION\nThe Five Layers of Roland-Garros Clay\n\n[1] Red Clay Dust (1-2mm)     --> Red brick powder (sliding)\n[2] Crushed White Limestone   --> Hard\, compact white base\n[3] Coal Dust / Clinker       --> Intermediate drainage line\n[4] Crushed Gravel            --> Coarse stone foundation\n[5] Drain Pipe / Large Stones --> Deep soil water evacuation\n\n\n\nThe surface is not actually solid dirt. It is a highly engineered\, five-layer system topped with a paper-thin layer of crushed red brick dust. This creates a surface with a incredibly high friction coefficient when the ball strikes the ground\, leading to two defining physical traits: \n\n\n\n\nVelocity Reduction: The rough texture of the brick dust acts as a natural brake. Upon bouncing\, a tennis ball loses roughly 40-45% of its horizontal speed\, compared to a mere 20-25% reduction on a standard hard court. This makes it incredibly difficult to hit clean winners past a quick opponent.\n\n\n\nVertical Bounce Amplification: Because the ball grips the loose surface rather than sliding across it\, the horizontal momentum is transferred directly into vertical height. The ball bites and kicks violently upward.\n\n\n\n\nThe Clay Court Movement Strategy\n\n\n\nBecause of the loose top layer\, traditional change-of-direction footwork is useless; pushing off abruptly will cause a player to lose traction and slip. Instead\, elite clay-court players utilize the “controlled slide.” \n\n\n\nPlayers intentionally initiate a long slide several feet before reaching the ball\, striking it mid-glide\, and using the friction of their shoes against the limestone base to brake. This allows them to instantly recover back toward the center of the court. Players who cannot master sliding are forced to take extra steps to slow down\, leaving them completely exposed to an opponent’s counter-punch. \n\n\n\nTactical Geometry and Extreme Topspin\n\n\n\nThe high bounce completely alters baseline tactics. Players like Iga Świątek generate heavy topspin\, rotating the ball at over 3\,200 RPM (revolutions per minute). When that ball hits the clay\, it explodes upward toward an opponent’s shoulders\, forcing them well behind the baseline just to make a clean return. \n\n\n\nTo counter this aggressive spin\, defending champion Coco Gauff uses a high-risk\, high-reward strategy: she steps up inside the baseline\, taking the ball early on the rise before it can jump out of her strike zone. This denies her opponent time to recover and allows Gauff to use her spectacular speed to dictate the points. \n\n\n\n7. The Essence of Roland-Garros\n\n\n\nThe French Open stands as the ultimate test of athletic endurance and mental willpower. Without the assistance of quick\, unreturnable aces to shorten points\, matches devolve into brutal physical examinations where every single point must be carefully constructed. It requires a perfect blend of patience\, creative point-building\, drop-shot artistry\, and supreme cardiovascular fitness. \n\n\n\nAs the gates of Porte d’Auteuil swing open\, history is waiting to be written. The historic increase in prize money ensures a fiercely competitive field from the opening weekend\, while the sudden absence of Carlos Alcaraz opens a rare path to Grand Slam glory. Paris in the spring provides a breathtaking backdrop\, but on the historic red clay courts\, it remains the most intense\, unforgiving theater in professional sports.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2026-french-open/
LOCATION:Roland Garros Stadium\, 2 Av. Gordon Bennett\, Paris\, 75016\, France
CATEGORIES:Grand Slam
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/French-Open-.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="F%C3%A9d%C3%A9ration Fran%C3%A7aise de Tennis":MAILTO:accueil@fft.fr
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260606T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260614T235959
DTSTAMP:20260606T010719
CREATED:20260518T053226Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260518T053230Z
UID:4067-1780704000-1781481599@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2026 Stuttgart Open (BOSS Open)
DESCRIPTION:The brief but intense grass-court season is universally recognized as one of the most exciting periods on the tennis calendar. In the critical weeks bridging the clay of the French Open and the historic lawns of Wimbledon\, the tennis world shifts its focus entirely to fast-paced\, low-bouncing slice shots and dominant serve-and-volley performances. \n\n\n\nServing as a premier launchpad for this elegant stretch of the calendar is the 2026 Stuttgart Open\, commercially known as the BOSS OPEN. Celebrating its 48th edition in the Open Era\, this ATP Tour 250 tournament guarantees a high-quality field of competitors year after year. Because grass-court preparation opportunities are strictly limited\, the world’s elite must maximize their time on the turf to adjust their footwork and positioning for the Grand Slam highlight in London. \n\n\n\nWhether you are a digital journalist formatting your coverage or an avid fan planning your viewing schedule\, this comprehensive evergreen guide covers everything you need to know about the 2026 event. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTournament Dates and Venue\n\n\n\nThe 2026 edition of the BOSS OPEN is scheduled to take place from June 6 to June 14\, 2026. \n\n\n\nThe tournament is hosted at the prestigious Tennis Club Weissenhof (TC Weissenhof) in Stuttgart\, Germany. Renowned for its exclusive\, intimate club atmosphere\, the venue offers spectators a unique panoramic view stretching over five pristine grass pitches and the scenic Stuttgart Killesberg. The combination of world-class athleticism and a relaxed\, open-sky summer ambiance transforms the Weissenhof facility into an international hotspot for sports enthusiasts and media figures alike. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n2026 Tournament Timeline and Daily Schedule\n\n\n\nThe schedule blends competitive professional matches with themed fan experiences\, offering unique incentives such as free evening admission. Below is the complete daily timeline for the 2026 event (subject to adjustments by tournament officials): \n\n\n\nSaturday\, June 6\, 2026 – Qualification Round 1\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 (Singles): 4 consecutive matches starting at 11:00 AM\n\n\n\nMatch Court 2 (Singles): 4 consecutive matches starting at 11:00 AM\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Free admission for all visitors.\n\n\n\n\nSunday\, June 7\, 2026 – KidsDay & Qualification Finals\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court: Exhibition training sessions featuring top-seeded players (Time TBC)\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 & 2 (Singles): 2 consecutive qualification matches on each court starting at 11:00 AM\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Dedicated KidsDay activities; free entry to the grounds starting from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nMonday\, June 8\, 2026 – KidsDay & Main Draw Opening\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Singles): 1st and 2nd matches begin at 11:00 AM; 3rd match not before 3:00 PM; 4th match not before 5:00 PM.\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 (Doubles): 1st match at 1:00 PM\, followed immediately by the 2nd match.\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Free entry to the grounds starting from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nTuesday\, June 9\, 2026 – KidsDay & Main Draw Round 1\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Singles): 1st and 2nd matches from 11:00 AM; 3rd match not before 3:00 PM; 4th match not before 5:00 PM.\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 (Singles): 4 consecutive matches starting at 11:00 AM.\n\n\n\nMatch Court 2: 1st match (Doubles) at 11:00 AM\, followed by 1 Singles match and 2 additional Doubles matches.\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Final day of youth-centric programming; free entry to the grounds starting from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nWednesday\, June 10\, 2026 – Sustainability Day & Round of 16\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Singles): Matches begin at 11:00 AM\, with late-afternoon sessions scheduled not before 3:00 PM and 5:00 PM.\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 (Doubles): 3 consecutive matches starting at 11:00 AM.\n\n\n\nSocial Event: AfterWork @ BOSS Experience runs from 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Focus on social responsibility and inclusion initiatives; free entry from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nThursday\, June 11\, 2026 – BOSS OPEN Fest & Round of 16\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Singles): Standard four-match structure starting at 11:00 AM (late slots not before 3:00 PM / 5:00 PM).\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 (Doubles): 2 consecutive matches starting at 1:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSocial Event: The BOSS OPEN Festival featuring a live performance by the band “LaDiri” at the BOSS OPEN Meadow from 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Free entry to the grounds starting from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nFriday\, June 12\, 2026 – Ischgl Night & Quarterfinals\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Singles): Four high-stakes quarterfinal matches starting at 11:00 AM (afternoon block not before 3:00 PM and 5:00 PM).\n\n\n\nMatch Court 1 (Doubles): 2 consecutive matches starting at 2:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSocial Event: Ischgl Night hosted at the BOSS OPEN Meadow from 6:00 PM to 10:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Free entry to the grounds starting from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nSaturday\, June 13\, 2026 – Semifinals\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court: 1st Singles Semifinal at 12:00 PM\, followed immediately by the 2nd Singles Semifinal. Doubles action scheduled not before 3:30 PM.\n\n\n\nSocial Event: AfterHour @ BOSS Experience from 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM.\n\n\n\nSpecial Note: Free entry to the grounds starting from 7:00 PM.\n\n\n\n\nSunday\, June 14\, 2026 – Championship Sunday\n\n\n\n\nFacility Opening: 10:00 AM\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Doubles Final): Commences at 11:30 AM.\n\n\n\nCentre Court (Singles Final): Scheduled not before 2:00 PM to crown the 2026 champion.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPrize Money and Financial Commitment\n\n\n\nThe total prize money pool and financial commitment for the 2026 Stuttgart Open is established at €757\,320. \n\n\n\n\nPlease Note: The exact round-by-round breakdown of player compensation\, detailing the financial payouts and corresponding ATP ranking points from the opening round through to the winner’s check\, will be fully available after the official ATP Tour announcement closer to the main draw draw ceremony. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nStars to Watch: The 2026 Player Field\n\n\n\nThe grass surface requires an aggressive technical approach—blending baseline power\, lightning-fast reflexes at the net\, and reliable\, heavy serves. The confirmed player lineup for 2026 presents a fascinating mix of elite Top-10 title contenders\, former Stuttgart champions\, grass-court specialists\, and rising Next-Gen talents. \n\n\n\nPlayerNationalityAgeNotable Stuttgart & Surface ContextAlexander ZverevGermany29World No. 3 and local favorite; looking for redemption after a runner-up finish in the 2025 final.Ben SheltonUSA23World No. 6; his thunderous\, un-returnable left-handed serve makes him a natural threat on grass.Taylor FritzUSA27World No. 8 and the defending 2025 BOSS OPEN champion; won last year’s title without dropping a single set.Alexander BublikKazakhstan10World No. 10; an unpredictable shot-maker whose slice and trick shots excel on fast grass.Matteo BerrettiniItaly29A two-time Stuttgart champion (and 2024 finalist) whose massive serve-and-forehand combo dominates lawns.Frances TiafoeUSA27Former Stuttgart tournament champion known for his electric style and deep bond with the Weissenhof crowd.Jan-Lennard StruffGermany35The veteran local hero who narrowly missed out on the title in a dramatic 2023 final against Tiafoe.Nick KyrgiosAustralia30Entering via a highly anticipated wildcard; the former Wimbledon finalist remains a premier grass attraction.Justin EngelGermany18Entering via the Next Gen Accelerator program; a home-crowd prospect making his mark on the big stage.\n\n\n\nThe American Contingent\n\n\n\nBeyond Fritz\, Shelton\, and Tiafoe\, the United States brings deep roster strength to Stuttgart. Tommy Paul (28) arrives with exceptional grass-court credentials\, including a recent title run at London’s Queen’s Club and a deep run at Wimbledon. He is accompanied by sharp-shooting compatriots Brandon Nakashima (24)\, Alex Michelsen (21)\, and the highly promising young left-hander Learner Tien (20). \n\n\n\nInternational Contenders\n\n\n\nThe draw is rounded out by a dangerous tier of international threats capable of pulling off major upsets early in the week: \n\n\n\n\nJiří Lehečka (24) & Tomáš Macháč (25) — Leading a potent Czech surge of flat\, powerful ball-strikers.\n\n\n\nJakub Menšík (20) — The young Czech phenom whose height and serving power map perfectly to grass.\n\n\n\nFlavio Cobolli (23) — The rising Italian star bringing tremendous court coverage to the faster surface.\n\n\n\nAlejandro Davidovich Fokina (26) — The creative Spanish star capable of brilliant all-court play.\n\n\n\nTomás Martín Etcheverry (26) — The heavy-hitting Argentine looking to translate his baseline weight to grass.\n\n\n\nCorentin Moutet (27) — A French variety specialist whose unconventional slices can disrupt any rhythm.\n\n\n\nValentin Vacherot (27) — The representative from Monaco looking to leave a mark on the professional grass circuit.\n\n\n\n\nWith a field boasting multiple former champions\, local tennis icons\, and immediate Top-10 firepower\, the 2026 BOSS OPEN promises an exceptional week of high-octane grass-court tennis in Stuttgart.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2026-stuttgart-open/
LOCATION:Tennis Club Weissenhof\, Parlerstraße 102\, Stuttgart\, 70192\, Germany
CATEGORIES:ATP Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Stuttgart-Open-ATP-250.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="e|motion sports GmbH Germany":MAILTO:info@bossopen.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260606T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260614T235959
DTSTAMP:20260606T010719
CREATED:20260602T010552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260602T013617Z
UID:4190-1780704000-1781481599@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2026 Libéma Open
DESCRIPTION:The grass-court swing of the professional tennis calendar is brief\, intense\, and deeply traditional. Serving as one of the definitive launching pads for this surface shift is the Libéma Open. \n\n\n\nHeld annually in the scenic surroundings of Rosmalen\, near ‘s-Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands\, this combined ATP and WTA 250 event offers players an ideal bridge from the heavy clay of Roland Garros to the lightning-fast lawns of Wimbledon. As the 35th edition of this historic tournament unfolds in 2026\, it promises top-tier competition\, elite players\, and a fan-friendly festival atmosphere. \n\n\n\nHere is your comprehensive guide to everything you need to know about the 2026 Libéma Open\, spanning dates\, player fields\, historical context\, and essential visitor details. \n\n\n\n1. Dates\, Venue\, and Tournament Basics\n\n\n\nThe 2026 Libéma Open officially takes place from June 8 to June 14\, 2026\, with qualifying rounds kicking off right before the main action. \n\n\n\n\nThe Venue: The entire tournament is played on the beautiful outdoor lawns of Autotron Rosmalen. The venue transforms into a premier tennis village every summer\, attracting over 62\,000 spectators across the week.\n\n\n\nThe Surface: Natural grass. Fast-paced\, low-bouncing\, and physically demanding\, grass courts favor aggressive baseliners\, strong servers\, and sharp net players.\n\n\n\nTournament Status: It features a simultaneous men’s ATP 250 draw (28 singles / 16 doubles) and women’s WTA 250 draw (32 singles / 16 doubles).\n\n\n\n\n2. A Quick Look Back: Libéma Open History\n\n\n\nThe tournament’s roots stretch back to 1989\, when it debuted as an eight-player test event. That inaugural title was captured by Miloslav Mečíř\, the 1988 Olympic gold medalist. By 1990\, the event joined the newly minted ATP Tour\, standing out uniquely as the only professional grass-court tournament on the European mainland. \n\n\n\nRecognizing its growing appeal\, organizers added women’s singles and doubles draws in 1996\, with German star Anke Huber claiming the first female singles crown. \n\n\n\nOver the years\, the tournament has gone by several monkers due to sponsorship shifts—including the Heineken Trophy\, Ordina Open\, UNICEF Open\, Topshelf Open\, and RICOH Open—before adopting its current name\, the Libéma Open\, in 2018. \n\n\n\nA crucial scheduling shift occurred in 2015. Prior to that\, the tournament was played the week immediately preceding Wimbledon. Since 2015\, it has occupied the week directly following Roland Garros\, giving players a critical extra week to find their “grass-court legs.” \n\n\n\nPast Legends & Champions\n\n\n\nThe honor roll at Rosmalen boasts some of the finest names in tennis history: \n\n\n\n\nInternational Icons: Lleyton Hewitt\, Kim Clijsters\, Justine Henin\, and Daniil Medvedev.\n\n\n\nDutch Heroes: Richard Krajicek\, Sjeng Schalken\, Michaëlla Krajicek\, Tallon Griekspoor\, and Tim van Rijthoven.\n\n\n\n\n3. The 2026 Provisional Schedule & Match Times\n\n\n\nThe tennis park opens its gates daily at 10:00 AM. From Monday through Friday\, fans can expect a packed slate\, featuring at least four high-profile matches daily on Center Court alongside rolling action on the outside courts. \n\n\n\nThe schedule moves intentionally toward championship weekend: \n\n\n\nDateSession / PhaseFeatured MatchesSaturday\, June 6QualifyingEarly-round knockouts for main draw spotsSunday\, June 7QualifyingFinal qualification roundsMon\, June 8 – Fri\, June 12Main DrawSingles Rounds of 32\, 16\, Quarterfinals & Early DoublesSaturday\, June 13Semifinals & Doubles FinalsMen’s & Women’s Singles SemifinalsMen’s & Women’s Doubles FinalsSunday\, June 14Singles Championship Sunday12:00 PM: Women’s Singles FinalNot before 2:30 PM: Men’s Singles Final\n\n\n\n4. Stars to Watch: The 2026 Player Field\n\n\n\nThe tournament regularly pulls in a balanced mixture of Top 10 heavyweights\, grass-court specialists\, and surging local favorites. \n\n\n\nGentlemen’s Singles (ATP)\n\n\n\nThe men’s side features incredible depth\, headlined by Canadian powerhouse Félix Auger-Aliassime and former World No. 1 Daniil Medvedev. Home fans will have plenty to cheer for with top-ranked Dutchman Tallon Griekspoor (a former champion here) and tactical veteran Botic van de Zandschulp in the mix. \n\n\n\n\nTop Contenders: Félix Auger-Aliassime\, Daniil Medvedev\, Arthur Fils\, Cameron Norrie\, Ugo Humbert.\n\n\n\nDangerous Threats: Denis Shapovalov\, Adrian Mannarino (always lethal on grass)\, Hubert Hurkacz\, and Belgian young gun Alexander Blockx.\n\n\n\nSee complete entry list.\n\n\n\n\nLadies’ Singles (WTA)\n\n\n\nThe women’s field is incredibly competitive\, led by the precise hitting of Ekaterina Alexandrova and Denmark’s Clara Tauson. Returning champion Elise Mertens will look to defend her crown against a highly versatile international lineup. \n\n\n\n\nTop Contenders: Ekaterina Alexandrova\, Clara Tauson\, Elise Mertens\, Emma Navarro.\n\n\n\nPlayers to Watch: Anastasia Potapova\, Dayana Yastremska\, Barbora Krejcikova\, and multi-surface threat Paula Badosa. Local fans will also keep a close eye on Suzan Lamens\, while Southeast Asian tennis fans will be tracking Indonesia’s rising star\, Janice Tjen.\n\n\n\nSee complete women’s entry list.\n\n\n\n\n5. 2026 Prize Money and Ranking Points\n\n\n\nThe total combined prize pool across both tours is highly lucrative. For 2026\, the overall financial commitment sits at a base of €965\,000. Because the formal 2026 round-by-round breakdown is still being finalized by the tours\, the baseline distributions are modeled below to give a clear picture of how earnings scale as players go deep into the tournament. \n\n\n\n\nNote on Equity: In modern tennis structure\, the ATP and WTA distribute payouts differently based on total tour-specific financial pools. Approximately 80% of an individual tour’s pool goes to singles players\, with 20% reserved for the doubles field. \n\n\n\n\nProjected Singles Prize Money & Points\n\n\n\nRound ReachedATP Prize Money (€)ATP PointsWTA Prize Money (€)WTA PointsWinner€107\,490250€31\,565250Runner-up€62\,720165€18\,685163Semifinalist€36\,870100€10\,41098Quarterfinalist€21\,38550€6\,60854Round of 16€12\,42025€4\,04030Round of 32€7\,5800€2\,8901\n\n\n\nProjected Doubles Prize Money (Per Team)\n\n\n\nRound ReachedATP Payout (€)WTA Payout (€)Winners€37\,400€11\,480Finalists€20\,090€6\,460Semifinalists€11\,750€3\,435Quarterfinalists€6\,560€2\,185Opening Round€3\,870€1\,320\n\n\n\n6. Travel and Logistics: Getting to Autotron Rosmalen\n\n\n\nAutotron Rosmalen is highly accessible\, situated centrally within the Benelux region. Plan your travel with these straightforward options: \n\n\n\n1. Driving by Car\n\n\n\nIf you are commuting by car\, the venue is simple to find. Keep an eye out for the yellow ANWB traffic signs marked “Autotron” on the major A2 and A59 motorways. \n\n\n\n\nAverage Drive Time: Autotron is roughly a comfortable one-hour drive from major hubs including Amsterdam\, Rotterdam\, The Hague\, Apeldoorn\, Venlo\, Roermond\, Bergen op Zoom\, and even Antwerp (Belgium).\n\n\n\nParking: There is ample parking capacity on-site. Visitors are strongly encouraged to purchase a digital parking ticket online ahead of time to skip morning entry queues.\n\n\n\n\n2. Public Transport\n\n\n\nIf you prefer trains and buses\, the Netherlands’ excellent public transit infrastructure has you covered: \n\n\n\n\nFrom ‘s-Hertogenbosch Central Station: Hop directly onto bus number 90\, which drops passengers off right near the Autotron complex.\n\n\n\nFrom Rosmalen Station: You can easily grab a local train taxi directly to the venue gates.\n\n\n\n\n7. How to Watch: Broadcast and Streaming Guide\n\n\n\nCan’t make it to the Netherlands in person? You can catch world-class grass tennis from home. Comprehensive global coverage is split cleanly by tour: \n\n\n\n\nWatching the Men (ATP): The premier destination for all ATP matches is Tennis TV\, the official live streaming service of the ATP Tour. It offers live court selection\, multi-court viewing\, and full on-demand replays.\n\n\n\nWatching the Women (WTA): WTA matches are broadcast internationally through regional rightsholders (such as Tennis Channel in the US\, Sky Sports in the UK/Germany\, and BeIN Sports across various global markets).\n\n\n\nLocal Domestic Coverage: In the Netherlands\, local sports networks and national broadcasters provide daily live tournament feeds\, especially focusing on Center Court and local Dutch athletes.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2026-libema-open/
LOCATION:Autotron Rosmalen\, Graafsebaan 133\, Rosmalen\, 5248\, Netherlands
CATEGORIES:ATP Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Rosmalen-Grass-Court-Championships-Overview.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Lib%C3%A9ma Events B.V.":MAILTO:info@libema-events.nl
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260606T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260621T235959
DTSTAMP:20260606T010719
CREATED:20250805T001704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260604T121442Z
UID:85-1780704000-1782086399@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2026 Queen's Club Championships
DESCRIPTION:As the tennis world transitions to the slick\, lightning-fast grass courts of the summer season\, few venues hold as much prestige and historical charm as West London. The HSBC Championships\, traditionally known as the Queen’s Club Championships\, stands as one of the most popular and longest-running grass-court tennis events in existence. \n\n\n\nEstablished all the way back in 1889\, this iconic event offers the perfect blend of high-stakes professional tennis and quintessential British summer tradition. In a groundbreaking modern expansion\, the tournament spans two thrilling weeks\, featuring an elite WTA 500 women’s event in week one\, followed immediately by the historic ATP 500 men’s event in week two. \n\n\n\nWhether you are preparing to head to West Kensington or setting up your broadcast viewing schedule at home\, this comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know about the 2026 edition—including tournament dates\, the historic venue\, daily schedule breakdown\, global star player entry lists\, prize money\, and official broadcasting networks. \n\n\n\n1. Tournament Dates & Historic Venue\n\n\n\nThe 2026 HSBC Championships will take place across a blockbuster fortnight from 06 June to 21 June 2026. This expansive positioning gives fans twice the action on one of the most revered surfaces in all of sports. \n\n\n\nThe tournament is hosted at The Queen’s Club in West Kensington\, London\, United Kingdom. \n\n\n\nVenue Fast Facts\n\n\n\n\nCapacity: The historic grounds are optimized to welcome up to 17\,000 passionate spectators every single day.\n\n\n\nThe Complex: Boasts 28 pristine grass courts across the property.\n\n\n\nSurface Reputation: Widely regarded by top ATP and WTA professionals as possessing some of the finest\, most meticulously maintained grass tennis courts in the world\, offering an authentic\, low-skidding bounce that perfectly mirrors the conditions found at nearby Wimbledon.\n\n\n\n\n2. Provisional Tournament Schedule\n\n\n\nThe 2026 event features two entirely distinct tournament weeks. Week one hosts the fierce competitors of the WTA 500 circuit\, while week two shifts the spotlight over to the ATP 500 men’s draw and the highly competitive Men’s Wheelchair division. \n\n\n\nOrder of Play\n\n\n\nWeek 1: Women’s WTA 500 Singles & Doubles\n\n\n\nWTA Qualifying Rounds: Saturday\, 6 June – Sunday\, 7 June. The opening weekend sees players outside the automatic main draw entry list battle through two rounds of intense qualification matches to earn a spot in the primary 28-player field. \n\n\n\nWTA First Round: Monday\, 8 June – Tuesday\, 9 June. The main draw officially gets underway. Star seeds and wildcard entrants make their grass debuts on the Queen’s Club show courts across both singles and doubles action. \n\n\n\nWTA Second Round & Quarterfinals: Wednesday\, 10 June – Thursday\, 11 June. The field narrows significantly. Play intensifies as competitors fight for spots in the final eight of singles\, while doubles pairings push through into the quarterfinal stages. \n\n\n\nWTA Quarterfinals & Semifinals: Friday\, 12 June – Saturday\, 13 June. Super Friday showcases the top eight singles players. Saturday follows with high-tension semifinal match-ups on Center Court to determine who earns a spot in Championship Sunday. \n\n\n\nWTA Championship Sunday: Sunday\, 14 June. The historic culmination of week one. The afternoon crowns the 2026 Queen’s Club WTA Singles and Doubles champions. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWeek 2: Men’s ATP 500 & Wheelchair Schedule\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nATP Qualifying Rounds: Saturday\, 13 June – Sunday\, 14 June. As the women’s event concludes\, the men’s qualifying draw takes center stage across the outer courts\, featuring two rounds of intense singles qualifying and a round of doubles qualifying. \n\n\n\nATP First Round: Monday\, 15 June – Tuesday\, 16 June. The 32-player men’s main draw swings into action. Top international seeds open their accounts alongside local British favorites across a packed\, high-energy schedule. \n\n\n\nATP Second Round: Wednesday\, 17 June – Thursday\, 18 June. The round of 16. Power-servers and grass-court specialists collide as players look to secure their placement in the critical final weekend rounds. \n\n\n\nATP Quarterfinals: Friday\, 19 June. Quarterfinal Friday. Four high-stakes\, back-to-back singles blockbusters take over Center Court to decide who moves within striking distance of the trophy. \n\n\n\nATP Semifinals & Wheelchair Action: Saturday\, 20 June. A spectacular day of tennis featuring the ATP Singles and Doubles semifinals\, alongside the high-intensity kickoff of the Men’s Wheelchair Singles semifinals. \n\n\n\nATP & Wheelchair Finals: Sunday\, 21 June. Championship Sunday for the men’s circuit. The day features three back-to-back finals: the Men’s Wheelchair Singles/Doubles titles\, followed by the main ATP Singles and Doubles finals. \n\n\n\n3. Stars to Watch: The 2026 Player Line-Up\n\n\n\nThe 2026 entry lists for both the WTA and ATP events are stacked with elite baseline champions\, booming servers\, and reigning titlists looking to assert dominance on the grass. \n\n\n\nWTA Singles Stars to Watch\n\n\n\nThe women’s field features an incredible blend of Grand Slam winners and defensive powerhouses: \n\n\n\n\nElena Rybakina (Kazakhstan | World No. 2): The former Wimbledon champion stands as the absolute gold standard on grass. Armed with a thunderous first serve and lightning-flat groundstrokes\, she enters as the heavy favorite.\n\n\n\nAmanda Anisimova (USA | World No. 6): The 2025 runner-up returns to London with unfinished business\, looking to go one step further than her brilliant final run last summer.\n\n\n\nBelinda Bencic (Switzerland | World No. 12): A naturally gifted grass-court player with exceptional timing and an innate ability to take the ball early on low-bouncing surfaces.\n\n\n\nEmma Raducanu (Great Britain | World No. 30): The home crowd will be out in full force to support the former US Open Champion\, who always raises her level of play on British lawns.\n\n\n\n\nATP Singles Stars to Watch\n\n\n\nThe men’s entry list is an absolute minefield of deep\, explosive talent: \n\n\n\n\nAlex de Minaur (Australia | World No. 9): The lightning-fast Aussie top-seeds the event. His world-class speed\, low center of gravity\, and flat counter-punching make him an apex predator on slick grass.\n\n\n\nLorenzo Musetti (Italy | World No. 11): Possessing one of the most elegant\, versatile one-handed backhands in the modern game\, his slice variations and net touch are beautiful to watch on this surface.\n\n\n\nJiri Lehecka (Czech Republic | World No. 14): The 2025 finalist returns to West Kensington with highly dangerous\, flat groundstrokes that proved lethal on these exact courts a year ago.\n\n\n\nJack Draper (Great Britain | World No. 74): The powerful\, big-serving British lefty possesses a game completely tailor-made for grass court dominance and stands as a major unseeded threat in the draw.\n\n\n\n\nComplete Entry List\n\n\n\n4. Prize Money & Points Distribution\n\n\n\nIn an ongoing\, historic commitment by the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA)\, the prize money for the women’s WTA 500 event has seen another massive increase for 2026\, climbing to a record $1\,915\,000 as part of an official initiative to achieve total prize parity across the men’s and women’s events by 2029. \n\n\n\nMeanwhile\, the men’s ATP 500 event features a total prize fund of €2\,583\,330. \n\n\n\nPoint and Financial Rewards\n\n\n\nBeyond the massive financial compensation\, players are competing for crucial ranking points right before the seeding deadline for Wimbledon. The distribution scales heavily by round: \n\n\n\nRound ReachedATP 500 PointsWTA 500 PointsChampion500500Runner-Up330325Semifinalist200195Quarterfinalist100108Round of 165060Round of 3201\n\n\n\n5. Official Broadcast Guide\n\n\n\nTo accommodate the surging global interest in both the men’s and women’s draws\, the HSBC Championships provides extensive domestic and international television coverage. \n\n\n\nDomestic Coverage (United Kingdom)\n\n\n\nFor local fans watching within Great Britain\, the entire fortnight of live coverage is broadcast entirely free-to-air across the BBC network. \n\n\n\n\nEarly Rounds (Monday – Friday): Daily live action streams from 1:00 PM to 6:00 PM local time on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer.\n\n\n\nFinal Rounds (Saturday – Sunday): The high-stakes semifinal and final matches transition over to BBC One for premium weekend afternoon viewing.\n\n\n\n\nInternational Broadcasters\n\n\n\nIf you are tuning in from outside the United Kingdom\, you can catch the live action via the following primary broadcasting partners: \n\n\n\nRegion / TerritoryOfficial Broadcast NetworkUnited States & Puerto RicoTennis ChannelCanadaTSNAustraliabeIN SPORTS AustraliaSoutheast AsiabeIN Southeast Asia (Thailand\, Malaysia\, Singapore\, etc.)Germany\, Austria\, SwitzerlandSky DeutschlandItaly & San MarinoSky ItaliaSpainTelefonica / MovistarFranceEurosport France
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2026-queens-club-championships/
LOCATION:The Queen’s Club\, Palliser Rd\, London W14 9EQ\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:ATP Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Queens-Club-Championships.jpg
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