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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251027
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251103
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251020T033204Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251102T155416Z
UID:1406-1761523200-1762127999@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Hong Kong Tennis Open
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Hong Kong Tennis Open (also known as the Prudential Hong Kong Tennis Open for sponsorship reasons) was a professional women’s tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Hong Kong. It was the 12th edition of the event and was classified as a WTA 250 tournament on the 2025 WTA Tour. The tournament took place at the Victoria Park Tennis Stadium in Hong Kong from October 27 to November 2\, 2025\, following the qualifying rounds which begin on October 25. \n\n\n\nWTA Tournament Profile\n\n\nScores\nOrder of Play\nDraws\n\n\n\nChampions\nMain article: Hong Kong Tennis Open 2025 Winners and Their Prize Money \n\n\n\nEvent\nChampion(s)\nRunner(s)-up\n\n\nSingles\n🇨🇦 Victoria Mboko\n🇪🇸 Cristina Bucșa\n\n\n7–5\, 6–7(9–11)\, 6–2\n\n\nDoubles\n🇨🇳 Jiang Xinyu\n🇨🇳 Wang Yafan\n🇯🇵 Momoko Kobori\n🇹🇭 Peangtarn Plipuech\n\n\n6–4\, 6–2\n\n\n\nTournament Details\n\n\n\nDate\nOctober 27 – November 2\, 2025\n\n\n\n\nEdition\n12th\n\n\nCategory\nWTA 250\n\n\nSurface\nOutdoor hard court\n\n\nTotal Financial Commitment\n$275\,094\n\n\nSingles Draw\n32 players\n\n\nDoubles Draw\n16 teams\n\n\nLocation\nVictoria Park Tennis Stadium\, Hong Kong\n\n\n2024 Champions\nSingles: Diana Shnaider\n\n\nDoubles: Ulrikke Eikeri / Makoto Ninomiya\n\n\n\nPrize Money and Ranking Points\nThe total prize money commitment for the 2025 Hong Kong Tennis Open was $275\,094. As a WTA 250 event\, the winner earned 250 ranking points. \n\n\n\n\nResult\nSingles\nDoubles\n\n\nWinner\n$36\,300 | 250 pt\n$13\,200 | 250 pt\n\n\nRunner-up\n$21\,484 | 163 pt\n$7\,430 | 163 pt\n\n\nSemifinalist\n$11\,970 | 98 pt\n$4\,260 | 98 pt\n\n\nQuarterfinalist\n$6\,815 | 54 pt\n$2\,540 | 54 pt\n\n\nRound of 16\n$4\,160 | 30 pt\n$1\,960 | 1 pt\n\n\nRound of 32\n$2\,975 | 1 pt\n–\n\n\n\n\nContext and Schedule\nThe 2025 Hong Kong Tennis Open is strategically positioned late in the WTA calendar\, serving as one of the final tournaments before the end-of-season WTA Finals. The event is part of the Asian swing of the WTA Tour\, following other tournaments in China and Japan. It marks the grand finale of a “Super October” of tennis events held in Hong Kong. \nThe tournament runs for eight days\, with the qualifying rounds held on Saturday\, October 25\, and Sunday\, October 26\, which traditionally offer free admission to the public. The main draw commences on Monday\, October 27\, featuring the popular “People’s Monday\,” where first-round matches are open to the public free of charge on a first-come\, first-served basis\, highlighting the tournament’s commitment to community engagement and making professional tennis accessible. \nThe singles and doubles finals are scheduled for Sunday\, November 2. The event is organized by the Hong Kong\, China Tennis Association (HKCTA). Notably\, four-time Grand Slam champion and former world No. 1 Li Na was announced to serve as the Tournament Director for the 2025 edition\, bringing a high-profile figure from Asian tennis to the leadership role. \nTournament Schedule\nSaturday\, 25 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles Qualifying\nStart Time: 10:00 AM\nStadium Gate Opens: 9:00 AM\nVillage Gate: N/A\nVIP Champions Club: —\nRemark: Free Admission (First-come\, first-served)\n\nSunday\, 26 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles Qualifying\nStart Time: 10:00 AM\nStadium Gate Opens: 9:00 AM\nVillage Gate: N/A\nVIP Champions Club: —\nRemark: Free Admission (First-come\, first-served)\n\nMonday\, 27 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – 1st Round\nStart Time: 2:00 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nStadium Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 1:00 PM\nRemark: “People’s Monday” – Free Admission (First-come\, first-served)\n\nTuesday\, 28 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – 1st Round\nStart Time: 2:00 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nStadium Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 1:00 PM\n\nWednesday\, 29 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – 2nd Round\nStart Time: 2:00 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nStadium Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 1:00 PM\n\nThursday\, 30 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – 2nd Round\nStart Time: 2:00 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nStadium Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 1:00 PM\n\nFriday\, 31 October 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – Quarter Finals\nStart Time: 2:00 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nStadium Gate Opens: 1:00 PM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 1:00 PM\n\nSaturday\, 1 November 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – Semi Finals\nStart Time: 2:00 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 12:00 PM\nStadium Gate Opens: 12:00 PM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 1:00 PM\n\nSunday\, 2 November 2025\n\nEvent: Singles/Doubles Main Draw – Finals\nStart Time: 1:30 PM\nVillage Gate Opens: 11:30 AM\nStadium Gate Opens: 11:30 AM\nVIP Champions Club Opens: 12:30 PM\n\nNote: Daily schedules are subject to change according to the final confirmation of the WTA Supervisor and Tournament Director the night before each day. \nVenue\nAll matches are held on the outdoor hard courts of the Victoria Park Tennis Stadium. The venue is a key public sports facility in Hong Kong and provides a central location for the event\, easily accessible for spectators. A Tournament Village is also set up during the event\, offering further activities and attractions\, with free public admission throughout the competition days. \nEntry Information\nThe event features a 32-player draw in the singles main competition and a 16-team draw in the doubles competition. \nSingles Entrants\nThe tournament attracted a strong field for a WTA 250-level event. Initial announcements and early entry lists included several high-profile players. Among those confirmed or initially listed were: \n\nTop Seeds: Clara Tauson (DEN)\, Belinda Bencic (SUI)\, Leylah Fernandez (CAN)\, and Victoria Mboko (CAN).\nFormer Major Champions: Grand Slam champion Sofia Kenin (USA) and Olympic gold medallist Belinda Bencic were confirmed to be joining the lineup.\n\nThe main draw entry is determined by the WTA rankings\, with additional spots allocated via wildcards and the qualifying tournament. \nDefending Champions\nThe 2025 Hong Kong Tennis Open sees the return of the title-holders from the 2024 edition: \n\nSingles: Diana Shnaider (RUS)\, who won her title by defeating Katie Boulter in the final.\nDoubles: Ulrikke Eikeri (NOR) and Makoto Ninomiya (JPN)\, who were the reigning champions.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-hong-kong-tennis-open/
LOCATION:Victoria Park Centre Court\, Victoria Park\, Causeway Bay\, Hong Kong
CATEGORIES:WTA Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Hong-Kong-Tennis-Open.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251027
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251103
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251020T090821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251102T153747Z
UID:1412-1761523200-1762127999@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Jiangxi Open
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Jiangxi Open was a professional women’s tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 9th edition of the event and was classified as a WTA 250 tournament on the 2025 WTA Tour. The tournament took place at the Jiujiang International Tennis Center in Jiujiang\, China\, from October 27 to November 2\, 2025. \nThe event\, which was previously held in Nanchang\, relocated to Jiujiang starting in 2024. It featured a singles draw of 32 players and a doubles draw of 16 teams. The total prize money commitment for the event was $275\,094. The defending champion in singles was Viktorija Golubic\, and the defending doubles champions were Guo Hanyu and Moyuka Uchijima. \n\n\n\nWTA Tournament Profile\n\n\nScores\nOrder of Play\nDraws\n\n\n\nChampions\nMain article: Jiangxi Open 2025 Winners and Their Prize Money \n\n\n\nEvent\nChampion(s)\nRunner(s)-up\n\n\nSingles\nAnna Blinkova\n🇦🇹 Lilli Tagger\n\n\n6–3\, 6–3\n\n\nDoubles\n🇺🇸 Quinn Gleason\nElena Pridankina\nEkaterina Ovcharenko\n🇬🇧 Emily Webley-Smith\n\n\n6–4\, 2–6\, [10–6]\n\n\n\nTournament Details\n\n\n\nCategroy\nWTA 250\n\n\nDates\nOctober 27 – November 2\, 2025\n\n\nEdition\n9th\n\n\nLocation\nJiujiang\, China\n\n\nVenue\nJiujiang International Tennis Center\n\n\nSurface\nHard (Outdoor)\n\n\nDraw\n32 Singles / 16 Doubles\n\n\n\nPrize Money and Ranking Points\nThe total prize money commitment for the Jiangxi Open was $275\,094. As a WTA 250 event\, the winner earned 250 ranking points. \n\n\n\n\nResult\nSingles\nDoubles\n\n\nWinner\n$36\,300 | 250 pt\n$13\,200 | 250 pt\n\n\nRunner-up\n$21\,484 | 163 pt\n$7\,430 | 163 pt\n\n\nSemifinalist\n$11\,970 | 98 pt\n$4\,260 | 98 pt\n\n\nQuarterfinalist\n$6\,815 | 54 pt\n$2\,540 | 54 pt\n\n\nRound of 16\n$4\,160 | 30 pt\n$1\,960 | 1 pt\n\n\nRound of 32\n$2\,975 | 1 pt\n–\n\n\n\n\nMain Draw Entrants\nSingles Seeds\nThe following are the likely seeds for the tournament\, with rankings as of October 20\, 2025: \n\n\n\nSeed\nPlayer\nRank\n\n\n\n\n1\nLiudmila Samsonova\n18\n\n\n2\nLaura Siegemund (GER)\n39\n\n\n3\nAnn Li (USA)\n44\n\n\n4\nViktorija Golubic (SUI)\n55\n\n\n5\nRebecca Šramková (SVK)\n64\n\n\n6\nAlycia Parks (USA)\n65\n\n\n7\nPolina Kudermetova\n75\n\n\n8\nYulia Putintseva (KAZ)\n76\n\n\n\nDoubles Seeds\n\n\n\nSeed\nPlayer 1\nPlayer 2\nRank (Combined)\n\n\n\n\n1\nKristina Mladenovic (FRA)\nKatarzyna Piter (POL)\n106\n\n\n2\nQuinn Gleason (USA)\nElena Pridankina\n144\n\n\n3\nIsabelle Haverlag (NED)\nMaia Lumsden (GBR)\n153\n\n\n4\nCho I-hsuan (TPE)\nCho Yi-tsen (TPE)\n234
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-jiangxi-open/
LOCATION:Jiujiang International Tennis Center\, Jiujiang\, China
CATEGORIES:WTA Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Jiangxi-Open-Tennis.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251027
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251103
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251020T092414Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251102T172732Z
UID:1417-1761523200-1762127999@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Chennai Open
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Chennai Open was a professional women’s tennis tournament that was part of the WTA Tour. Classified as a WTA 250 tournament\, the event marked its return to the tour calendar after a three-year hiatus (following the inaugural edition in 2022). It was the second edition of the event under the “Chennai Open” name\, but the eighth overall WTA-level tournament held in India. \nThe tournament was staged on outdoor hardcourts at the SDAT Tennis Stadium in Nungambakkam\, Chennai\, India. The main draw competition run from Monday\, October 27\, to Sunday\, November 2\, 2025. The singles draw featured 32 players\, while the doubles competition consisted of 16 teams\, offering a final opportunity for players to secure year-end ranking points in the late stages of the season. The defending singles champion from the 2022 edition was Linda Fruhvirtová\, and the defending doubles champions were Gabriela Dabrowski and Luisa Stefani. \nThe singles final was won by the Indonesian player\, Janice Tjen\, who defeated Australia’s Kimberly Birrell in straight sets\, 6–4\, 6–3. This victory secured Tjen’s maiden WTA Tour singles title. With her win\, Tjen became the first Indonesian woman to lift a tour-level singles trophy since Angelique Widjaja accomplished the feat in 2002. \nJanice Tjen also won the doubles title with compatriot Aldila Sutjiadi\, the second seed. In the final\, they defeated top seed Storm Hunter of Australia and Monica Niculescu of Romania in straight sets\, 7–5\, 6–4. \n\n\n\nWTA Tournament Profile\n\n\nScores\nOrder of Play\nDraws\n\n\n\nChampions\nMain article: Indonesian Tennis Star Janice Tjen Ends 23-Year Drought with Historic Chennai Open Title \n\n\n\nEvent\nChampion(s)\nRunner(s)-up\n\n\nSingles\n🇮🇩 Janice Tjen\n🇦🇺 Kimberly Birrell\n\n\n6–4\, 6–3\n\n\nDoubles\n🇮🇩 Aldila Sutjiadi\n🇮🇩 Janice Tjen\n🇦🇺 Storm Hunter\n🇷🇴 Monica Niculescu\n\n\n7–5\, 6–4\n\n\n\nPrize Money and Ranking Points\nThe total prize money commitment for the 2025 Chennai Open was $251\,750.  \n\n\n\nResult\nSingles\nDoubles\n\n\nWinner\n$36\,300 | 250 pt\n$13\,200 | 250 pt\n\n\nRunner-up\n$21\,484 | 163 pt\n$7\,430 | 163 pt\n\n\nSemifinalist\n$11\,970 | 98 pt\n$4\,260 | 98 pt\n\n\nQuarterfinalist\n$6\,815 | 54 pt\n$2\,540 | 54 pt\n\n\nRound of 16\n$4\,160 | 30 pt\n$1\,960 | 1 pt\n\n\nRound of 32\n$2\,975 | 1 pt\n–\n\n\n\nPlayer Field\n\nThe singles main draw for the 2025 Chennai Open featured 32 players\, though the final composition of the field was affected by several withdrawals\, leading to adjustments in the seeding and the inclusion of multiple lucky losers. Play was further disrupted in the early rounds due to heavy rain caused by Severe Cyclonic Storm Montha\, delaying the start of the main draw until Wednesday. \nThe Indonesian player Janice Tjen\, seeded 4th\, ultimately won the singles title\, defeating the 7th seed Kimberly Birrell\, 6–4\, 6–3\, in the final. This marked Tjen’s first WTA Tour singles title\, making her the first Indonesian woman to win a tour-level singles title since 2002. \nSingles Seeds\nThe seeds were determined by the WTA rankings as of October 20\, 2025\, and were subject to change due to pre-tournament withdrawals: \n\n\n\nCountry\nPlayer\nFinal Result\nSeed\n\n\n\n\nTUR\nZeynep Sönmez\nSecond Round\n1\n\n\nGBR\nFrancesca Jones\nFirst Round (Retired)\n2\n\n\nCRO\nDonna Vekić\nQuarterfinals\n3\n\n\nINA\nJanice Tjen\nChampion\n4\n\n\nITA\nLucia Bronzetti\nFirst Round\n5\n\n\nFRA\nLéolia Jeanjean\nWithdrew\n6\n\n\nAUS\nKimberly Birrell\nRunner-up\n7\n\n\nNZL\nLulu Sun\nWithdrew\n8\n\n\n\nInitial Top-10 Seeds Loïs Boisson and Tatjana Maria also withdrew before the main draw began. \nOther Entrants\nThe main draw was also supplemented by the following categories of players: \n\nWildcards (WC): Four players received wildcards: Shrivalli Bhamidipaty (IND)\, Mia Pohánková (SVK)\, Maaya Rajeshwaran (IND)\, and Sahaja Yamalapalli (IND). Maaya Rajeshwaran\, a 16-year-old local prospect\, lost her opening match to fellow wildcard Shrivalli Bhamidipaty.\nProtected Ranking (PR): Storm Hunter (AUS) entered the main draw using a protected ranking.\nQualifiers (Q): Four players successfully navigated the qualifying rounds: Arianne Hartono (NED)\, Astrid Lew Yan Foon (FRA)\, Caroline Werner (GER)\, and Mei Yamaguchi (JPN).\nLucky Losers (LL): A significant number of withdrawals led to the inclusion of four lucky losers in the main draw: Vaishnavi Adkar (IND)\, Thasaporn Naklo (THA)\, Priska Nugroho (INA)\, and Arina Rodionova (AUS).\n\n\nTournament History\nThe event that is now known as the Chennai Open is a continuation of the WTA-level tennis history in India\, which began with the WTA Indian Open in 2003. \n\nInitial Years (2003–2008): The original Indian Open was first held in Hyderabad (2003–2005) and then in Bengaluru (2006–2008). It was initially a Tier IV tournament\, but was upgraded to Tier II in 2008. The 2008 edition was won by Serena Williams.\nHiatus: Following the 2008 tournament\, there was no WTA-level event in India for over a decade.\nChennai Open (2022): The tournament was successfully relaunched in 2022 in Chennai as a WTA 250 event. The singles title was won by then 17-year-old Linda Fruhvirtová\, marking a significant milestone in her career.\nSecond Hiatus (2023–2024): The tournament did not take place in 2023 or 2024.\n2025 Return: The 2025 event marked the eagerly anticipated second edition of the Chennai Open\, bringing top-level women’s professional tennis back to the city.\n\nVenue\nThe tournament was held at the SDAT Tennis Stadium\, Nungambakkam\, in Chennai\, India. This venue has historically hosted several significant tennis events\, including the long-running ATP Chennai Open. The matches were contested on outdoor hardcourts\, providing a familiar surface for the international field. The stadium complex offers excellent facilities to host the WTA-level competition.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-chennai-open/
LOCATION:SDAT Tennis Stadium\, 4th Cross St\, Lake Area\, Nungambakkam\, Chennai\, Tamil Nadu\, 600034\, India
CATEGORIES:WTA Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Chennai-Open-Tennis.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251027
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251103
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251028T161243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251102T163800Z
UID:1561-1761523200-1762127999@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Rolex Paris Masters
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Rolex Paris Masters was a professional men’s tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 53rd edition of this ATP Masters 1000 event on the 2025 ATP Tour. The tournament took place from 27 October to 2 November 2025. \nA significant change for the 2025 edition was the venue; the event was held at La Défense Arena in Paris\, marking its move from the former venue\, the Accor Arena\, where it had been held for many years. This move was set to be for a decade-long stay. The Rolex Paris Masters was the ninth and final ATP Masters 1000 event of the season. \nThe 2025 Rolex Paris Masters served as the final tournament of the regular men’s tennis season\, making it crucial for players vying for qualification spots in the season-ending Nitto ATP Finals in Turin. The tournament was also a key battleground for the World No. 1 ranking heading into the end-of-year championships\, with top seeds Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner involved in a tight race. \nTournament Details\n\nCategory: ATP Tour Masters 1000\nDates: 27 October – 2 November 2025\nSurface: Hard (indoor)\nLocation: Paris\, France\nVenue: La Défense Arena (New venue for 2025)\nDraw Size: 56 Singles / 24 Doubles\nTournament Director: Cédric Pioline\n\nChampions\nSingles\nJannik Sinner delivered a commanding\, pitch-perfect performance at the 2025 Rolex Paris Masters\, securing the coveted title and simultaneously achieving the ultimate prize: reclaiming the World No. 1 ranking. The 24-year-old Italian concluded his flawless week at the newly inaugurated La Défense Arena with a clinical victory over a resilient Félix Auger-Aliassime\, triumphing 6–4\, 7–6(7–4) in a final that showcased Sinner’s current indoor dominance. \nSinner’s victory was a feat of historical significance. Not only did it mark his first-ever Paris Masters title and the fifth ATP Masters 1000 crown of his career (his 23rd ATP Tour title overall)\, but he achieved the championship without dropping a single set throughout the tournament. This level of unbroken dominance made him the first player to win an ATP Masters 1000 event in straight sets since Carlos Alcaraz achieved the feat at Indian Wells in 2023. \nHis journey through the draw was highlighted by a stunning semi-final dismantling of the former champion\, Alexander Zverev. Sinner completely overwhelmed the German\, who was also battling physical discomfort\, in a shocking 6-0\, 6-1 rout. Zverev\, the defending champion from the 2024 edition\, was simply unable to compete with the Italian’s searing pace and consistency. \nDoubles\nThe doubles tournament at the 2025 Rolex Paris Masters concluded with an impressive victory for the Finnish-British duo of Harri Heliövaara and Henry Patten. The third seeds delivered a strong performance against the all-British pairing of Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool in the final\, winning 6–3\, 6–4 to secure their first-ever ATP Masters 1000 title as a team. This victory\, while a crowning moment for Heliövaara and Patten\, also ensured the dramatic race for the Year-End World No. 1 doubles team would continue into the Nitto ATP Finals. \nThe final was a high-stakes affair\, particularly for Lloyd Glasspool\, who entered the week as the newly-crowned World No. 1 in the doubles rankings. Cash and Glasspool\, a formidable team in 2025 with titles including the Canadian Masters and Wimbledon\, needed to lift the Paris trophy to guarantee the Year-End No. 1 honour. However\, the defeat meant the battle for the top spot would be carried forward to the Finals in Turin\, especially after rival Horacio Zeballos (partnering Marcel Granollers) exited in the second round\, allowing Glasspool to retain the top ranking for the time being. The top-seeded pair of Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavić were also in contention but withdrew before their first match. \n\nPrize Money and Points\nThe total prize money pool for the 2025 Rolex Paris Masters was €6\,128\,940. \nSingles Prize Money and ATP Ranking Points\n\n\n\nRound\nATP Ranking Points\nPrize Money (€)\n\n\n\n\nWinner\n1000\n€946\,610\n\n\nFinalist\n600\n€516\,925\n\n\nSemi-finalist\n400\n€282\,650\n\n\nQuarter-finalist\n200\n€154\,170\n\n\nRound of 16\n100\n€82\,465\n\n\nRound of 32\n50\n€44\,220\n\n\nRound of 64\n10\n€24\,500\n\n\nQualifying 2\n16\n€12\,550\n\n\nQualifying 1\n0\n€6\,750\n\n\n\nDoubles Prize Money and ATP Ranking Points (Per Team)\n\n\n\nRound\nATP Ranking Points\nPrize Money (€)\n\n\n\n\nWinner\n1000\n€290\,410\n\n\nFinalist\n600\n€157\,760\n\n\nSemi-finalist\n360\n€86\,600\n\n\nQuarter-finalist\n180\n€47\,810\n\n\nRound of 16\n90\n€26\,275\n\n\nRound of 28\n0\n€15\,350\n\n\n\nProvisional Schedule\nThe tournament officially spans seven days of main draw action\, running from Monday\, October 27\, through to the finals on Sunday\, November 2. Qualifying took place on the preceding Saturday and Sunday (October 25–26). \n\n\n\nDate\nMain Draw Rounds\nDaily Session Structure (Center Court)\n\n\n\n\nMonday\, Oct 27\nSingles First Round\, Doubles First Round\nDay session (Starts 11:00 AM)\, Night session (Starts from 7:00 PM)\n\n\nTuesday\, Oct 28\nSingles First Round\, Singles Second Round\, Doubles First Round\nDay session (Starts 11:00 AM)\, Night session (Not before 7:00 PM)\n\n\nWednesday\, Oct 29\nSingles Second Round\, Doubles Second Round\nDay session (Starts 11:00 AM)\, Night session (Not before 7:00 PM)\n\n\nThursday\, Oct 30\nSingles Round of 16 (1/8 Finals)\, Doubles Second Round\nDay session (Starts 11:00 AM)\, Night session (Not before 7:00 PM)\n\n\nFriday\, Oct 31\nSingles Quarter-finals\, Doubles Quarter-finals\nDay session (Starts 2:00 PM)\, Night session (Not before 7:00 PM)\n\n\nSaturday\, Nov 1\nSingles Semi-finals\, Doubles Semi-finals\nDay session (Starts 11:30 AM)\, with Singles Semi-finals starting at 2:00 PM (followed by a Doubles Semi-final not before 4:30 PM)\n\n\nSunday\, Nov 2\nSingles Final\, Doubles Final\nDay session (Starts 12:30 PM for Doubles Final\, Singles Final not before 3:00 PM)\n\n\n\nNote: The schedule details are provisional and subject to change based on match length and local time. \n\nPlayer Field\nThe 56-player singles main draw is composed of direct entries based on ranking\, wildcards\, and players who emerged from the qualifying rounds. The doubles draw consists of 24 teams. \nSingles Main Draw Entrants\nThe top seeds are as follows (rankings as of October 20\, 2025): \n\n\n\nSeed\nRank\nPlayer\nCountry\n\n\n\n\n1\n1\nCarlos Alcaraz\nSpain\n\n\n2\n2\nJannik Sinner\nItaly\n\n\n3\n3\nAlexander Zverev\nGermany\n\n\n4\n4\nTaylor Fritz\nUSA\n\n\n5\n6\nBen Shelton\nUSA\n\n\n6\n7\nAlex de Minaur\nAustralia\n\n\n7\n8\nLorenzo Musetti\nItaly\n\n\n8\n9\nCasper Ruud\nNorway\n\n\n9\n10\nFélix Auger-Aliassime\nCanada\n\n\n10\n13\nKaren Khachanov\nRussia\n\n\n11\n14\nDaniil Medvedev\nRussia\n\n\n12\n15\nAndrey Rublev\nRussia\n\n\n13\n16\nAlexander Bublik\nKazakhstan\n\n\n14\n17\nJiří Lehečka\nCzech Republic\n\n\n15\n18\nAlejandro Davidovich Fokina\nSpain\n\n\n16\n19\nJakub Menšík\nCzech Republic\n\n\n\nNote: Several players ranked in the Top 21 were seeded\, but higher-ranked players like Novak Djokovic (5)\, Jack Draper (11)\, and Holger Rune (12) withdrew prior to the tournament. \nWildcards (Singles Main Draw)\nFour main draw wildcards were issued\, with a notable inclusion of the Shanghai Masters finalists: \n\nTérence Atmane (FRA)\nArthur Cazaux (FRA)\nArthur Rinderknech (FRA)\nValentin Vacherot (MON)\n\nQualifiers (Singles Main Draw)\nThe players who successfully advanced through the qualifying rounds include: \n\nFrancisco Comesaña\nDamir Džumhur\nTomás Martín Etcheverry\nJacob Fearnley\nSebastian Korda\nEthan Quinn\nAleksandar Vukic\n\nDoubles Main Draw Seeds\nThe top eight seeded doubles teams received a bye into the second round: \n\n\n\nSeed\nTeam\nCountry\n\n\n\n\n1\nMarcelo Arévalo / Mate Pavić\nESA / CRO\n\n\n2\nJulian Cash / Lloyd Glasspool\nGBR / GBR\n\n\n3\nHarri Heliövaara / Henry Patten\nFIN / GBR\n\n\n4\nMarcel Granollers / Horacio Zeballos\nESP / ARG\n\n\n5\nKevin Krawietz / Tim Pütz\nGER / GER\n\n\n6\nJoe Salisbury / Neal Skupski\nGBR / GBR\n\n\n7\nSimone Bolelli / Andrea Vavassori\nITA / ITA\n\n\n8\nChristian Harrison / Evan King\nUSA / USA\n\n\n\nWildcards (Doubles Main Draw)\nWildcards were also granted to the following doubles teams: \n\nThéo Arribagé / Albano Olivetti\nGrigor Dimitrov / Nicolas Mahut (Marking Mahut’s final professional appearance)\nQuentin Halys / Pierre-Hugues Herbert
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-rolex-paris-masters/
LOCATION:La Défense Arena\, 99 Jard. de l'Arche\, Nanterre\, 92000\, France
CATEGORIES:ATP Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Rolex-Paris-Masters.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251101
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251109
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251004T045648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251108T213612Z
UID:1006-1761955200-1762646399@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 WTA Finals
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 WTA Finals was a year-end championship tennis tournament held by the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) for the eight best singles players and eight best doubles teams of the 2025 WTA Tour. The tournament took place from November 1 to November 8\, 2025\, in Riyadh\, Saudi Arabia\, for the second consecutive year. It marked the 54th edition of the singles event and the 49th edition of the doubles competition.\n\nChampions\nSingles\nElena Rybakina wrapped up her 2025 season in style\, taking down Aryna Sabalenka 6–3\, 7–6(7–0) to claim the WTA Finals singles title. It’s her 11th career trophy on the WTA Tour—and a special one\, as she became the first player from Kazakhstan ever to lift the prestigious year-end title. \nSabalenka\, meanwhile\, continued to make history in her own way. She was the top seed for the third year in a row—a feat only legends like Steffi Graf\, Martina Navratilova\, and Chris Evert had done before. She also became the first player since Angelique Kerber in 2016 to reach the finals of three Grand Slams and the WTA Finals in the same season. \nLast year’s champion\, Coco Gauff\, couldn’t repeat her magic this time—she was knocked out in the round-robin stage. The tournament did see some fresh faces\, though: Amanda Anisimova made her WTA Finals debut\, and Ekaterina Alexandrova joined the singles lineup as an alternate. Interestingly\, this was the first time since 2002 that four American women made the cut for singles—proof that U.S. women’s tennis is still thriving. \nUnfortunately\, Madison Keys had to pull out before her last group match due to illness\, with Alexandrova stepping in as her replacement. First alternate Mirra Andreeva decided to skip the call-up. And just like last year\, Jasmine Paolini managed to qualify for both singles and doubles—a rare double-duty achievement. \nDoubles\nVeronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens claimed the doubles crown at the 2025 WTA Finals after defeating Tímea Babos and Luisa Stefani 7–6(7–4)\, 6–1 in the championship match. The win marked their second title together and their first since 2022. Along the way\, they pulled off a dramatic escape in the semifinals\, saving a match point against Kateřina Siniaková and Taylor Townsend. \nDefending champions Gabriela Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe couldn’t repeat their success this year\, bowing out during the round-robin stage. \nThe tournament also saw several new faces in the doubles field\, with Mirra Andreeva\, Diana Shnaider\, Luisa Stefani\, and Asia Muhammad all making their debuts. For the second straight year\, Jasmine Paolini stood out as the only player to qualify for both singles and doubles. \nKateřina Siniaková capped off her season by securing the year-end WTA No. 1 doubles ranking for a record-tying fifth time\, clinched after Sara Errani and Paolini’s early exit. Errani\, who was chasing the rare Career Super Slam in women’s doubles\, saw that dream end with their elimination in the group stage. \nVenue\nThe 2025 WTA Finals is hosted at the King Saud University Indoor Arena in Riyadh\, Saudi Arabia. The event is played on an indoor hard court surface. This is the second year in a row that Riyadh has hosted the prestigious season-ending tournament.\nQualification\nThe eight singles players and eight doubles teams that qualify for the WTA Finals are determined by the “PIF WTA Race to the Finals\,” a season-long points race. Players earn points at all WTA-sanctioned tournaments\, including the four Grand Slams. Singles Qualification Criteria:\n\nThe top seven singles players on the leaderboard at the conclusion of the regular WTA season automatically qualify.\nThe eighth spot is awarded to the highest-ranked current-year Grand Slam winner who is ranked between 8th and 20th in the standings. If no player meets this criterion\, the eighth-ranked player in the race qualifies.\n\nThe points for a player’s race ranking are calculated from their results in 18 tournaments\, including:\n\nThe four Grand Slam events.\nThe best six results from the seven combined WTA 1000 tournaments (Indian Wells\, Miami\, Madrid\, Rome\, Toronto/Montreal\, Cincinnati\, and Beijing).\nThe best result from the three non-combined WTA 1000 tournaments (Doha\, Dubai\, and Wuhan).\nThe best seven results from all other non-WTA 125 tournaments.\n\nDoubles Qualification Criteria:\n\nSimilar to singles\, the top seven doubles teams on the leaderboard automatically qualify.\nThe eighth spot is awarded to the highest-ranked current-year Grand Slam winning team ranked from 8th to 20th. If no team meets this criterion\, the eighth-ranked team in the race qualifies.\n\nFor doubles\, the point totals are based on the team’s 12 best results from any of the non-WTA 125 WTA tournaments and Grand Slams throughout the season. The previous article section on the tournament format needs to be updated to include the specific group stage draw\, which was conducted on October 28\, 2025\, in Riyadh. The groups are named in honor of WTA legends who have held the World No. 1 ranking for the most weeks\, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the PIF WTA Rankings.\nQualified Players\nSingles\nThe singles line-up features the best of the best\, including a major title winner from the USA and the final qualifier who clinched her spot in the final possible event. The Confirmed Singles Eight:\n\nAryna Sabalenka: Secured her spot early in the season (July 8th)\, solidifying her place as the world No. 1. She is the reigning US Open champion and a consistent threat in the Finals.\nIga Świątek: Qualified after a dominant season\, highlighted by her Wimbledon victory\, sealing her spot in August.\nCoco Gauff: The American secured her return to Riyadh\, aiming to be the first player since Serena Williams to defend the title after winning the French Open in 2025.\nAmanda Anisimova: Making her WTA Finals debut\, Anisimova qualified in October after a phenomenal breakout season. She reached two Grand Slam finals\, Wimbledon and the US Open\, and captured her first WTA 1000 title in Doha.\nMadison Keys: The 2025 Australian Open champion\, Keys returns to the WTA Finals for the first time since 2016 after a triumphant start to the year.\nJessica Pegula: An established presence at the year-end event\, Pegula secured her berth after a strong run to the Wuhan WTA 1000 final.\nJasmine Paolini: The Italian star qualified in October\, adding her consistency to the top group.\nElena Rybakina: Clinched the final spot in dramatic fashion at the Pan Pacific Open in Tokyo. This marks her third consecutive appearance at the WTA Finals\, with two WTA 500 titles this season.\n\nDoubles\nThe doubles field is stacked with Grand Slam winners and former champions\, showcasing incredible partnership synergy. The Confirmed Doubles Eight:\n\nKateřina Siniaková / Taylor Townsend: The first team to qualify\, they kicked off the season by winning their second major together at the Australian Open and also claimed the WTA 1000 title in Dubai.\nSara Errani / Jasmine Paolini: Qualified in September\, this Olympic gold-medal-winning duo added the Roland Garros title to their resume in 2025.\nGabriela Dabrowski / Erin Routliffe: The 2024 WTA Finals champions secured their spot to defend their title after winning the US Open.\nVeronika Kudermetova / Elise Mertens: Qualified after a standout season highlighted by winning The Championships\, Wimbledon.\nMirra Andreeva / Diana Shnaider: The young Russian pair will make their WTA Finals debut after winning their first major titles together\, including the WTA 1000 Miami Open and the WTA 500 Brisbane International.\nHsieh Su-Wei / Jelena Ostapenko: This experienced pairing reached multiple finals throughout the year\, including the Australian Open and Wimbledon finals.\nTimea Babos / Luisa Stefani: Qualified after securing three titles this season\, with Babos bringing her three-time championship pedigree.\nAsia Muhammad / Demi Schuurs: The team earned their place with hard-court success\, winning the WTA 1000 Indian Wells and the WTA 500 HSBC Championships at Queen’s Club.\n\nTournament Format and Group Stage Draw\nBoth the singles and doubles events follow a round-robin format\, with the eight players/teams divided into two groups of four. Over the first six days of the tournament\, each player/team competes against the other three in their respective group once. The top two players/teams from each group advance to the knockout stage\, consisting of the semifinals on Friday\, November 7\, and the championship matches on Saturday\, November 8. In the semifinals\, the first-placed player/team from one group plays against the second-placed player/team from the other group. Tie-breaking methods for the round-robin groups include:\n\nGreatest number of match wins.\nHead-to-head result if only two players/teams are tied.\nIf three players/teams are tied:\n\nIf one player has played fewer than all three matches\, they are automatically eliminated. The remaining two players’ head-to-head result determines who advances.\nIf all three players have completed their matches\, the tie is broken by the highest percentage of sets won\, followed by the highest percentage of games won.\n\n\n\n2025 Group Stage Draw\nThe draw ceremony was conducted on October 28\, 2025\, with Tournament Director and 2021 WTA Finals champion Garbiñe Muguruza officiating alongside defending champion Coco Gauff\, and past doubles winners Gabriela Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the PIF WTA Rankings\, the groups have been named after WTA legends who held the No. 1 ranking for the most weeks.\nSingles Groups\n\n\n\nGroup Name (Legend)\nSeeded Players Included\n\n\n\n\nStefanie Graf Group\n[1] Aryna Sabalenka\, [3] Coco Gauff\, [5] Jessica Pegula\, [8] Jasmine Paolini\n\n\nSerena Williams Group\n[2] Iga Świątek\, [4] Amanda Anisimova\, [6] Elena Rybakina\, [7] Madison Keys\n\n\n\nDoubles Groups\n\n\n\nGroup Name (Legend)\nSeeded Teams Included\n\n\n\n\nMartina Navratilova Group\n[1] Sara Errani & Jasmine Paolini\, [4] Veronika Kudermetova & Elise Mertens\, [6] Hsieh Su-Wei & Jelena Ostapenko\, [8] Asia Muhammad & Demi Schuurs\n\n\nLiezel Huber Group\n[2] Kateřina Siniaková & Taylor Townsend\, [3] Gabriela Dabrowski & Erin Routliffe\, [5] Mirra Andreeva & Diana Shnaider\, [7] Timea Babos & Luisa Stefani\n\n\n\nPrize Money\nMain article: WTA Finals 2025 Prize Money and Points on Offer \nThe total prize money for the 2025 WTA Finals is a record-breaking $15.5 million\, a significant increase from previous years. The prize money is distributed based on performance\, with an undefeated singles champion standing to earn over $5 million\, and an undefeated doubles team earning over $950\,000. The prize money breakdown is structured to reward success at every stage of the tournament\, from participation to winning the title.\nPast Champions\nThe WTA Finals has a rich history of legendary champions. The list of past winners includes some of the greatest names in women’s tennis\, highlighting the tournament’s importance as a pinnacle of the tennis season. Singles:\n\nMartina Navratilova: The most successful player in the tournament’s history with eight singles titles.\nSteffi Graf and Serena Williams: Tied for second with five titles each.\nChris Evert: The inaugural winner and a four-time champion.\nMonica Seles and Kim Clijsters: Both three-time champions.\nCoco Gauff: The defending singles champion from the 2024 event in Riyadh.\n\nDoubles:\n\nMartina Navratilova: Holds the record for most doubles titles with 13.\nGabriela Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe: The defending champions from 2024.\n\nThe WTA Finals continues to be a showcase of the best talent in women’s tennis\, providing a fitting conclusion to the season and a platform for the sport’s biggest stars to compete for one of its most prestigious titles.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-wta-finals/
LOCATION:King Saud University Indoor Arena\, King Saud University\, Riyadh\, 12372\, Saudi Arabia
CATEGORIES:WTA Finals
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/2025-WTA-Finals-Riyadh.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251102
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251109
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251102T071138Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251108T214148Z
UID:1626-1762041600-1762646399@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Hellenic Championship
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Vanda Pharmaceuticals Hellenic Championship was a professional men’s tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts in Athens\, Greece. It was classified as an ATP 250 tournament on the 2025 ATP Tour. This tournament represented the inaugural edition of the Hellenic Championship and marked the return of top-tier men’s professional tennis to Greece for the first time in over three decades. \nThe event took place from November 2 to November 8\, 2025. The tournament was held at the OAKA Basketball Arena (often referred to as the Telekom Center Athens for sponsorship reasons)\, a major multipurpose indoor venue that was prominently used during the 2004 Summer Olympics. The arena was configured to provide an elite atmosphere for the 28-player singles and 16-team doubles fields. The event held particular significance as one of the final opportunities for players to earn crucial ATP ranking points before the year-end Nitto ATP Finals and the close of the regular season. \nChampions\nNovak Djokovic pulled off another incredible comeback to beat Lorenzo Musetti 4–6\, 6–3\, 7–5 in the final of the 2025 Hellenic Championship\, adding yet another trophy to his legendary collection. This victory marked his 101st career ATP title—just another reminder that age is merely a number for the Serbian great. \nAt 38 years and 5 months old\, Djokovic became the oldest men’s singles champion on the ATP Tour since the tour’s modern format began in 1990\, and the third-oldest champion in the entire Open Era. Even in his late thirties\, he’s still rewriting the record books. \nFrancisco Cabral and Lucas Miedler came out on top in a thrilling doubles final at the 2025 Hellenic Championship\, rallying past Santiago González and David Pel 4–6\, 6–3\, [10–3] to capture the title. It was a well-earned win after a tight first set\, with Cabral and Miedler stepping up big in the match tiebreak to seal the victory. \nHistory and Relocation\nThe Hellenic Championship secured its place on the 2025 ATP Tour calendar following the successful relocation of the ATP 250 event previously held in Belgrade\, Serbia (the Belgrade Open). The move to Athens was announced in August 2025\, bringing the tournament to a city rich in sporting history. The organizing team behind the Hellenic Championship is the experienced group that previously ran several successful international tournaments in Belgrade\, ensuring a high standard of execution for the new Greek event. The late-season timing places it strategically on the European indoor hardcourt swing\, following major events like the Paris Masters\, and offering competitive opportunities for players aiming for year-end ranking goals.\nPoints and Prize Money\nThe 2025 Hellenic Championship offers a total financial commitment of €766\,715\, marking a slight increase in prize money compared to the preceding tournament at the same calendar slot. As an ATP 250 event\, the champion of the singles draw is awarded 250 ranking points.\n\n\n\nResult\nPrize Money (EUR) and Points\n\n\nSingles\nDoubles\n\n\nWinner\n€116\,690 | 250 pt\n€40\,560 | 250 pt\n\n\nRunner-up\n€68\,035 | 165 pt\n€21\,790 | 150 pt\n\n\nSemifinalist\n€39\,995 | 100 pt\n€12\,750 | 90 pt\n\n\nQuarterfinalist\n€23\,170 | 50 pt\n€7\,070 | 45 pt\n\n\nRound of 16\n€13\,455 | 25 pt\n€4\,170 | 0 pt\n\n\nRound of 32\n€8\,220 | 0 pt\n–\n\n\nQualifier\n€0 | 13 pt\n–\n\n\nQ2\n€4\,115 | 7 pt\n–\n\n\nQ1\n€2\,240 | 0 pt\n–\n\n\n\n*Doubles prize money is shared per team.\nPlayer Field (Singles)\nThe inaugural event attracted a competitive field\, with several players vying for crucial ranking boosts late in the season. The primary storyline revolves around the participation of former World No. 1\, Novak Djokovic\, and the battle for the final spot in the Nitto ATP Finals.\nSeeds\nThe following players were seeded based on the ATP rankings as of October 27\, 2025:\n\n\n\nSeed\nPlayer\nCountry\nRanking\n\n\n1\nNovak Djokovic\nSerbia\n5\n\n\n2\nLorenzo Musetti\nItaly\n8\n\n\n3\nLuciano Darderi\nItaly\n27\n\n\n4\nBrandon Nakashima\nUnited States\n33\n\n\n5\nAlexandre Müller\nFrance\n44\n\n\n6\nNuno Borges\nPortugal\n46\n\n\n7\nAlexei Popyrin\nAustralia\n47\n\n\n8\nFábián Marozsán\nHungary\n48\n\n\n\nNotable Entrants\nThe tournament was highlighted by the entry of the 24-time Grand Slam champion\, Novak Djokovic\, making his first competitive appearance since the Shanghai Masters. The presence of the No. 2 seed\, Lorenzo Musetti\, added significant intrigue as he actively competed for one of the final positions in the year-end Nitto ATP Finals held in his home country. Wildcards were granted to three players\, including former World No. 3 and three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka (Switzerland)\, as well as local Greek talents Ivan Ivanov and Stefanos Sakellaridis.\nWithdrawals\nSeveral notable players withdrew before the tournament began\, including Greek star Stefanos Tsitsipas\, who ended his 2025 season prematurely\, and other highly ranked players such as Karen Khachanov\, Jiří Lehečka\, and Sebastián Báez. Their spots were filled by players receiving entry from the qualifying draw and lucky losers\, ensuring a full and competitive main draw.\nDoubles Competition\nThe doubles draw featured a field of 16 teams. The competition provided a platform for both established pairings and emerging duos. Notable entrants included the top seeds Sadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul (France)\, and Greek wildcard pairings\, notably Pavlos Tsitsipas and Petros Tsitsipas\, adding a local flavor to the doubles event. The structure of the doubles competition ensures immediate elimination\, with no byes in the first round.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-hellenic-championship/
LOCATION:OAKA Basketball Arena\, Leof. Kifisias 37\, Marousi\, 151 23\, Greece
CATEGORIES:ATP Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Hellenic-Championship.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251102
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251109
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251102T073838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251108T214615Z
UID:1633-1762041600-1762646399@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Moselle Open
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Moselle Open was a professional men’s tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 22nd\, and reportedly final\, edition of the event and part of the ATP Tour 250 series of the 2025 ATP Tour. The tournament took place at the Arènes de Metz in Metz\, France\, from November 2 to November 8\, 2025\, concluding the indoor European swing of the ATP calendar alongside the Hellenic Championship in Athens. As one of the final ATP 250 events of the season\, the Moselle Open offered a crucial last chance for players to earn ranking points and potentially qualify for the year-end ATP Finals or improve their seeding for future tournaments. The single-elimination singles draw featured 28 players\, while the doubles tournament hosted 16 teams. The 2025 edition marked the end of the tournament’s run on the ATP Tour\, as the event was not included in the finalized 2026 ATP calendar. This gave the event a significant historical note\, as players and fans celebrated the legacy of one of France’s premier indoor tournaments. The defending champions from 2024 were Benjamin Bonzi in singles and the pairing of Sander Arends and Luke Johnson in doubles.\n\nTournament Details\n\n\n\nDates\nNovember 2 – November 8\, 2025\n\n\nEdition\n22nd (and final)\n\n\nCategory\nATP Tour 250 series\n\n\nSurface\nHard (Indoor)\n\n\nLocation\nArènes de Metz\, Metz\, France\n\n\nSingles Draw\n28 players\n\n\nDoubles Draw\n16 teams\n\n\nSingles Champion\nLearner Tien (USA)\n\n\nDoubles Champions\nQuentin Halys / Pierre-Hugues Herbert (FRA)\n\n\n\nChampions\nLearner Tien scored the biggest win of his young career at the 2025 Moselle Open\, edging out Cameron Norrie 6–3\, 3–6\, 7–6(8–6) in a tense final to claim his very first ATP Tour title. The 19-year-old American showed impressive composure under pressure\, sealing the victory in a nail-biting third-set tiebreak to make his breakthrough moment on tour. \nIn doubles\, the French duo Quentin Halys and Pierre-Hugues Herbert thrilled the home crowd with a solid 7–5\, 6–3 win over Guido Andreozzi and Manuel Guinard to take the title. \nPoints and Prize Money\nThe total financial commitment for the 2025 Moselle Open was €596\,035\, marking a slight increase compared to the previous year. As an ATP Tour 250 event\, the tournament offered 250 ranking points to the singles champion. The detailed breakdown of prize money and ranking points for the singles and doubles competition is as follows:\n\n\n\nResult\nPrize Money (EUR) and Points\n\n\nSingles\nDoubles\n\n\nWinner\n€90\,675 | 250 pt\n€31\,530 | 250 pt\n\n\nRunner-up\n€52\,890 | 165 pt\n€16\,940 | 150 pt\n\n\nSemifinalist\n€31\,090 | 100 pt\n€9\,910 | 90 pt\n\n\nQuarterfinalist\n€18\,015 | 50 pt\n€5\,500 | 45 pt\n\n\nRound of 16\n€10\,460 | 25 pt\n€3\,240 | 0 pt\n\n\nRound of 32\n€6\,390 | 0 pt\n–\n\n\nQualifier\n€0 | 13 pt\n–\n\n\nQ2\n€3\,200 | 7 pt\n–\n\n\nQ1\n€1\,745 | 0 pt\n–\n\n\n\n*Doubles prize money is shared per team.\nPlayer Field\nThe singles field for the 2025 Moselle Open featured a mix of established tour veterans and promising young talent\, with several high-ranked players competing for the title and crucial year-end points. The tournament was particularly relevant for players still in the race for the final spot at the Nitto ATP Finals.\nSingles Seeds\nThe seeds were determined by the ATP rankings as of October 27\, 2025.\n\n🇨🇦 Félix Auger-Aliassime (Rank No. 10)\n(WC) Daniil Medvedev (Rank No. 13) – Later withdrew\n🇰🇿 Alexander Bublik (Rank No. 16)\n🇮🇹 Flavio Cobolli (Rank No. 23)\n🇳🇱 Tallon Griekspoor (Rank No. 25) – Later withdrew\n🇫🇷 Arthur Rinderknech (Rank No. 29)\n🇬🇧 Cameron Norrie (Rank No. 31)\n🇫🇷 Corentin Moutet (Rank No. 32)\n\nOther Notable Entrants\nThe main draw also included several direct acceptances\, wildcards\, and other notable names:\n\nWildcards (WC): Hugo Gaston (FRA)\, Ugo Blanchet (FRA)\, Daniil Medvedev (later withdrew and was replaced by a Lucky Loser)\nNext Gen Accelerator: Alexander Blockx (BEL)\nLate Entry (LE): Tomáš Macháč (CZE) – Later withdrew\nOther prominent players: Adrian Mannarino\, Matteo Berrettini\, Lorenzo Sonego\, and Alexander Vukic.\n\nThe tournament saw multiple withdrawals leading up to the main event\, including the defending champion Benjamin Bonzi and 2023 champion Ugo Humbert\, both replaced by players who entered the main draw either directly or as lucky losers.\nDoubles Field\nThe doubles event showcased a competitive field. The seeded teams included:\n\n🇸🇪 André Göransson / 🇵🇱 Jan Zieliński\n🇳🇱 Sander Arends / 🇬🇧 Luke Johnson (Defending Champions)\n🇦🇷 Guido Andreozzi / 🇫🇷 Manuel Guinard\n🇧🇷 Fernando Romboli / 🇦🇺 John-Patrick Smith\n\nSchedule\nThe daily tournament schedule can be seen here.\nSignificance and Legacy\nThe 2025 Moselle Open held particular significance as it was announced to be the final staging of the tournament in Metz. The event\, which had been a staple of the ATP Tour since 2003\, had developed a rich history\, particularly for French players. Past French champions include Arnaud Clément\, Jérôme Haehnel\, Gaël Monfils\, Gilles Simon\, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga\, Lucas Pouille\, Ugo Humbert\, and Benjamin Bonzi. The tournament’s closure represented a notable change in the ATP Tour’s European indoor circuit. The final days of the tournament were expected to be highly emotional\, with fans celebrating the event’s two decades of contribution to professional tennis. The ultimate champion of the 2025 singles event would forever hold the distinction of being the last Moselle Open singles winner.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-moselle-open/
LOCATION:Arènes de Metz\, 5 Av. Louis le Débonnaire\, Metz\, 57000\, France
CATEGORIES:ATP Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Moselle-Open-Tennis.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251109
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20251117
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251009T104018Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251108T022353Z
UID:1064-1762646400-1763337599@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Nitto ATP Finals
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Nitto ATP Finals is a planned men’s tennis tournament for the highest-ranked singles players and doubles teams on the 2025 ATP Tour. It marks the culmination of the men’s professional tennis season and is the fifth consecutive edition to be held in Turin\, Italy.\n\nThe tournament is notable for featuring a record-breaking prize money pool\, with the singles champion eligible to earn over $5 million for the first time in the event’s history.\nTournament Details\n\n\n\nData\nInformation\n\n\n\n\nOfficial Name\n2025 Nitto ATP Finals\n\n\nCategory\nATP Finals (Year-end championships)\n\n\nDate\n9–16 November 2025\n\n\nEdition\n56th (Singles) / 51st (Doubles)\n\n\nLocation\nTurin\, Italy\n\n\nVenue\nInalpi Arena (formerly Pala Alpitour/PalaOlimpico)\n\n\nSurface\nHard (indoor)\n\n\nDraw\n8 Singles / 8 Doubles Teams\n\n\nTotal Prize Money\n$15.5 Million (Event Record)\n\n\nDefending Champions (2024)\nJannik Sinner (Singles)\, Kevin Krawietz & Tim Pütz (Doubles)\n\n\n\nVenue\nThe 2025 Nitto ATP Finals will be held at the Inalpi Arena (formerly known as Pala Alpitour or PalaOlimpico) in Turin\, Italy.\nAbout Inalpi Arena\nThe Inalpi Arena\, located within the Torino Olympic Park\, is the largest indoor sporting arena in Italy.\n\n 	Construction and History: It was opened in December 2005 and served as one of the main venues for the ice hockey events during the 2006 Winter Olympics. The futuristic building was designed by international architects Arata Isozaki and Pier Paolo Maggiora.\n 	Capacity: The venue has a potential capacity of up to 15\,000 seats\, though the configuration for the Nitto ATP Finals typically features flexible stands accommodating up to approximately 12\,000 spectators.\n 	Significance: Turin began hosting the ATP Finals in 2021\, marking the start of a five-year contract that runs through 2025\, and making the Inalpi Arena the fifth Italian venue to host the event’s different iterations.\n\nQualification\nThe tournament features the world’s top eight singles players and the world’s top eight doubles teams\, based on their performance throughout the 2025 season as tracked by the PIF ATP Race to Turin rankings. A maximum of 1\,500 ATP Ranking points can be won by an undefeated champion.\nSingles Qualification Criteria\nEight players and two alternates qualify\, with places assigned based on the following order of precedence:\n\n 	The top 7 players in the PIF ATP Race to Turin after the final week of the ATP Tour on 8 November 2025.\n 	Up to two 2025 Grand Slam tournament winners who finish the season ranked between 8th and 20th.\n 	The eighth ranked player in the ATP rankings (if fewer than two Grand Slam winners have qualified).\n\nDoubles Qualification Criteria\nEight teams and one alternate qualify based on the PIF ATP Live Doubles Teams Rankings.\nQualified Players (Singles)\nSeven of the eight singles spots are now officially confirmed\, with the final spot potentially being decided this week in the remaining ATP 250 tournaments (Athens and Metz).\n\n\n\nRank\nPlayer\nDate Qualified\n\n\n\n\n1\nCarlos Alcaraz\n9 July 2025\n\n\n2\nJannik Sinner\n8 August 2025\n\n\n3\nAlexander Zverev\n24 October 2025\n\n\n4\nNovak Djokovic\n18 October 2025\n\n\n5\nBen Shelton\n30 October 2025\n\n\n6\nTaylor Fritz\n29 October 2025\n\n\n7\nAlex de Minaur\n30 October 2025\n\n\n8\nTBD (Currently led by Félix Auger-Aliassime)\nBattle Ongoing\n\n\n\nQualified Players (Doubles)\n\n\n\nRank\nTeam\nDate Qualified\n\n\n\n\n1\nJulian Cash (GBR) & Lloyd Glasspool (GBR)\n7 August 2025\n\n\n2\nMarcel Granollers (ESP) & Horacio Zeballos (ARG)\n6 September 2025\n\n\n3\nMarcelo Arévalo (SLV) & Mate Pavić (CRO)\n18 September 2025\n\n\n4\nHarri Heliövaara (FIN) & Henry Patten (GBR)\n1 October 2025\n\n\n5\nJoe Salisbury (GBR) & Neal Skupski (GBR)\n2 October 2025\n\n\n6\nKevin Krawietz (GER) & Tim Pütz (GER)\n27 October 2025\n\n\n7\nSimone Bolelli (ITA) & Andrea Vavassori (ITA)\n28 October 2025\n\n\n8\nChristian Harrison (USA) & Evan King (USA)\n30 October 2025\n\n\n\nThe Year-End No. 1 Showdown\nThe final has been set between the world’s two highest-ranked players:\n\n 	Jannik Sinner takes the momentum of his Paris Masters win and World No. 1 return into the Finals. Crucially\, he is the defending champion\, meaning he will be defending 1\,500 points.\n 	Carlos Alcaraz still holds a marginal lead in the year-end points race (the PIF ATP Live Race to Turin) and will be looking to secure the Year-End No. 1 title for the first time.\n\nThe maximum amount of points an undefeated champion can earn is 1\,500 points\, making every match win vital for Sinner and Alcaraz to secure the year-end honour.\nTournament Format\nThe format for both the singles and doubles competitions is a Round-Robin followed by a knockout stage.\n\n 	Group Stage: The eight qualified players/teams are divided into two groups of four (Group A and Group B). Each player/team plays the other three in their group. The top seed is placed in Group A\, and the second seed is placed in Group B.\n 	Progression: The top two players/teams from each group advance to the Semi-Finals.\n 	Knockout Stage: In the semi-finals\, the winner of Group A plays the runner-up of Group B\, and the winner of Group B plays the runner-up of Group A. The winners of the semi-finals advance to the final.\n 	Match Scoring: All singles matches\, including the final\, are best-of-three tie-break sets. All doubles matches are two sets (no-ad scoring) and a Match Tie-break in place of a third set.\n\nPrize Money Distribution\nThe 2025 Nitto ATP Finals features an event record $15.5 million in total prize money. The most significant financial milestone is the potential payout for an undefeated singles champion\, which surpasses the $5 million mark for the first time. The previous record was set by the 2024 champion\, Jannik Sinner\, who earned $4\,881\,100.\n\nEach match victory from the semi-finals onward is valued at more than $1 million.\nSingles Prize Money (2025)\n\n\n\nStage\nPayout\nNotes\n\n\n\n\nUndefeated Champion\n$5\,071\,000\nMaximum potential earnings (5 wins)\n\n\nFinal Win (on top of prior earnings)\n$2\,367\,000\nPayout for the championship match\n\n\nSemi-final Win (on top of prior earnings)\n$1\,183\,500\nPayout for the semi-final match\n\n\nRound-robin Win (per match)\n$396\,500\n\n\n\nParticipation Fee (3 matches played)\n$331\,000\nGuaranteed for qualified players\n\n\nAlternate\n$155\,000\nPayout for first and second alternates\n\n\n\nDoubles Prize Money (2025) (Per Team)\n\n\n\nStage\nPayout\nNotes\n\n\n\n\nUndefeated Champion\n$959\,300\nMaximum potential earnings (5 wins)\n\n\nFinal Win (on top of prior earnings)\n$356\,800\nPayout for the championship match\n\n\nSemi-final Win (on top of prior earnings)\n$178\,500\nPayout for the semi-final match\n\n\nRound-robin Win (per match)\n$96\,600\n\n\n\nParticipation Fee (3 matches played)\n$134\,200\nGuaranteed for qualified teams\n\n\nAlternate\n$51\,700\nPayout for the alternate team\n\n\n\nTournament History\nThe ATP Finals\, the prestigious season-ending championship of the men’s professional tennis tour\, has a rich history dating back to the birth of the Open Era.\n\n 	The Masters (1970–1989): The tournament was first held as The Masters in Tokyo in 1970\, won by Stan Smith. The event gained significant prestige during its 13-year stint at Madison Square Garden in New York City (1977–1989).\n 	ATP Tour World Championships / Tennis Masters Cup (1990–2008): The tournament underwent several name and location changes\, including stops in Frankfurt\, Hanover\, Lisbon\, Sydney\, Houston\, and Shanghai. This era saw champions such as Pete Sampras\, Andre Agassi\, and Lleyton Hewitt lift the title.\n 	The London Era (2009–2020): Renamed the ATP World Tour Finals\, the tournament was hosted at The O2 Arena in London for 12 years. This period was dominated by the “Big Four\,” particularly Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic.\n 	Turin Era (2021–Present): The event moved to Turin\, Italy\, in 2021 and was renamed the Nitto ATP Finals (under sponsorship by Nitto Denko Corporation). This phase has continued the tradition of elite competition\, highlighted by Novak Djokovic’s record-breaking seventh title in 2023 and the historic first Italian victory by Jannik Sinner in 2024.\n\nRecent Singles Champions (Turin Era)\n\n\n\nYear\nWinner\nScore\nRunner-up\n\n\n\n\n2024\nJannik Sinner\n6–4\, 6–4\nTaylor Fritz\n\n\n2023\nNovak Djokovic\n6–3\, 6–3\nJannik Sinner\n\n\n2022\nNovak Djokovic\n7–5\, 6–3\nCasper Ruud\n\n\n2021\nAlexander Zverev\n6–4\, 6–4\nDaniil Medvedev\n\n\n\nAll-Time Titles Leaders (Singles)\n\n\n\nRank\nPlayer\nTitles\nYears Won\n\n\n\n\n1\nNovak Djokovic\n7\n2008\, 2012–15\, 2022–23\n\n\n2\nRoger Federer\n6\n2003–04\, 2006–07\, 2010–11\n\n\n3\nIvan Lendl\n5\n1981–82\, 1985–87\n\n\n\nPete Sampras\n5\n1991\, 1994\, 1996–97\, 1999\n\n\n5\nIlie Năstase\n4\n1971–73\, 1975\n\n\n\nNovak Djokovic currently holds the record for the most singles titles with seven. The doubles record is jointly held by Peter Fleming and John McEnroe\, who won seven consecutive titles together.
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-nitto-atp-finals/
LOCATION:Inalpi Arena\, Corso Sebastopoli\, 123\, Torino\, 10134\, Italy
CATEGORIES:ATP Finals
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/2025-Nitto-ATP-Finals.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20251110T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20251116T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251114T125917Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251114T131009Z
UID:2001-1762732800-1763337599@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Uruguay Open
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Uruguay Open is part of the 2025 ATP Challenger Tour\, bringing competitive tennis action to Montevideo\, Uruguay. As one of the key events on the lower-tier professional circuit\, this tournament provides rising talents and experienced tour players an important opportunity to earn ranking points\, gain match confidence\, and make a push toward the ATP Tour level. \n\n\n\nThis year’s event will be played on outdoor clay courts at the Carrasco Lawn Tennis Club from 10 to 16 November. \n\n\n\nTable of Contents[Open][Close]Key DetailsPlayers to WatchDraws & SchedulePrize Money and Ranking PointsResultsSinglesDoublesPast ChampionsSinglesDoubles\n\n\n\nKey Details\n\n\n\n\nCategory: Challenger 100\n\n\n\nEdition: 20th\n\n\n\nLocation: Montevideo\, Uruguay\n\n\n\nVenue: Carrasco Lawn Tennis Club\n\n\n\nSurface: Clay | Outdoor\n\n\n\nDraw Sizes: 32 Singles | 16 Doubles\n\n\n\nPrize Money: $160\,000\n\n\n\nDate: 10–16 November 2025\n\n\n\n\nPlayers to Watch\n\n\n\nRankSeedPlayerCountry451Sebastián BáezArgentina742Mariano NavoneArgentina903Emilio NavaUSA1034Carlos TabernerSpain1045Cristian GarínChile1056Román Andrés BurruchagaArgentina1097Ignacio BusePeru1228Tomás Barrios VeraChile\n\n\n\nNote: Rankings are as of 3 November 2025. \n\n\n\nDraws & Schedule\n\n\n\nThe tournament includes three main competitions: \n\n\n\n\nMen’s Singles\n\n\n\nMen’s Doubles\n\n\n\nSingles Qualifying\n\n\n\n\n\nSingles Draw\n\n\n\nDoubles Draw\n\n\n\nQualifying Draw (Singles)\n\n\n\n\nDaily order of play: \n\n\n\n\nDaily Schedule\n\n\n\n\nPrize Money and Ranking Points\n\n\n\nRoundSinglesDoublesWinner$22\,730 | 100 pt$7\,960 | 100 ptFInals$13\,350 | 50 pt$4\,600 | 60 ptSemi-Finals$7\,960 | 25 pt$2\,760 | 36 ptQuarter-Finals$4\,620 | 14 pt$1\,620 | 20 ptRound of 16$2\,695 | 7 pt$930 | 0 ptRound of 32$1\,670 | 0 pt–Qualifier$0 | 4 pt–Qualifier 2$770 | 2 pt–Qualifier 1$385 | 0 pt–\n\n\n\nResults\n\n\n\nSingles\n\n\n\n\nChampion: updated after final\n\n\n\nRunner-up: updated after final\n\n\n\nFinal Score: updated after final\n\n\n\n\nDoubles\n\n\n\n\nChampions: updated after final\n\n\n\nRunners-up: updated after final\n\n\n\nFinal Score: updated after final\n\n\n\n\nPast Champions\n\n\n\nSingles\n\n\n\n\n2024: Tristan Boyer (USA)\n\n\n\n2023: Facundo Díaz Acosta (ARG)\n\n\n\n2022: Genaro Alberto Olivieri (ARG)\n\n\n\n\nDoubles\n\n\n\n\n2024: Guido Andreozzi (ARG) / Orlando Luz (BRA)\n\n\n\n2023: Guido Andreozzi (ARG) / Guillermo Durán (ARG)\n\n\n\n2022: Karol Drzewiecki (POL) / Piotr Matuszewski (POL)
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-uruguay-open/
LOCATION:Carrasco Lawn Tennis Club\, Grauert Park\, Dr Eduardo Couture\, Montevideo\, Departamento de Montevideo\, 11500\, Uruguay
CATEGORIES:ATP Challenger Tour
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Brisbane:20251110T000000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Brisbane:20251116T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251114T134020Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251114T134025Z
UID:2014-1762732800-1763337599@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Queensland International III
DESCRIPTION:The 2025 Queensland International III or Brisbane 3 is part of the 2025 ATP Challenger Tour\, bringing competitive tennis action to Brisbane\, Australia. As one of the key events on the lower-tier professional circuit\, this tournament provides rising talents and experienced tour players an important opportunity to earn ranking points\, gain match confidence\, and make a push toward the ATP Tour level. \n\n\n\nThis year’s event will be played on outdoor hard courts at the Queensland Tennis Centre from 10 to 16 November. \n\n\n\nTable of Contents[Open][Close]Key DetailsPlayers to WatchDraws & SchedulePrize Money and Ranking PointsResultsSinglesDoublesPast ChampionsSinglesDoubles\n\n\n\nKey Details\n\n\n\n\nCategory: Challenger 75\n\n\n\nEdition: 3rd\n\n\n\nLocation: Brisbane\, Australia\n\n\n\nVenue: Queensland Tennis Centre\n\n\n\nSurface: Hard | Outdoor\n\n\n\nDraw Sizes: 32 Singles | 16 Doubles\n\n\n\nPrize Money: $100\,000\n\n\n\nDate: 10–16 November 2025\n\n\n\n\nPlayers to Watch\n\n\n\nRankSeedPlayerCountry1131James DuckworthAustralia1272Rinky HijikataAustralia1853Bernard TomicAustralia1884Jason KublerAustralia1955James McCabeAustralia1986Alex BoltAustralia2427Dane SweenyAustralia2468Rio NoguchiJapan\n\n\n\nNote: Rankings are as of 3 November 2025. \n\n\n\nDraws & Schedule\n\n\n\nThe tournament includes three main competitions: \n\n\n\n\nMen’s Singles\n\n\n\nMen’s Doubles\n\n\n\nSingles Qualifying\n\n\n\n\n\nSingles Draw\n\n\n\nDoubles Draw\n\n\n\nQualifying Draw (Singles)\n\n\n\n\nDaily order of play: \n\n\n\n\nDaily Schedule\n\n\n\n\nPrize Money and Ranking Points\n\n\n\nRoundSinglesDoublesWinner$14\,200 | 75 pt$4\,980 | 75 ptFInals$8\,330 | 44 pt$2\,880 | 50 ptSemi-Finals$4\,975 | 22 pt$1\,730 | 30 ptQuarter-Finals$2\,890 | 12 pt$1\,010 | 16 ptRound of 16$1\,685 | 6 pt$580 | 0 ptRound of 32$1\,045 | 0 pt–Qualifier$0 | 4 pt–Qualifier 2$480 | 2 pt–Qualifier 1$240 | 0 pt–\n\n\n\nResults\n\n\n\nSingles\n\n\n\n\nChampion: updated after final\n\n\n\nRunner-up: updated after final\n\n\n\nFinal Score: updated after final\n\n\n\n\nDoubles\n\n\n\n\nChampions: updated after final\n\n\n\nRunners-up: updated after final\n\n\n\nFinal Score: updated after final\n\n\n\n\nPast Champions\n\n\n\nSingles\n\n\n\n\n2025 (II): Adam Walton (AUS)\n\n\n\n2025 (I): Tristan Schoolkate (AUS)\n\n\n\n\nDoubles\n\n\n\n\n2025 (II): Joshua Charlton (AUS) / Patrick Harper AUS)\n\n\n\n2025 (I): Matthew Romios (AUS) / Colin Sinclair (NMI)
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-queensland-international-iii/
LOCATION:Queensland Tennis Centre\, 190 King Arthur Terrace\, Tennyson QLD\, Queensland\, 4105\, Australia
CATEGORIES:ATP Challenger Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tennistourcalendar.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Queensland-International.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251118T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20251123T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T153605
CREATED:20251110T100318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T100323Z
UID:1927-1763424000-1763942399@tennistourcalendar.com
SUMMARY:2025 Davis Cup Finals
DESCRIPTION:Updated on April 14\, 2026\n\n\nThe 2025 Davis Cup Final 8 represents the culmination of the World Cup of Tennis\, bringing together the eight most formidable national teams in a high-stakes\, single-elimination tournament. Held over six intense days\, the event determines the Davis Cup champion for the year\, offering a blend of historic tradition and modern\, rapid-fire competition. \n\n\n\nThe format\, colloquially known as the Final 8\, is the pinnacle stage of the annual Davis Cup competition. Unlike the previous\, longer-format iterations\, this structure concentrates the drama into one venue over a single week. The ties are contested in a best-of-three rubbers format: two singles matches followed by a crucial doubles match\, which is played only if the tie stands at 1-1 after the singles rubbers. The three-match format ensures that every rubber carries immense weight\, transforming each day of play into a decisive battle for national pride. \n\n\n\nIn 2025\, the tournament returns to the fervent tennis nation of Italy\, with all matches taking place on the indoor hard courts of the BolognaFiere Exhibition Centre. As the host nation\, Italy secured an automatic berth into the Final 8\, joining the seven other countries that navigated the rigorous path of the Qualifiers second round earlier in the year. The Final 8 structure—featuring four Quarter-Finals\, two Semi-Finals\, and the ultimate Final—is a true test of a nation’s depth\, requiring not only star power but also cohesive team dynamics and endurance over the six-day championship run. The indoor hard court surface is known for rewarding aggressive\, first-strike tennis\, promising a week of fast-paced\, high-quality play from the world’s elite. \n\n\n\nDates18–23 November 2025Edition6th (since format change)LocationBolognaFiere Exhibition Centre\, Bologna\, ItalySurfaceHard (Indoor)Teams8Defending ChampionsItaly\n\n\n\nTable of Contents[Open][Close]The Road to Bologna: The Elite EightTournament Schedule: The Path to GloryFinancial Stakes and Prize MoneyBologna Fiere: The Host VenueKey Storylines: Battles to WatchLogistics and Ticketing\n\n\n\nThe Road to Bologna: The Elite Eight\n\n\n\nThe eight nations competing in the 2025 Final 8 represent a mix of established tennis powers and emerging contenders\, each bringing a unique roster of talent and a burning desire to lift the iconic Davis Cup trophy. Their qualification stories vary\, with Italy entering as the privileged host and the remaining seven battling through the unforgiving Qualifiers. \n\n\n\nThe participating nations are: \n\n\n\n\nArgentina (ARG): A powerhouse from the Americas zone\, led by consistent ATP players such as Francisco Cerúndolo and Tomás Martín Etcheverry\, and anchored by experienced doubles specialists Horacio Zeballos and Andrés Molteni.\n\n\n\nAustria (AUT): A resilient European squad\, featuring players like Filip Misolic and Jurij Rodionov\, relying on strong performances from both their singles and doubles pairings\, Alexander Erler and Lucas Miedler.\n\n\n\nBelgium (BEL): Spearheaded by Zizou Bergs and Raphaël Collignon\, the Belgian team is known for its fighting spirit and often punches above its ranking\, with the doubles pairing of Sander Gillé and Joran Vliegen capable of swinging a tie.\n\n\n\nCzech Republic (CZE): One of the most dangerous young teams in the competition. Their contingent includes the dynamic trio of Jiří Lehečka\, Jakub Menšík\, and Tomáš Macháč\, representing a formidable next-generation threat.\n\n\n\nFrance (FRA): A storied tennis nation\, the French team brings depth with Arthur Rinderknech and Ugo Humbert leading their singles efforts\, and the experienced Pierre-Hugues Herbert in their doubles arsenal.\n\n\n\nGermany (GER): Boasting one of the highest-ranked singles players\, Alexander Zverev\, Germany is a heavy favourite in any tie. Their doubles team\, featuring the renowned partnership of Kevin Krawietz and Tim Pütz\, is also one of the strongest in the field.\n\n\n\nItaly (ITA): As the host nation and perennial title contender\, Italy features a potent line-up including top-ten talent Lorenzo Musetti and the aggressive Flavio Cobolli\, supported by veteran doubles duo Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori.\n\n\n\nSpain (ESP): A historical giant of the Davis Cup\, Spain features former World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz as their headline act. Supported by Jaume Munar\, the Spanish side\, captained by David Ferrer\, remains a threat to any team in the competition.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTournament Schedule: The Path to Glory\n\n\n\nThe 2025 Davis Cup Final 8 unfolds with a compact and electrifying schedule\, with the quarter-final action being split over three days to maximize spectator engagement and television broadcast windows. \n\n\n\nStageTieTeamsDateTime (CET)Quarter-Final 1QF 1France v BelgiumTuesday 18 November 202516:00Quarter-Final 2QF 2Italy v AustriaWednesday 19 November 202516:00Quarter-Final 3QF 3Spain v CzechiaThursday 20 November 202510:00Quarter-Final 4QF 4Argentina v GermanyThursday 20 November 202517:00Semi-Final 1SF 1Winner QF 1 v Winner QF 2Friday 21 November 202516:00Semi-Final 2SF 2Winner QF 3 v Winner QF 4Saturday 22 November 202512:00FinalFinalWinner SF 1 v Winner SF 2Sunday 23 November 202515:00\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFinancial Stakes and Prize Money\n\n\n\nThe modern Davis Cup Finals are characterized not only by prestige but also by significant financial incentives for the participating nations and their players. While official prize money figures for the 2025 edition are subject to final confirmation by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)\, the overall prize pool is expected to remain substantial\, reflecting the event’s stature as a premier global tennis championship. \n\n\n\nBased on the confirmed figures from the 2024 Final 8\, the prize money breakdown—split between the players and their National Associations—demonstrates the massive financial commitment to the competition. The figures serve as a reliable indicator of the magnitude of the rewards in Bologna: \n\n\n\nStage ReachedEstimated Player Prize Money (USD)World Champions$2\,678\,571Runner-Up$1\,607\,143Semi-Finalists$1\,071\,429Quarter-Finalists$535\,714\n\n\n\nThis substantial prize pool\, divided among the team members\, places the Davis Cup Finals among the highest-paying team events in professional sport. The financial rewards are designed to attract the world’s top talent and compensate national associations for their commitment to the prestigious global tournament. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nBologna Fiere: The Host Venue\n\n\n\nThe BolognaFiere Exhibition Centre in Bologna\, Italy\, serves as the stage for this high-octane week of tennis. While primarily an international trade fair complex\, the venue is transformed to accommodate the world-class competition. The choice of BolognaFiere underscores Italy’s status as a key nation in the tennis world and provides a central European location with excellent infrastructure. The venue’s capacity\, which meets the World Group standards set by the ITF\, guarantees an electric atmosphere\, with the partisan home crowd expected to heavily back the Italian national team. The indoor hard court chosen for the tournament will favour players who possess big serves and aggressive groundstrokes\, setting the stage for exhilarating and fast-paced contests throughout the knockout stages. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nKey Storylines: Battles to Watch\n\n\n\nThe draw has set up several compelling Quarter-Final matches that will define the narrative of the 2025 Final 8: \n\n\n\n\nSpain vs. Czechia: This early morning thriller pits the established brilliance of Carlos Alcaraz against the exciting firepower of the Czech next-generation\, led by Jiří Lehečka. The tie could hinge on whether the Czech depth in singles can overcome the immense talent of the Spanish No. 1.\n\n\n\nArgentina vs. Germany: This promises to be a battle of specialties. Germany’s tie is significantly strengthened by world-class singles player Alexander Zverev and the elite doubles team of Krawietz/Pütz. Argentina\, however\, possesses a strong South American contingent and doubles mastery that could cause an upset\, particularly if the tie goes down to the deciding third rubber.\n\n\n\nItaly vs. Austria: The home nation begins its campaign with a regional derby against Austria. Italy\, with a team rich in talent and home crowd support\, will look to Musetti and Cobolli to deliver the crucial singles victories as they defend their standing in the competition.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nLogistics and Ticketing\n\n\n\nFans wishing to attend the 2025 Davis Cup Final 8 and witness the world’s best national teams compete for the ultimate prize can purchase tickets online. The official ticketing portal provides a range of options for individual sessions or full-week packages\, allowing fans to be part of the exhilarating atmosphere at the BolognaFiere. \n\n\n\nTicket Purchase Link: https://tickets.italy.daviscup.com/en/
URL:https://tennistourcalendar.com/event/2025-davis-cup-finals/
LOCATION:BolognaFiere Exhibition Centre\, Viale della Fiera\, 20\, Bologna\, 40128\, Italy
CATEGORIES:Davis Cup
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