Brisbane tournament returns to ATP calendar after five years - Sportish
Connect with us

Tennis

Brisbane tournament returns to ATP calendar after five years

Published

on

Brisbane tournament returns to ATP calendar after five years

Tournament ATP 250 Brisbane International and Brisbane, Australia, return to the ATP calendar after a five-year absence.

In the 2024 season, the Brisbane tournament will be held on hard courts at the Queensland Tennis Center in parallel with the WTA 500 tournament from 31 December to 7 January. 32 tennis players will participate in the main draw in singles and 24 tennis players in doubles. The main draw of the women’s tournament will increase from 32 tennis players to 48 tennis players, and the doubles will have 24 pairs.

The prize money for the Brisbane tournament in the 2024 season will be a record 3.1 million Australian dollars (1.87 million euros or 2 million US dollars).

The last winner of the ATP 250 tournament in Brisbane was Japan’s Kei Nishikori, the former world number four racket, who beat Daniil Medvedev in three sets in the 2019 final.

Source: Sport UA

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Tennis

Blinkova lost to Gibson in the first round of the Australian Open

Published

on

By

Blinkova lost to Gibson in the first round of the Australian Open

Russian tennis player Anna Blinkova lost to Australian Talia Gibson in the first round of the Australian Open in Melbourne.

The match ended with a score of 6:1, 6:3 and lasted 1 hour 16 minutes.

In the second round, Gibson will meet the winner of the match between another Russian, Diana Schneider, and the Czech Barbora Krejcikova.

Grand Slam tournament. Australian Open. Melbourne (Australia). Hard

Prize fund – more than 74 million dollars

Women. First round

Talia Gibson (Australia, WC) – Anna Blinkova (Russia) – 6:1, 6:3

Source: Sportbox

Continue Reading

Tennis

Dayana Yastremskaya – Elena-Gabriela Ruse. Watch online. Live broadcast

Published

on

By

Dayana Yastremskaya – Elena-Gabriela Ruse. Watch online. Live broadcast

Ukrainian tennis player on the night of January 18 Dayana Yastremskaya (WTA 27) will begin competing at the 2026 Australian Open.

In the first round, the Ukrainian player will play against the Romanian representative. Elena-Gabriela Ruse (WTA 79). The fight will begin with the first launch at ANZ Arena. The approximate start time of the match is 02:00 Kyiv time.

The best moments of tennis matches LIVE on Telegram channel Tennis on Sport.ua

This will be the third head-to-head encounter. The score is 2:0 in favor of Ruse.

The winner of the fight will face Yulia Starodubtseva or Ayla Tomljanovic in the second round.

Attention! The match is broadcast by a third-party service (player), the content of which is not managed or controlled by Sport.ua.
The use of this player is a voluntary and informed decision by the user who accepts all risks associated with the use of this player.

DAY CALENDAR

TOURNAMENT TABLE

(21+). Participating in gambling can lead to gambling addiction. Follow the rules (principles) of responsible gaming.

Source: Sport UA

Continue Reading

Tennis

He earned more than $20 million. Former ATP number three retires

Published

on

By

He earned more than  million. Former ATP number three retires

Former world third place in men’s singles Milos Raonic The Canadian announced his retirement from his professional career:

“It’s time. I’m ending my professional tennis career. It’s the moment you know will come one day, but it’s impossible to be truly prepared for it. No matter how ready I am right now. Tennis has been my love and obsession for most of my life.”

I am incredibly lucky to be living and achieving my dreams. I went out on the field every day focused on getting better, seeing where it took me, and playing the game I was introduced to completely by chance when I was eight years old. It somehow became my entire obsession and childhood, and then it turned into my profession and my entire life.

I am grateful to the amazing fans around the world that I have played and trained in front of. They saw me in my best moments on the field and in my hardest moments. They saw me grow. Thank you to everyone who stopped for a moment to watch and support me.

I would like to thank my coaches and my entire team who sacrificed their time with their families and homes to be with me on this path as I pursued my dreams and goals. I am extremely grateful for your mentorship and knowledge.

Thanks to the ATP Tour, ITF and all Grand Slam tournaments. It has been my dream to play in your great tournaments and I have been lucky enough to have this experience with wonderful people who do their best for the beautiful game called tennis.

I would like to thank all my colleagues and competitors. I admired you growing up, I respected you throughout my career, and I will continue to respect you as a fan. Because of you, I have become the best player I can be, a better person, and learned life’s most important lessons while competing with you every week for over twenty years.

Thank you Canada. My family and I came here more than 30 years ago. You made me choose tennis, you changed my family’s life and I enjoyed every moment of being able to represent you all over the world.

Mother, father, Elena and Momir; I am forever grateful to you for often putting your life on hold so that I could have the chance to follow my dreams. All this was only possible thanks to you. Nothing would happen without your constant support, effort and emotional investment. And as happy as I am to have found tennis, it’s nothing compared to how lucky I am to have such parents, a sister and a brother.

I hope to make my wife and son proud every day and be as much a family to them as my family is to me.

A big part of my tennis journey has been the amazing people I’ve been lucky enough to meet from around the world. In many cases, they became mentors who helped me understand the rest of my life. I am grateful for their attention, time and support, which makes the answers to life’s most important questions clearer and more inspiring.

What’s next? I won’t slow down. I still have a lot of life ahead of me and I’m just as motivated and hungry for new goals as I was when I broke through on tour in 2011. I will bring the same dedication and intensity to the next level. “If I can strive for the same level of excellence as in tennis, trying to get better every day, we’ll see where that takes me.”

Milos, 35, has won eight trophies at Tour level. In 2016, she reached the Wimbledon final as well as the semi-finals of the Australian Open and the Finals. Raonic earned $20,764,512 during his career.

Raonic last played in the 2024 Olympics and lost to Dominik Koepfer in the first round.

View this post on Instagram

Posted by: Milos Raonic (@mraonic)


Source: Sport UA

Continue Reading

Trending

All Rights Reserved © 2023 - Sportish | Powered by: