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Western & Southern Open
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| Location |
Mason, Ohio
United States |
| Venue |
Lindner Family Tennis Center |
| Surface |
Hard / Outdoors |
| [1] |
| ATP World Tour |
| Category |
Masters 1000 |
| Draw |
56S / 32Q / 24D |
| Prize Money |
US$2,430,000 |
| WTA Tour |
| Category |
Premier 5 |
| Draw |
56S / 32Q / 28D |
| Prize Money |
US$2,000,000 |
The Cincinnati Open is an annual outdoor hardcourts tennis event held in the Cincinnati suburb of Mason, Ohio, USA. The event started on September 18, 1899 and is the oldest tennis tournament in the United States played in its original city., Between 1978 to 1989 it was a major tournament of the men's Grand Prix Tennis Tour and part of the Grand Prix Championship Series.
The men's event is one of nine Masters 1000 tournaments on the ATP World Tour. The women's event is a $2 million Premier 5 event on the WTA Tour and is the only WTA event held in the American Midwest. The 2012 event will be held August 11–19. Due to its sponsorship by the Western & Southern Financial Group, the official name of the event is the Western & Southern Open.
History
The tournament was started in 1899 as the Cincinnati Open (it would later be known by several other names, including the Tri-State Tennis Tournament and ATP Championships), and would eventually grow into the tournament now held in Mason. The original tournament was held at the Avondale Athletic Club, which sat on property that is now Xavier University, and would later be moved to several various locations due to changes in tournament management and surfaces. The first tournament in 1899 was played on clay courts (described in a newspaper article of the time as "crushed brick dust"), and the event was mostly played on clay until 1979 when it switched permanently to hardcourts.
In 1903, the tournament was moved to the Cincinnati Tennis Club, where it was primarily held until 1972. In 1974, the tournament was nearly dropped from the tennis calendar but moved at the last moment to the Cincinnati Convention Center, where it was played indoors and, for the first time since 1919, without a women's draw. In 1975, the tournament moved to the Coney Island amusement park on the Ohio River, and the tournament began to gain momentum again.
In 1979 the tournament moved to Mason where a permanent stadium was to be built and the surface was changed from Har-Tru clay to hardcourt (DecoTurf II.). Later, two other permanent stadiums were constructed, making the Cincinnati Masters the only tennis tournament outside the four Grand Slam events with three stadium courts – Center Court, Grandstand Court and Court 3. The women's competition was reinstated in 1988 for one year, and then again in 2004 when the organizers, with the help of the Octagon sports agency, bought a tour tournament previously held in Croatia and moved it to Cincinnati.
Since 1975, the tournament has been guided by Paul M. Flory, current tournament chairman and former executive with the Procter & Gamble Company. During his tenure, the tournament has enriched its considerable heritage, while donating millions of dollars to charity. Currently, the tournament donates money to Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and The Charles M. Barrett Cancer Center at University Hospital. Flory has been honored with the ATP's Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award and enshrinement in the USTA/Midwest Hall of Fame and the Cincinnati Tennis Hall of Fame. In 2009, he was named one of the Great Living Cincinnatians by the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce. Flory began his involvement as a volunteer with the tournament in the late 1960s and has remained a volunteer, having never accepted a salary.
In August, 2008, the men's tournament was sold to the United States Tennis Association, the owners of the US Open.
In 2011 the men's and women's tournaments were played at the same time making a joint tournament. As a result the name of the competition changed from the Western & Southern Financial Group Masters and Women's Open to the Western & Southern Open.
Wellington Orthopedics, a local sports medicine business, currently sponsors the tournament, and is in charge of any medical problems within the players.
Venue
The tournament is played at the Lindner Family Tennis Center, located at 5460 Courseview Drive in Mason, Ohio. It features three tennis stadiums, and is the only venue outside of the Grand Slams with more than two permanent stadiums. Center Court, built in 1981 and expanded over the years, has a capacity of 11,400. Grandstand Court (Stadium 2), built in 1995, has a capacity of 5,000. Court #3 (Stadium 3), built in 1997, has a capacity of 2,000. The venue has a total of 10 courts.
In 2009, the tennis tournament announced the construction of a $10 million upgrade to the facility, including the construction of a 52,000 square feet (4,800 m2) West Building to add space for players, media and fans. The new building, which opened in mid-2010, is approximately twice as high as the previous West Building, rising 85 feet (26 m) above ground level and 97 feet (30 m) above the court level.
In 2010, the tournament announced plans to expand the grounds by more than 40% and add six new courts. One of those courts will seat 4,000 and will serve as the third television court, while another court will have seating for 2,500. A new ticket office, entry plaza, food court and exhibit areas also are included in the plans. Construction started on August 22, 2010 and is expected to be completed by August 13, 2011.
Past champions
Main article: List of Western & Southern Financial Group Masters and Women's Open champions
Current champions
Andy Murray won the Men's Singles in 2011, his second Cincinnati
Masters 1000 title.
Men's Singles finals
| Year |
Champion |
Runner-up |
Score |
| 2011 |
Andy Murray |
Novak Djokovic |
6–4, 3–0, ret. |
Women's Singles finals
Men's Doubles champions
Women's Doubles champions
| Year |
Champion |
Runner-up |
Score |
| 2011 |
Vania King
Yaroslava Shvedova |
Natalie Grandin
Vladimíra Uhlířová |
6–4, 3–6, [11–9] |
Records
| Record |
Player |
Titles/Record |
| Most Men's Singles titles |
George Lott, Bobby Riggs, Mats Wilander and Roger Federer |
4 |
| Most consecutive Men's Singles titles |
Raymond D. Little, Beals Wright, Robert LeRoy, and Bobby Riggs |
3 |
| Most Women's Singles titles |
Ruth Sanders Cordes and Clara Louise Zinke |
5 |
| Most consecutive Women's Singles titles |
Ruth Sanders Cordes, May Sutton, and Clara Louise Zinke |
3 |
| Most Men's Doubles titles |
Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde |
4 |
| Most Women's Doubles titles |
Clara Louise Zinke |
6 |
| Most consecutive Women's Doubles titles |
Martha Kinsey and Clara Louise Zinke |
4 |
| Most Men's Titles |
Raymond D. Little |
11 |
| Most Women's Titles |
Clara Louise Zinke |
12 |
| Most Men's Finals Appearances (all events) |
William Talbert |
14 |
| Most Women's Finals Appearances (all events) |
Clara Louise Zinke |
18 |
| No. 1 Seeds Winning Men's Title (seeding began 1927) |
|
38 |
| No. 1 Seeds Winning Women's Title (since 1927) |
|
27 |
| Most Times Seeded No. 1, men (since 1927) |
Roger Federer |
6 |
| Most Times Seeded No. 1, women (since 1927) |
Pauline Betz |
4 |
Note
The 1979 men's competition was a non-Grand Prix event not bringing any ATP ranking points although named "ATP Championships", run as a rival event to US Pro Championships in Boston.
| Cincinnati Masters |
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1968 |
1969 |
| 1970 |
1971 |
1972 |
1973 |
1974 |
1975 |
1976 |
1977 |
1978 |
1979 |
| 1980 |
1981 |
1982 |
1983 |
1984 |
1985 |
1986 |
1987 |
1988 |
1989 |
| 1990 |
1991 |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
| 2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 |
2009 |
| 2010 |
2011 |
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| WTA Premier tournaments (2009–current) |
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Sydney · Paris · Dubai · Indian Wells · Miami · Charleston · Stuttgart · Rome · Madrid · Eastbourne
Stanford · Cincinnati · Toronto/Montreal · New Haven · Tokyo · Beijing · Moscow
2009 Los Angeles · 2009–2010 Warsaw · 2010–current San Diego · 2011–current Doha · Brussels · 2012–current Brisbane
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2009 schedule · 2010 schedule · 2011 schedule
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WTA Tour Championships, Istanbul
*Bold denotes the four mandatory tournaments. |
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| Grand Prix Championship Series (1970–1989) |
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1970–1971 Sydney · 1970–1973 Los Angeles · 1970–1974 Johannesburg · 1970–1977 Boston · 1970–1980, 1984–1989 Stockholm · 1970–1971, 1976–1989 London · 1970–1986 Philadelphia
1970–1989 Monte Carlo · Rome · 1972–1981 Las Vegas · 1973–1977 Indianapolis · 1974–1977 Washington · 1978–1989 Hamburg · Montreal/Toronto · 1978–1988 Tokyo Indoor · 1981–1989 Cincinnati
1982–1985 Forest Hills1986–1989 Miami · 1987–1989 Indian Wells · 1989 Paris
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| WTA Tier III Tournaments (1988–2008) |
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1988 Eastbourne • New Orleans 1988–1989 Brighton • California • Filderstadt • Dallas • Chicago • Tokyo Indoor • 1988–1990 Houston • 1989 Indian Wells • Zurich • 1989/2004–2008 Cincinnati
1990 Tampa • Newport • 1990–1991 San Diego • 1990–1992 San Antonio • Leipzig • 1991–1992 Barcelona • 1992–1994 Lucerne • Osaka • 1993/2007–2008 Budapest • 1993 Kitzbühel • 1993–1994 Schenectady 1993–1997 Linz • 1993–2008 Oklahoma City/Memphis • Strasbourg • Tokyo Outdoor • Birmingham • Quebec City • 1994–1996 Moscow (Ladies Open) • 1995 San Juan • 1995/2000–2003 Zagreb/Bol • 1995–1996 Jakarta
1995–1998/2002 Warsaw • 1996 Moscow (Kremlin Cup) • 1996–2004/2008 Luxembourg City • 1996–2008 's-Hertogenbosch • 1997–2003 Madrid • 1997–2008 Gold Coast • 1998 Prague • Boston • 1999 Cairo
1999–2004 Sopot • 1999–2008 Kuala Lumpur/Bali • 2000–2004 Vienna • 2001 Canberra • 2001–2003 Doha • 2001–2008 Bogotá • Acapulco • 2004–2006 Hasselt • 2004–2008 Guangzhou • 2005–2007 Bangkok • Kolkata • 2005–2008 Istanbul • 2006–2008 Bangalore • 2007–2008 Bad Gastein • 2008 Viña del Mar
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Categories: Tennis tournaments in the United States | Hard court tennis tournaments | ATP Tour | WTA Tour | Sports in Cincinnati, Ohio | Recurring events established in 1899 | Visitor attractions in Warren County, Ohio | Cincinnati Masters | US Open Series
Hidden categories: All articles with dead external links | Articles with dead external links from September 2009