Orlando Sentinel

New site for Miami in 2019

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happen.’ But I think we’re going to create one of the truly great sports venues in the world. And this is going to be the greatest tennis tournament in the world.”

Williams nodded as Ross spoke.

“I thought Steve was crazy too, for the record,” Williams said. “But he’s a visionary and always thinking out of the box, and it’s such a great idea. We want this to be the best tournament ever.”

Ross spent $500 million on recent stadium renovation­s, including a canopy, and now the backhoes and front-end loaders have returned. While the ceremonial groundbrea­king was Monday, work began weeks ago to construct outer courts and a spectator plaza in the parking lot adjacent to the stadium.

Center court will be in the stadium, with the net over the 50-yard line.

Most of the seats will be temporary to create a 13,800-seat showcase court in a building that can hold 65,000.

Fabric screens will help hide unused seats.

Ross swears it will work. And others attending the ceremony insisted the new complex represents progress for the tournament, even if the spectacula­r drive over Biscayne Bay to the island of Key Biscayne can’t be replicated in a suburban setting.

“We’re talking about a footprint here that is really unimaginab­le, filled with music and art and culinary attraction­s and culture for families,” Shapiro said. “It will be much, much more than just tennis. Every aspect of the tournament will be improved.”

New tournament director James Blake agreed.

“We’ll have more practice courts, better facilities, better locker rooms, cutting edge video screens, more parking,” Blake said. “Every single aspect is going to be an upgrade.”

Williams, along with the other pros, will play on Key Biscayne for a final time beginning with her firstround match Wednesday. She grew up 90 minutes to the north in Palm Beach Gardens, attended the tournament as a youngster and has long considered it her hometown event.

“When I heard they were going to move it, it literally broke my heart,” she said. “I’m so happy this tournament is still going to be in Miami.”

 ?? CLIVE BRUNSKILL/GETTY IMAGES ?? WME/IMG’s Mark Shapiro, Serena Williams, Dolphins owner Stephen Ross and tournament director James Blake participat­ed in the ground-breaking ceremony Monday.
CLIVE BRUNSKILL/GETTY IMAGES WME/IMG’s Mark Shapiro, Serena Williams, Dolphins owner Stephen Ross and tournament director James Blake participat­ed in the ground-breaking ceremony Monday.

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