The Star Malaysia

ATP Cup men’s team event goes to Sydney and Brisbane

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SYDNEY: The inaugural edition of the US$15mil (RM62mil) ATP Cup men’s team event will be hosted in Sydney, Brisbane and one other city in the lead-up to the Australian Open next January, Tennis Australia announced.

Sydney, which will host the knockout rounds and final, announced a US$36mil (RM148mil) upgrade of the Olympic Tennis Centre venue on Friday, which includes putting a roof on the main showcourt.

Perth, which has hosted the mixed team Hopman Cup for the last 30 years, and Adelaide are the other cities likely to be in the running to host the group stage of the event along with Brisbane.

The 24-team tournament is seen as a threat to the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation’s (ITF) revamped 18-nation Davis Cup competitio­n starting in Madrid in November.

The new ATP event also has major implicatio­ns for the other men’s and mixed events in Australia and further afield that have traditiona­lly been used by players to prepare for the year’s first Grand Slam at Melbourne Park.

Brisbane will host ATP Cup matches along with the existing WTA Tour event for women but there is likely to be no men’s draw at the Brisbane Internatio­nal from next year.

Sydney also currently hosts men and women’s draws at the Sydney Internatio­nal – a tournament with a history dating back to 1885 – in the week before the Australian Open.

No details were given about how the hosting of the Jan 3-12 ATP Cup would affect the men’s event but Tennis Australia said there could potentiall­y be a new women’s tournament in Australia.

The most contentiou­s potential casualty of the restructur­ing is the Hopman Cup, which was won by Swiss pairing Roger Federer and Belinda Bencic at the weekend.

Popular with the players, and organised by the ITF rather than the Tours, the event has been played out in front of healthy crowds in Perth since 1989 but is unlikely to survive without any top male players.

Tennis Australia is contracted to host the tournament until 2022 and are on record as having said they “planned to honour” that agreement with the local government in Western Australia.

Federer said after his victory last weekend that he hoped Perth would continue to host top class tennis.

“If it’s the Hopman Cup, that’s great. If it’s not, then it’s a pity,” he said. “We had an unbelievab­le event here for so many years.

“These events ... get the players closer together – men and women.

“We share a lot of tournament­s together, but it’s not the same as when you play together or share the same court.

“Let’s hope it continues in some way shape or form.”

Craig Tiley, who is chief executive of Tennis Australia as well as co-organiser of the ATP Cup, said the time was right to expand the sport’s offering to Australian tennis fans.

“We want more players rewarded, more opportunit­ies for them, more opportunit­ies for fans to get to see them ... more global exposure for the sport,” he added. — Reuters

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