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The German Open[1] (previously known as the Grass Court Championships Berlin, bett1open, and since 2024 the Berlin Ladies Open) is a WTA Tour affiliated professional tennis tournament for women played in West Berlin, West Germany (until 1990), then Berlin, Germany from 1991 to 2008 following reunification. Held since 1896, it was one of the oldest tournaments for women. Until 1978 the tournament was held in Hamburg together with the men's tournament. From 1988, it was classified on the WTA Tour as a Tier I tournament. Since 2021, it is a WTA 500 tournament.
German Open | |
---|---|
WTA Tour | |
Founded | 1896–2008; 2021–present |
Editions | 93 |
Location | Hamburg (1894–1978) West Berlin (1979–1990) Berlin (1991–2008, 2021–) |
Venue | Am Rothenbaum Rot-Weiss Tennis Club (1979–2008, 2021–) |
Category | Tier I (1988–2008) WTA 500 (2021–) |
Surface | Clay outdoor (until 2008) Grass outdoor (2021–) |
Draw | 28M 24Q 16D |
Prize money | €802,237 (2024) |
Website | https://www.berlinladiesopen.com |
Current champions (2024) | |
Singles | Jessica Pegula |
Doubles | Wang Xinyu Zheng Saisai |
After an absence of more than a decade, the tournament was announced to return to the WTA calendar for the 2020 season. However, the event was cancelled in April 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and it would be due to return in 2021. The new event is classified as a Premier-level tournament and serve as a warm-up event towards the Wimbledon Championships, having switched its surface from clay to grass.[2][3]
History
editPast champions of the tournament include former world number ones Billie Jean King, Chris Evert, Steffi Graf, Monica Seles, Arantxa Sánchez Vicario, Martina Hingis, Amélie Mauresmo, Justine Henin, Ana Ivanovic and Dinara Safina.
Past finals
editSingles
editDoubles
editTournament names
edit- 1896–1927:German Championships
- 1928–1948:German International Championships
- 1949–1970:West German Championships
- 1971–1979: German Open
- 1980: No tournament
- 1981–1988: German Open
- 1989–1990: Lufthansa Cup
- 1991–1992: Lufthansa Cup German Open
- 1993–2000: German Open
- 2001–2002: Eurocard German Open
- 2003: MasterCard German Open
- 2004: Ladies German Open
- 2005: Qatar Total German Open
- 2006–2008: Qatar Telecom German Open
- 2021–2023: bett1open
- 2024–present: ecotrans Ladies Open
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Two-time champion Kvitova warms up for Wimbledon with German Open title". Reuters. homson Reuters Group Limited. 25 June 2023. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
- ^ "Former Wimbledon champion to headline brand-new WTA Premier event in." 26 October 2019.
- ^ "Cancellation of bett1open 2020". Berlin Open. 1 April 2020. Archived from the original on 16 May 2020. Retrieved 18 October 2020.