WTA Tournament of Champions

WTA Tournament of Champions
Tournament information
Founded 2009
Abolished 2014
Location Sofia
Bulgaria
Venue Armeets Arena
Category International
Surface Hard / Indoors
Draw 8S
Prize money US$750,000
Website sofia-tennis.bg

WTA Tournament of Champions was a women's season ending tennis tournament for players who have won one or more of the WTA International tournaments during the year but did not qualify for the WTA Championships.

History

It debuted in 2009 at the Bali International Convention Centre on November 4–8 and was a part of the 2009 WTA Tour. The first edition of the tournament featured a 12-woman round robin singles format (four groups of three players, then single-elimination semifinals and final), and offered both US$600,000, €500,000 in prize money and a chance to earn a €1-million bonus for qualified players who won three or more international tournaments. For its second edition, the tournament featured an eight-woman draw with players having only one opportunity to reach the semifinals, where the remaining four women would compete for the first, second, third, and fourth place prizes. The event replaced the Commonwealth Bank Tennis Classic in Bali (a former Tier III tournament).

For the 2009 edition, the 10 highest-ranked players who had captured at least one international tournament during the year and who were not participating in singles at the year-end WTA Tour ChampionshipsDoha 2009 qualified for the event, along with two wildcards. For the 2010 edition, only the top 8 ranked women qualified for the event, with the tournament having the possibility to replace competitors with wildcards of their choice.

The WTA Tournament of Champions took place in Bali from the inaugural edition in 2009 until 2011. Since 2012 the tournament was held in Sofia, Bulgaria.

From 2015, the tournament will be replaced by the WTA Elite Trophy. The singles competition will feature a four-group round robin format consisting of players ranked from 9th to 19th in the world plus one wildcard; followed by the semifinals and final. The tournament will also include a doubles tournament featuring six teams split into two groups followed by a final.[1]

Venues

Town Years Stadium Surface Capacity
Indonesia Nusa Dua, Bali 2009–2011 Bali International Convention Centre Hard (i) 8,000
Bulgaria Sofia 2012–2014 Armeets Arena Hard (i) 13,545

Past results

Singles

Venue Year Champion Runner-up Score in final
Indonesia Bali 2009 France Aravane Rezaï France Marion Bartoli 7–5, retired
2010 Serbia Ana Ivanovic Russia Alisa Kleybanova 6–2, 7–6(7–5)
2011 Serbia Ana Ivanovic (2) Spain Anabel Medina Garrigues 6–3, 6–0
Bulgaria Sofia 2012 Russia Nadia Petrova Denmark Caroline Wozniacki 6–2, 6–1
2013 Romania Simona Halep Australia Samantha Stosur 2–6, 6–2, 6–2
2014 Germany Andrea Petkovic Italy Flavia Pennetta 1–6, 6–4, 6–3

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.