Background
The dream of an international tennis tournament
in Miami began in the 1960s, when top tennis players such as Jack
Kramer, Frank Sedgman, Pancho Gonzalez, Pancho Segura and Butch
Buchholz toured the country in a station wagon, playing tennis
in darkened arenas and fairgrounds. It was before the days of Open
tennis, and they traveled with a portable canvas court and plenty
of hopes. Buchholz - an original member of the “Handsome
Eight” (the first recognized pros of Lamar Hunt’s World
Championship Tennis Circuit introduced in 1968) - competed until
he was forced to retire from tennis in 1970 with chronic tennis
elbow.
In 1980, when Buchholz was executive director
of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) - the player’s
union - he met a vice president of the Thomas J. Lipton Company
who liked his idea of creating a two-week players tournament. A
sponsorship agreement would eventually be reached for $1.5 million
a year for five years and Lipton would own the title.
The “Winter Wimbledon,” as it was
first dubbed, would be the first major tournament of the year (the
Australian Open was then held in December). It was decided that
the first tournament would be held at Laver’s International
Tennis Resort in Delray Beach, 50 miles north of Miami.
Buchholz was thinking first class all the way
and brought in Alan Mills, tournament referee at Wimbledon, as
head referee, and Ted Tinling, a well-known tennis fashion designer
since the 1920s, as director of protocol.
He then approached the ATP and Women’s
International Tennis Association and offered prize money, a percentage
of the ticket sales and worldwide television rights. In return
he wanted the rights to run the tournament for 15 years. The associations
agreed, but Buchholz remembers that he had his detractors in the
beginning.
“The tours and some of the top players
were skeptical,” Buchholz said. “Even [tennis writer/TV
analyst] Bud Collins said at the time we didn’t need another
combined event. At one point, I was sure if we didn’t have
a signed contract the tour would have altered this event and we
would not have the same event we have today.”
On Feb. 4, 1985, following 20 years of nurturing
a dream to create a world-class tennis tournament, the first ball
was struck at the International Players Championships and a new
tradition in tennis began. Manuela Maleeva won the first point
en route to a 6-3, 6-2 victory over Angeliki Kanellopula.
The first tournament turned out 84 of the top
100 men and 97 of the top 100 women. ESPN telecast the first weekend
and the men’s semifinals, and ABC telecast the finals live.
Networks from Australia, England, France, Italy, Japan, Sweden
and West Germany also were present.
The first champions were Tim Mayotte and Martina
Navratilova. The women’s final between Navratilova and Chris
Evert was a sellout. Only Wimbledon and the U.S. Open exceeded
the $1.8 million in prize money. But Laver’s was in financial
trouble, so Buchholz moved the 1986 tournament to Boca West, an
Arvida property in Boca Raton. This tournament hosted 43 of the
top 50 men and 46 of the top 50 women. A tradition of excellent
tennis had been established. But then Arvida sold Boca West, and
Buchholz was again searching for a home for his event. It was after
that successful second year that then-Dade County Manager and Sony
Ericsson WTA Tour Executive Director Merrett Stierheim helped
pave the way for a move to Miami.
Stierheim showed Buchholz locations at Flamingo
Park, Tropical Park and Amelia Earhart Park, before Buchholz crossed
the Rickenbacker Causeway and fell in love with the property that
would become the Tennis Center at Crandon Park, a Miami-Dade County
Park that borders Key Biscayne.
“You go over that bridge, and it’s
like leaving a city and entering tropical paradise,” Buchholz
said. ‘It had that postcard feeling I was hoping for, and
then I saw those 5,000 parking spots [by the beach], and I thought, ‘This
is it.’ “
The rest, as they say, is history.
First, a $1 million, 10,000 square-foot clubhouse
was built at the Tennis Center at Crandon Park in 1989 with plans
for a permanent stadium to follow. But there were obstacles. After
a favorable court ruling involving the use of the land in July, 1992
cleared the way to begin construction, the bulldozers started humming
in hopes of getting the stadium ready for the 1993 tournament.
However, Hurricane Andrew and
then the Storm of the Century had other ideas.
“I want you to know we’ve got nine
lives,” Buchholz said back then. “By this time next
year the stadium will be up. I don’t have any lives left.”
On Feb. 13, 1994, as the tournament was celebrating
its 10th event, Miami-Dade County dedicated the $20 million permanent
stadium to the citizens of Miami-Dade County. The stadium also
served as home to the USTA Player Development Program. Less than
a month later, on March 11, 1994, Karin Kschwendt defeated Kathy
Rinaldi-Stunkel, 6-3, 6-4 in the first match on Stadium Court.
“When we got the stadium built, and players
like Steffi Graf, Pete Sampras, Gabriela Sabatini, Jim Courier
and Andre Agassi started saying it was one of the best center courts
in the world, it changed the players minds, and the minds of the
tours.” Buchholz said, “They got behind us and we went
on from there. We went from being a public wart to the tours feeling
they should have more events like this one.”
Now a 12-day event annually showcasing one of
the deepest fields of the year, the Sony Ericsson Open has reached
the next echelon in presenting an international sports extravaganza.
With $6.9 million in prize money, equally distributed to the men
and women, and all of the top players and media from all corners
of the world covering the action every day, the Sony Ericsson Open
has earned its place in the world as the fifth largest tennis tournament,
surpassed only by the Grand Slams.
In 2006, the tournament was televised in the
United States on CBS and ESPN2, as well as by ESPN International
and many other terrestrial broadcast partners. Each year, television
coverage reaches more than 200 countries, radio coverage is broadcast
in more than 44 languages, and print media reports are followed
by millions and millions of tennis enthusiasts worldwide.
A year-by-year review:
1983: Buchholz announces at
the French Open that plans are proceeding for a major two-week
event for men and women players.
1984: Dates and site are set
for the first International Players Championships. Prize money:
$1.8 million. Tournament to be held in Delray Beach, Florida. Title
sponsor: Thomas J. Lipton Company. Initial partners are the two
players’ organizations, Association of Tennis Professionals
(ATP) and Women’s International Tennis Association (WITA).
1985: Field at Laver’s
International Tennis Resort includes 128 men and women in singles,
64 doubles teams for men and women, and mixed doubles. Tournament
format is the same as the four Grand Slams. It is the first time
in 56 years that a new, two-week tournament is launched. Martina
Navratilova and Tim Mayotte capture singles titles before ABC-TV
cameras. Navratilova-Evert women’s final is first sellout.
Attendance for two weeks: 125,817, exceeding any golf or tennis
event ever held in Florida.
1986: Site is Boca West Resort
and Club in Boca Raton, Florida. Ivan Lendl defeats Mats Wilander
for men’s title, while Evert captures women’s title
vs. newcomer Steffi Graf. Attendance reaches 193,046, an increase
of 65%.
1987: Search ends for a permanent
home as the tournament arrives in Miami. Metro-Dade County Commissioners
plan to build a stadium at Crandon Park. Graf defeats Evert for
women’s title, while Miloslav Mecir upsets Lendl in men’s
final. Television reaches 31 nations.
1988: En route to No. 1 world
ranking later that year, Mats Wilander defeats Jimmy Connors. Graf
becomes first woman to win two of the tournament’s titles,
beating Gabriela Sabatini.
1989: A new $1 million clubhouse
is dedicated by Metro Dade March 12. Ivan Lendl wins his second
tournament and is first man with two titles. Part-time Key Biscayne-resident
Gabriela Sabatini is women’s winner. Attendance reaches record
226,653.
1990: New 10-day format with
96 men and 96 women in singles, features two weekends of play.
Only event in pro tennis with this unique format. Andre Agassi,
19, and Monica Seles, just 16, become the youngest of the tournament’s
champions. On Nov. 6, Metro Dade Commissioners approve new contract
for permanent stadium in Miami.
1991: Ground passes sold for
first time with record crowds at 15 of 18 sessions. All-time attendance
mark of 15,107 for the day session on March 17. Seles joins Graf
as two-time women’s winner. Jim Courier climbs into top 10
for the first time by defeating unseeded David Wheaton in the final.
In October, USTA announces Tennis Center at Crandon Park will be
home for its new National Junior Player Development Center. U.S.
teams to train here. In November, construction contract for new
stadium is awarded to James A. Cummings, Inc. of Fort Lauderdale.
1992: The men’s and women’s
final sell out in February - earliest pre-tournament sellout. The
Initial USTA training camp is held at Crandon Park, campers include
nine-year old Andy Roddick. During the event, Thomas J. Lipton
Company announces it will extend title sponsorship. Michael Chang
becomes third straight U.S. winner, while Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario
upsets Seles to win the title. Record attendance for 10 days reaches
204,643, with an average of more than 20,000 per day. In April,
construction begins on permanent stadium. The construction is halted
in mid-May by court order. By late summer, Appeal Court says stadium
construction can go on. On Aug. 24, 1992, Miami is slammed by Hurricane
Andrew, which causes $16 billion in damage to South Florida. In
October, the tournament is renamed the Lipton Championships. On
Nov. 24, it is announced that construction will resume Dec. 1 but
stop for the 1993 event.
1993: The ninth tournament
survives worst weather in history, which includes The Storm of
the Century. Four sessions are cancelled as the storm wreaks havoc
on the site. Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario and Pete Sampras emerge as
winners. Sampras is fourth straight U.S. man to win title and two
weeks later ascends to No. 1 in the world for the first time. Sanchez-Vicario
becomes third woman with two titles by upsetting Graf. TV goes
to 66 nations.
1994: On Feb. 13, Miami-Dade
County dedicates new permanent 14,000-seat stadium to citizens
of Dade County. On March 11, the stadium is christened with a match
between Karin Kschwendt and Kathy Rinaldi-Stunkel. On March 20,
during a third round match between Andre Agassi and Boris Becker,
Becker creates a stir among the fans when he hands his racquet
to a ballgirl, Stephanie Flagherty. She won the point but Agassi
eventually defeats Becker, 6-2, 7-5.
1995: Steffi Graf wins second
consecutive title for the second time. She becomes the tournament’s
winningest player and the first player to win four titles: 1987,
1988, 1994, and 1995. On Sept. 7, the tournament announces it will
be played over 11 days, the only 11-day event on the ATP Tour and
Sony Ericsson WTA Tour. On Dec. 6, the tournament announces that
men’s final will go back to best-of-five sets.
1996: Steffi Graf breaks her
own record by taking a third consecutive title and fifth overall
singles championship when she defeats Chanda Rubin, 6-1, 6-3, in
the women’s final. She also won a doubles championship in
1988 with Gabriela Sabatini. The tournament breaks all attendance
records with a total of 234,755 spectators attending the tournament.
15,501 fans pass through the gates the first Sunday day session
(March 24), breaking the all-time single session record. A record
six sessions were sold out. In December, the Tennis Center in Crandon
Park is awarded top honors in two design excellence award competitions.
The awards were issued by the U.S. Tennis Court and Track Builders
Association for Outstanding Tennis Court and/or Tennis Facility
and Athletic Business Magazine for Facility of Merit in the 1996
Architectural Showcase.
1997: The tournament hosts
the first men’s and women’s pro tennis awards benefit
at the Jackie Gleason Theater on Miami Beach. Tennis stars Pete
Sampras, Carlos Moya, Jim Courier, Steffi Graf, Martina Hingis
and Anna Kournikova were on hand and joined by national and local
celebrities for a star-studded evening featuring comedian Dennis
Miller as the emcee. More than $100,000 was raised and distributed
to the Ashe-Buchholz Tennis Center in Moore Park and the Community
Partnership for Homeless. On March 22, the tournament formally
dedicates the men’s locker room to Tim Gullikson with an
on-court presentation that includes Butch Buchholz, Pete Sampras,
Rosemary Gullikson, and Tim and Rosemary’s children, Megan
and Erik Gullikson. On March 30, top seed Martina Hingis defeats
two-time women’s champion and former world ranked No.1 Monica
Seles, 6-2, 6-1, in 43 minutes. Hingis became the top-ranked player
on the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour following her championship run. On
March 31, Thomas Muster defeats Sergi Bruguera 7-6(6), 6-3, 6-1
to win the tournament, eight years after defaulting to Ivan Lendl
in 1989 when he was injured in a car accident the night before
the final.
1998: On January 5, the tournament
sells a record number of tickets the first day individual tickets
go on sale for the 1998 tournament - a 40 percent increase over
the previous single day sales record set on opening day 1997. On
March 20, Butch Buchholz organizes a reunion of the WCT’s “Handsome
Eight” in an on-court ceremony at the tournament to honor
the 30-year anniversary of Open tennis. On March 26, Steve Campbell
becomes the first qualifier ever to reach the quarterfinals of
the tournament. On March 28, 23rd-seeded Anna Kournikova becomes
the first Sony Ericsson WTA Tour player to defeat four Top 10 players
in one event, setting down No. 5 Monica Seles, No. 9 Conchita Martinez,
No. 2 Lindsay Davenport, and No. 8 Aranxta Sanchez Vicario before
losing to No. 11 Venus Williams in a three-set final. On March
29, Marcelo Rios becomes the first Latin American male to reach
No. 1 on the ATP after defeating Andre Agassi in the final. In
August, Butch Buchholz announces that Ericsson will acquire the
title sponsorship of the tournament beginning in 2000. In October,
the tournament announces that the men’s and women’s
finals will be broadcast on Fox with the men’s final played
on Saturday, and the women’s on Sunday - the first time the
final days have ever been played that way.
1999: On Feb. 12, the tournament
announces its best field in history with 48 of the top 50 women
and 47 of the top 50 men competing. On March 28, Venus and Serena
Williams appear in the first all-sister final since 1884 when Maud
and Lillian Watson met at the Wimbledon final. Venus won 6-1, 4-6,
6-4. In June, Butch Buchholz announces that his family will sell
the tournament to IMG.
2000: On March 24, at the first
Ericsson Open, little known 17-year-old Andy Roddick secures his
first ATP victory, 6-4, 6-0 over Fernando Vincente. Roddick loses
to Andre Agassi, 6-2, 6-3, in the second round. On April 2, Pete
Sampras wins his third singles title by defeating Brazil’s
Gustavo “Guga” Kuerten in a four-set epic in front
of a boisterous, partisan crowd. Following his win, Sampras said “I
can definitely walk out of this tournament feeling real confident
and real good about the way things went. The crowd was huge today.
I got chills up my spine a number of times.” Sampras would
win only two more tournaments in his career: 2000 Wimbledon and
the 2002 US Open. On August 30, the tournament announces it will
add a 12th day to its schedule in order to give players more time
between matches.
2001: On March 31, Venus Williams
defeats Jennifer Capriati in a thrilling three-set final, 4-6,
6-1, 7-6 (4), to win her third title in four years. Tennis Magazine
would name it the Best Women’s Match of 2001. On April 1,
Andre Agassi defeats Jan-Michael Gambill 7-6 (7), 6-1, 6-0 in the
final, to win his fourth title in Miami, the most of any male.
2002: On Feb. 5, the tournament
teams with NASDAQ-100 (QQQ), an index of 100 of the largest non-financial
U.S. and non-U.S. companies listed on the National Market tier
of the NASDAQ Stock Market. Butch Buchholz opens the NASDAQ Market
for trading with help from tennis legends Martina Navratilova and
Rod Laver. On March 19, Cliff Buchholz’s retirement as tournament
director after 18 years is officially recognized as Butch Buchholz
dedicates the Stadium Player Center in his honor. On March 25,
Pete Sampras makes what would become his final appearance losing
in the third round to Fernando Gonzalez of Chile. He wins the US
Open later in the year and announces his retirement in 2003. Sampras
was a three-time champion and was 42-10 in 14 years. On March 28,
perhaps the most exciting day and night of tennis in tournament
history, Serena Williams defeats Venus Williams in the day session
in straight sets to advance to her first final. Both night session
matches go to third-set tie breaks as No. 1 seed Lleyton Hewitt
defeats Marat Safin and Jennifer Capriati downs Monica Seles. Capriati
sealed match point at 12:20 a.m. on March 29, her 26th birthday.
On March 31, Andre Agassi wins his fifth title with a four-set
victory over Roger Federer, tying his wife Steffi Graf for the
most titles in tournament history. On June 4, the tournament announces
that Executive Vice President Adam Barrett succeeds Cliff Buchholz
as tournament director. On Aug. 22, Serena Williams opens the NASDAQ
Market for trading at 9:30 a.m. at NASDAQ MarketSite. She goes
on to win the US Open.
2003: On Feb. 18, Mary Joe
Fernandez is named the official tournament ambassador. The Miami
native participated in 11 tournaments in her hometown and continues
to be heavily involved in the tennis community as a commentator
for ESPN and CBS. On March 22, another chapter in tournament history
closes when Michael Chang walks off the court after losing in the
second round to Andre Agassi. Chang, the 1992 tournament champion,
retired at the end of the 2003 season. On March 30, Andre Agassi
wins his third consecutive and sixth title over Carlos Moya (6-3,
6-3). The win propels Agassi past his wife, Steffi Graf, in total
titles. The entire match is shown live on the NASDAQ MarketSite
screen on Broadway in Times Square in New York City. On Aug. 20,
Andy Roddick and Butch Buchholz are welcomed to the Market Open
of the NASDAQ prior to the US Open. Two weeks later Roddick would
win his first Grand Slam
title and finish No. 1 for the
year.
2004: On March 26, Serena Williams
returns to the court for the first time since winning Wimbledon
the previous July with a 6-1, 6-0 victory over Marta Marrero. Williams,
sporting her new Nike gear, would roll to her third consecutive
title. March 27, the Tennis Channel broadcast over 12 hours of
live match coverage from the first Saturday of the event. On April
2-4, the men’s and women’s finals were both telecast
live on CBS, while the men’s semifinals were both live on
ESPN2. This was the first time since 1992 that both finals were
televised live on network TV in the United States. On April 4,
Andy Roddick, truly a hometown hero, is crowned champion. Roddick
defeats Guillermo Coria, 6-7, 6-3, 6-1, 0-0 after Coria retired
due to back spasms at 0-40 during the first game of the fourth
set.
2005: The tournament sets session
attendance records in five different sessions, including a 2005
best of 17,180 on Good Friday. The total attendance of 263,118
marked a gain of over 9,000 from 2004. On April 2, Kim Clijsters
became the first unseeded women’s player to win the title,
winning seven matches while dropping only an astounding 27 games
en route to the championship. She defeated No. 5 seed Anastasia
Myskina in the Round of 16, No. 4 seed Elena Dementieva in the
quarterfinals, top seed Amelie Mauresmo in the semifinals and No.
2 seed Maria Sharapova, 6-3, 7-5 in the final. The next day, Roger
Federer avenged his 2004 loss to Rafael Nadal in dramatic fashion.
He spotted the young Spaniard two sets and a break before prevailing
2-6, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (5), 6-3, 6-1 to take the championship in three
hours, 42 minutes in what most were calling the best final in the
history of the event. On August 25, 2005 Champion Roger Federer
and Butch Buchholz open the NASDAQ Market prior to the US Open.
Roger Federer goes on to win the 2005 US Open.
2006: An amazing year for the
tournament begins with the announcement of the return to equal
prize money ($533,500 - winners check - first time equal since
1989) for the men and women. Electronic line calling debuts for
both the ATP and Sony Ericsson WTA Tour, as the Hawkeye system
is introduced at the 2006 event on the Stadium court and later
also utilized in the United States at the US Open Series events
and at the US Open. The first match to use the system had Jamea
Jackson playing Ashley Harkelroad. Jackson defeated Ashley Harkleroad
7-5, 6-7, 7-5 in over three hours with Jackson being the first
to throw out the challenge. It came 57 minutes into the match and
it was not successful. In all, the players challenged 161 calls,
overruling only 53. The tournament also smashed it’s total
attendance record – 272,033, breaking old record of 270,143
in 2001. The event featured five sellouts, including men’s
final. Two important improvements to the stadium were introduced,
chairback seats on the 400 level, and video boards which enabled
the stadium spectators to see the replay results. On March 30,
Svetlana Kuznetsova helped NASDAQ open the market from the stadium
court, the first time the market had ever been opened for trading
from a sporting event. Kuznetsova went on to win the women’s
title the next day, defeating Maria Sharapova. Roger Federer capped
off his second straight title on April 2, defeating Ivan Ljubicic
in three tiebreak sets. On August 29, Butch Buchholz and Dee Dutta
announced that Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications, a 50:50 joint
venture between Sony Corporation and Ericsson, would replace NASDAQ-100
as title sponsor effective for the 2007 event in a multi-year deal.
NASDAQ would remain a sponsor of the Sony Ericsson Open in 2007.
2007: In its first year as title sponsor Sony
Ericsson Mobile Communications wanted to change the way tennis
was presented, and the 2007 Sony Ericsson Open was truly a
complete entertainment experience for both fans and players
alike. The tournament hosted a star-studded Kickoff Party on
South Beach featuring a live musical performance by Robin Thicke,
an unprecedented five fashion shows by world renowned designers
Roberto Cavalli, Diane von Furstenberg, Etro and the upscale
local Village of Merrick Park, a celebrity chef demonstration
by Norman Van Aken and Katy Sparks and welcomed several on-court
celebrity performances by Jose Feliciano, JoJo, Melissa Jimenez,
Boyd Tinsley, Jon Secada and Kelly Rowland. The tournament
posted record numbers in 2007 setting an all-time attendance
record with 288,025 guests visiting the Tennis Center at Crandon
Park shattering the old attendance mark of 272,033 set in 2006
by nearly 16,000. Ten session attendance records were set during
the tournament’s 12 days including seven session sellouts.
The March 24 Saturday Day Session set an all-time attendance
record with 18,910. It marked the first time that a session
surpassed 18,000. The women’s final saw eight-time Grand
Slam Champion Serena Williams record one of the greatest comebacks
in tournament history with a 0-6, 7-5, 6-3 win over World No.
1 Justine Henin. The men’s final offered tennis fans
a glimps of the future as 19-year-old Novak Djokovic captured
his first Sony Ericsson Open title with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 win
over Guillermo Canas. Djokovic did not drop a set en route
to the title and becomes the lowest seed (No. 10) to win the
Sony Ericsson Open title since Jim Coureir (No. 13) in 1991.
Canas becomes the first qualifier to reach the tournament final.
2008: 2008 marked another record breaking year
for the Sony Ericsson Open. The tournament recorded 10 session
sellouts, set 11 session attendance records and shattered its
all-time attendance record with 297,011 guests visiting the Tennis
Center at Crandon Park. The men’s final on Sunday, April
6 was sold out on Friday, March 28 marking the quickest sellout
for a men’s final in tournament history. But the record
attendance is only part of the story. In its second year as title
sponsor of the Sony Ericsson Open, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications
continues to raise the bar when it comes to presenting tennis
to the world, and this year’s tournament was truly a complete
entertainment experience for both fans and players alike. The
Tennis Center at Crandon Park was once again revitalized with
bold colors and music welcoming guests to the tournament grounds,
and even before fans passed by the signature fountain, guests
were treated to an interactive entryway. Everywhere people
turned they were met with the sights and sounds of glitz and
glamour, all matching the Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications
brand identity that was launched for their mobile phones in December
2006. The Sony Ericsson Open has become one of the most
glamorous events on tour and this year’s event was definitely
the place to be seen in Miami. The names of those visiting the
tournament this year was like a who’s who of the entertainment
and sports industries including actors Owen Wilson, Woody Harrelson,
Brittany Murphy, and Pauly Shore; television host Star Jones-Reynolds;
feature film director David Frankel; musicians Paulina Rubio,
Alejandro Sanz, Jon McLaughlin, Kenny G, Common and Boyd Tinsley;
race car drivers Helio Castroneves, Christian Fittipaldi and
Emerson Fittipaldi; Miami Heat stars Dwyane Wade and Shawn Marion;
former NBA All-Star Alonzo Mourning; NFL standouts Terrell Owens,
Randy McMichael, Chris Chambers and Willis McGahee; and Florida
Panthers Richard Zedinik and Brano Nezei. The Sony Ericsson Open
hosted a star-studded Kickoff Party at the trendy club Opium
Garden on world famous South Beach. The red carpet event featured
world renowned DJ Bob Sinclar and drew many celebrity guests
including 10,000 BC star Camilla Bell, reality TV star Katrina
Campins, former professional tennis player Anna Kournikova, supermodel
and the face of Estée Lauder Hilary Rhoda, Sports Illustrated
Swimsuit models Quianna Grant, Jessica Gomes, Nicole Trunfio
and Jarah Mariano, and the band Misshapes. The Sony Ericsson
Open continued to bring its guests the best in all-around entertainment
in 2008. At the Sony Ericsson Open Fashion Park, the tournament
hosted four fashion shows by world renowned designers Fila, EleVen
by Venus Williams, Blumarine and the upscale local Village of
Merrick Park. Great tennis was not the only thing entertaining
fans on Stadium Court this year. The Sony Ericsson Open brought
in Island Def Jam recording artist Jon McLaughlin to perform
his new single “Smack into You” and the National
Anthem prior to the women’s final on April 5. Prior to
the men’s final on April 6 the tournament hosted Kenny
G, the biggest selling instrument musician in the modern era,
who performed “Sabor A Mi” from his new album Rhythm
and Romance as well as the National Anthem. Once again the Sony
Ericsson Open was a global event with 752 credentials issued
to media from 36 countries including reporters from Venezuela,
Uruguay, United States, United Kingdom, Ukraine, Switzerland,
Sweden, Slovakia, Serbia and Montenegro, Russian Federation,
Portugal, Poland, Peru, Panama, Netherlands, Mexico, Japan, Italy,
Israel, Hungary, Guatemala, Germany, France, Finland, Ecuador,
Denmark, Croatia, Costa Rica, Colombia, Chile, Brazil, Bolivia,
Belgium, Austria, Australia, Argentina. Both the
men’s and women’s finals were broadcast on CBS. CBS
has a long term contract with the tournament to showcase the
finals through 2011. The tournament received over 2000 hours
of television coverage globally on other networks. For the
first time the Sony Ericsson Open took to the streets of Miami
to bring tennis to people who may not normally visit the event
on Key Biscayne. The tournament hosted events at Coconut Grove
and Lincoln Road featuring video boards, player appearances and
interactive games. The Sony Ericsson Open also took the tournament
to many of the local high schools in South Florida with several
high school dance team performances and National Anthem singers
prior to select evening matches on Stadium Court. The Sony Ericsson
Open continued its long tradition of community service in 2008.
The tournament continued its affiliation with the First Serve
Organization which was started by the Buchholz family to
empower young people by providing local tennis facilities and
schools with alife skills
programthat promotes
positive values, healthy habits and education through the game
of tennis. For the 12th year in a row, the Sony Ericsson
Open joined international relief organization Feed the Children
to distribute food and supplies to benefit thousands of South
Florida children and families. On March 24, the Sony Ericsson
Open and Feed The Children distributed 15 eighteen-wheelers with
more than 399,500 pounds of food, beverages, personal care products,
paper goods and Vertrue pharmacy cards. The 15 truckloads of
goods were valued at more than $2,000,000 and were disturbed
amongst 50 South Florida hunger relief agencies. Over the 12
year partnership the Sony Ericsson Open has distributed 4.4 million
pounds of food valued at close to $12 million and supplemented
close to 17 million meals to over 163,000 families.
2009: 2009 marked the 25th edition of the Sony Ericsson Open and the event recorded another banner year. The tournament recorded eight session sellouts, set four session records and boasted a total attendance of 293,228 marking the second-highest total in tournament history.
The men’s final on Sunday, April 5 was sold out by Saturday, March 21 marking the quickest sellout for a men’s final in tournament history.
Over the last three years Sony Ericsson has produced several unique stunts that have helped move tennis from the sports section to the lifestyle & entertainment pages.
The Sony Ericsson Open once again hosted a star-studded Kickoff Party at LIV located at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach. The red carpet event featured a live performance by Wyclef Jean and drew many celebrity guests including Eliza Dushku, Nicky Hilton, Jim Belushi, Rick Fox, Boris Kodjoe, Romero Britto, Ana Christina, Santigold, Chad Johnson, Meagan Good, Jessica Gomes, Elyse Taylor.
On site, the tournament created a new entertainment stage which provided daily entertainment for fans including player Q&A’s, fashion shows, and live musical performances.
The Sony Ericsson Open has become one of the most glamorous events on tour and this year’s event was definitely the place to be seen in Miami. The names of those visiting the tournament this year was like a who’s who of the entertainment and sports industries including actors Owen Wilson, Eliza Dushku, Meagan Good, Adrien Brody, and Boris Kodjoe; television personalities Star Jones and Al Reynolds; musical artists Common, Chayanne, Sandy “Pepa” Denton, Gloria Estefan, Enrique Iglesias, William “WAK” King, Kelly Rowland, Paulina Rubio, Alejandro Sanz, and Shakira; Washington DC Mayor Adrian Fenty; sports stars Vernon Carey, Cris Carter, Rick Fox, Thomas Jones, Anna Kournikova, Curtis Martin, Bryant McKinnie, Ed Reed, Tony Gonzalez, Randy Shannon, Kimbo Slice, and Dara Torres; 2003 Miss Universe Amelia Vega and Vogue Editor Anna Wintour.
True to form, the Sony Ericsson Open was a global event with over 600 credentials issued to media from 36 countries.
Both the men’s and women’s finals were broadcast on CBS. CBS has a long term contract with the tournament to showcase the finals through 2011. The tournament received over 2000 hours of television coverage globally on other networks.
For the second consecutive year the Sony Ericsson Open took to the streets of Miami to bring tennis to people. The tournament hosted events at Coconut Grove (March 26), Mary Brickell Village (March 27) and the University of Miami (March 29) featuring video boards, player appearances and interactive games.
The Sony Ericsson Open continued its long tradition of community service in 2009.
The tournament continued its affiliation with the First Serve Organization which was started by the Buchholz family to empower young people by providing local tennis facilities and schools with a life skills program that promotes positive values, healthy habits and education through the game of tennis.
A total of 100 player appearances were made during the Sony Ericsson Open including Nadia Petrova visiting Habitat for Humanity of Greater Miami to help build homes for needy families in downtown Miami.
Sony Ericsson WTA Tour and ATP Tour players also visited Baptist Children’s Hospital (Kei Nishikori) and held clinics for the Special Olympics (Lleyton Hewitt and Bethanie Mattek-Sands) and local youths at Arcor Kids Day (Bruno Soares, Robert Lindstedt, Cara Black and Liezel Huber).