Before his debut in Miami, the player from Murcia showered praise on one of the stages of the calendar that he considers one of the "most special" in his entire career: the clay court tour in South America.
Before his debut in Miami, the player from Murcia showered praise on one of the stages of the calendar that he considers one of the "most special" in his entire career: the clay court tour in South America.
We analyze the reasons that explain the success of a phase of the season increasingly threatened by the tight schedule and scarcity of stars.
Major structural changes are imminent in the ATP calendar, and movements are already happening involving SURJ, the sovereign fund of Saudi Arabia through which the Arab country operates in sports, and the ATP itself. Both institutions are working together on the buying and reacquiring process of several tournaments. The two events they are already trying to purchase licenses for are Acapulco and Buenos Aires, according to an investigation by the NY Times.
Saudi Arabia and ATP Tour accelerate buyback and license reacquisition program to reshape men's tennis.
— James Hansen (@jameskhansen) March 12, 2026
SURJ is funding possible acquisitions of Mexican and Argentina Opens, after ATP-funded deals for four other licenses@MattFutterman @CDEcclesharehttps://t.co/ruqr7YbLvK
This news is an automatic translation. You can read the original news, Los torneos de Acapulco y Buenos Aires, más que amenazados por Arabia Saudí
[pixels-player]Before his debut in Miami, the player from Murcia showered praise on one of the stages of the calendar that he considers one of the "most special" in his entire career: the clay court tour in South America.
Major structural changes are imminent in the ATP calendar, and movements are already happening involving SURJ, the sovereign fund of Saudi Arabia through which the Arab country operates in sports, and the ATP itself. Both institutions are working together on the buying and reacquiring process of several tournaments. The two events they are already trying to purchase licenses for are Acapulco and Buenos Aires, according to an investigation by the NY Times.
Saudi Arabia and ATP Tour accelerate buyback and license reacquisition program to reshape men's tennis.
— James Hansen (@jameskhansen) March 12, 2026
SURJ is funding possible acquisitions of Mexican and Argentina Opens, after ATP-funded deals for four other licenses@MattFutterman @CDEcclesharehttps://t.co/ruqr7YbLvK
This news is an automatic translation. You can read the original news, Los torneos de Acapulco y Buenos Aires, más que amenazados por Arabia Saudí
[pixels-player]We analyze the reasons that explain the success of a phase of the season increasingly threatened by the tight schedule and scarcity of stars.