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ITF WorldTennis Tour

Learn about the significant changes in the tennis world in December 2018. Find out why change is necessary, the tour structure, ranking point conversions, singles and doubles acceptance criteria, and tournament organization updates. Explore the new ITF World Tennis Tour, its branding, and the revamped tournament structure for men and women players.

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ITF WorldTennis Tour

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  1. ITFWorldTennisTour December 2018

  2. Contents Why change is necessary 3 Branding 6 Tour structure 8 Ranking point conversion 18 Singles Acceptance 21 Doubles Acceptance 36 Tournament Organisation 41

  3. Why change is necessary (1) Extensive ITF research (supported by WTA and ATP) showing poor return on investment for players and nations with integrity risks. • 14,000 “professionals”; approximately 600 “break even” • Only 75 out of 210 ITF nations host pro tournaments • Emerging talent takes longer to break through Governance of professional tennis is the responsibility of ATP and WTA, who have the right to decide the starting point for entry in their events and with it determine the structure of professional tennis, including the number of professional players. ATP has determined that Challenger level is an appropriate starting point for professional tennis, a position supported by the Independent Review Panel (IRP). ATP points will be reduced at $25k level in 2019 and removed in 2020.

  4. Why change is necessary (2) New ITF World Tennis Tour is designed to: • Provide a continued and improved route into professional tennis, as well as link junior tennis with the professional game. • Help more players earn a financial living from the game • Provide more local playing opportunity at the $15,000 level through reduced costs for tournament organisers • Better identify the role of the ITF and National Associations and organisers and assistance provided to players on the pathway journey.

  5. Branding / naming (1) The Player Pathway will be known under the overall name of the ITF World Tennis Tour. This is the umbrella name for a collection of ITF Circuits played in 2017 by over 22,000 players from 179 countries across 1,662 tournaments. Branding press release and toolkits provided to National Associations and Tournament Organisers in early November.

  6. Branding / naming (2) Tournaments will be categorized by gender, prize money (or grade), city, and colour. • 15s (offering $15,000 in prize money, “fifteens”) • 25s ($25,000, “twenty-fives”) • 60s ($60,000) • 80s ($80,000) • 100s ($100,000) Options for combined events, hospitality and week number Immediate take-up encouraged but ITF has a practical approach to allow existing 2019 promotional materials to remain unchanged.

  7. Branding / naming (3) Multiple branding assets available including: wind breaks, net signage, accreditation, posters, perimeter signage ITF Brand department to work with National Associations and Tournament Directors as required

  8. TOUR STRUCTURE- Ranking points- Player progression- Tournament format

  9. ATP WORLD TOUR ATP WORLD TOUR ATP CHALLENGER TOUR ATP CHALLENGER TOUR 2019 STRUCTURE 2018 STRUCTURE ITF PRO CIRCUIT $15k ITF PRO CIRCUIT $25K ITF JUNIOR CIRCUIT Men – Tour structure

  10. WTA TOUR WTA TOUR ITF PRO CIRCUIT $60k - $100k 2019 STRUCTURE 2018 STRUCTURE ITF PRO CIRCUIT $15k ITF PRO CIRCUIT $25k ITF JUNIOR CIRCUIT Women – Tour structure

  11. Winner Finalist SF Remaining Main Draw rounds Qualifying Many players will have two (2) rankings and play at both levels Results in REDto make up a player’s ATP ranking (Best 18 tournaments – Singles and Doubles) ATP Tour / Grand Slam ATP Challenger Results in BLUE to make up a player’s ITF World Tennis Ranking (Best 14 tournaments – Singles and Doubles) ITF World Tennis Tour 25s ITF World Tennis Tour 15s ATP ranking points ITF World Tennis Ranking Points BOTH ATP ranking points and ITF World Tennis Ranking Points Men – What type of points will be earned where?

  12. Winner Finalist SF Remaining Main Draw rounds Qualifying WTA Tour / Grand Slam Results in REDto make up a player’s WTA ranking (Singles: Best 16 tournaments; Doubles: Best 11 tournaments) ITF World Tennis Tour 60s-100s ITF World Tennis Tour 25s Results in BLUE to make up a player’s ITF World Tennis Ranking (Singles and Doubles: Best 14 tournaments) ITF World Tennis Tour 15s WTA ranking points ITF World Tennis Ranking Points Women – What type of points will be earned where?

  13. Men – What type of points will be earned where?

  14. Women – What type of points will be earned where?

  15. ITF World Tennis Tour 25s • 25s tournaments main draws to reserve up to 5 places for best ITF World Tennis Ranked players • Additional direct acceptance for players with ITF World Tennis Rankings ITF World Tennis Tour 15s ITF World Tennis Tour 15s main draws to reserve up to 5 places for Top 100-ranked Juniors ITF Junior Tour WTA ranking points ITF World Tennis Ranking Points ITF Junior Ranking Points Women – how do players progress through the system?

  16. ATP Challengers All Challengers (except current $150k+H) to reserve 4 places in the main draw for players with ITF World Tennis Rankings and 3 places in the qualifying draw. ITF World Tennis Tour 25s ITF World Tennis Ranking (including ATP Challenger qualifying) 25s main draws to reserve up to 5 places for ITF-ranked players ITF World Tennis Tour 15s In addition, players can be directly accepted into ATP Challengers, ITF 15s and 25s tournaments by ITF World Tennis Ranking - after ATP ranking in the order of acceptance. 15s main draws to reserve up to 5 places for Top 100-ranked Juniors ITF World Tennis Tour Juniors ATP ranking points ITF World Tennis Ranking Points ITF Junior Ranking Points Men – how do players progress through the system?

  17. Tournament format All tournaments below ATP and WTA main tour level to be 7 days in duration • Men’s ITF World Tennis Tour 15s, 25s; Women’s 15s, 5s, 60s, 80s, 100s • ATP Challengers All ITF tournaments to have a 32 Singles Main Draw and 24 Singles Qualifying Draw, and 16 team Doubles Main Draw All ITF tournaments to run from Monday to Sunday, including qualifying. All ITF tournaments (men and women) match format: • NEW. Singles qualifying: Best of three sets with match tie-break (10 point) at one set all. Ad-scoring remains. • NO CHANGE. Singles main draw: best of 3 tie-break sets; ad-scoring • NO CHANGE. Doubles main draw. Best of three sets with match tie-break (10 point) at one set all. No ad-scoring.

  18. RANKING POINT CONVERSION

  19. Ranking conversion/introduction (1) 31 December 2018. Official conversion of ATP / WTA rankings; introduction of ITF World Tennis Ranking • 2018 performance gets converted into what it would look like under the 2019 points structure (see slides 12, 13). • ATP Singles and Doubles ranking – Best 18 tournaments; WTA Singles ranking – Best 16 (Doubles Best 11) • ITF World Tennis Ranking – Best 14 (men and women, Singles and Doubles) • Many players will have both an ATP/WTA and an ITF World Tennis Ranking • ATP/WTA/ITF “shadow” rankings available on IPIN / PlayerZone from June / July. MEN Performance at ATP Tour, ATP Challengers and later rounds of $25,000 tournaments retained as ATP points (Best 18 tournaments) Performance at $15,000, $25,000 and qualifying rounds in ATP Challengers converted into ITF World Tennis Ranking points (Best 14 tournaments)

  20. Ranking conversion/introduction (2) WOMEN Performance at $25,000 level and above retained as WTA ranking points (Best 16 tournaments). 2019 WTA ranking point structure not yet published. Performance at $15,000 level converted into ITF World Tennis Ranking points (Best 14 tournaments) All ranking points will count for 52 weeks, including any conversion. Example: I earn 18 ATP points for winning a $15,000 tournament in June 2018. On 31 December 2018, those ATP points are formally converted into 100 ITF World Tennis Ranking Points. The ITF points will “drop off” my ranking in June 2019. Tournament entry • 2018 tournaments, 2018 entry process, 2018 points. • 2019 tournaments, 2019 entry process, 2019 points • Shadow rankings will be used for acceptance into tournaments in the first 3 weeks of the 2019 season (where the entry deadline will fall in 2018)

  21. SINGLES ACCEPTANCE

  22. SINGLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (1) Men’s and Women’s ITF World Tennis tournaments (15s, 25s, 60s, 80s, 100s) will have the following 6 types of places: • 1. Direct Acceptance • The order of acceptance (“Systems of Merit”) is: • ATP/WTA ranking • ITF World Tennis Ranking • National Rankings • Unranked (if necessary) • (Special Exempts and Junior Exempts, if required, are taken from the DA allocation. ITF Junior ranking cannot be used for DA entry.) DA

  23. SINGLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (2) R 2. Reserved places ITF 15s (men / women) Each 15s tournament will reserve up to 5 places in the Main Draw for Top 100 Juniors (see slide 28) ITF 25s (men / women) Each $25s tournament will reserve up to 5 places in the Main Draw for the best ITF World Ranked players who apply. ATP Challenger (men) Each Challenger tournament (below the current $150k+H level) will reserve 4 main draw places for the best ITF World Tennis Ranked players who apply and 3 places in the qualifying draw. ITF 60s-80s-100s (women) No reserved places in 2019. 5 places at 15s and 25s level (men and women) to reward performance at a lower level with guaranteed opportunity at a higher level. JR IR IR

  24. SINGLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (3) WC 4 wild card places in each Main Draw. 4 wild card places in each Qualifying Draw, with the exception of 5 wild cards at ITF World Tennis Tour 15s tournaments (to increase opportunities for local players). 3. Wild Cards Q 6 qualifying places in each Main Draw for the qualifiers winning 2 rounds in the 24 Qualifying Draw. (Or Lucky Losers) 4. Qualifiers JE Exempt places awarded to Juniors finishing in the previous year end’s Top 20. Different to JR places. 5. Junior Exempt

  25. SINGLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (4) SE • Special Exempts available for previous week’s Singles Finalists as a reward and to not have to potentially play 2 qualifying matches on the Monday. • From 2019, players can be awarded a Special Exempt into the main draw of a tournament which offers prize money of the same category or one category higher. As a result: • A 15s tournament finalist can apply for a Special Exempt into a 25s tournament (men and women); • A finalist in a 25s tournament can apply for a Special Exempt into a 60s tournament (women only). • No Special Exempts into Challengers from 25s • (The current rule whereby Special Exempts can be used in any “direction” between Women’s 60s, 80s, and 100s tournaments will remain.) 6. Special Exempt

  26. SINGLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (5) * 14 if SE and JE places filled ** 19 if SE and JE places filled

  27. Principles of Player acceptance (1) A player will automatically be accepted into their best position in a tournament and will not have to choose which ranking to enter with. • Most players outside of the Top 300 men and women will have 2 rankings (e.g. ATP and ITF World Tennis Ranking) and may even have an ITF Junior ranking as well. A player will not have to choose which ranking to enter with, the entry system will take into account a player’s rankings and calculate which ranking accepts you into your best position in a tournament (unless the player has stated a preference). • The Reserved places will only be taken up by players who cannot already be accepted through the Direct Acceptance route. For example, if I am an ITF Junior, ranked 3, but my ATP ranking is good enough to have me accepted into a 15s tournament Main Draw, I will be accepted via Direct Acceptance and not through the Reserved places. • The entry system will always prioritise a player into the main draw over qualifying draw. For example, a player’s WTA ranking gets them into 25s qualifying draw but their ITF World Tennis Ranking gets them into a Reserved main draw place, the main draw place will have priority.

  28. Principles of Player acceptance (2) • In the event that there are Reserved places not taken up by those with ITF World Tennis Rankings (25s) or ITF Junior rankings (15s), those places will go to Direct Acceptances. • If a player accepted into a Reserved place withdraws before the Freeze deadline, he or she can be replaced by another player who has entered and who has an ITF World Tennis Ranking (25s) or ITF Top 100 Junior ranking (15s). • Between the Entry Deadline and the Freeze Deadline, there will be 2 Alternates lists at 15s and 25s tournaments: • 15s tournaments: Direct Acceptance Alternates list; Junior Reserved Alternates list. • 25s tournaments: Direct Acceptance Alternates list; ITF Reserved Alternates list (for those with ITF World Tennis Rankings) • A player may find themselves on both Alternates lists at one time, for example by being the next best ATP-ranked player into Qualifying and the next best Junior ranked player into the Junior Reserved places. • After the Freeze deadline, there will only be 1 Alternates list, the Direct Acceptance Alternate list. Any withdrawals from the Reserved places after the Freeze deadline will be filled from the Direct Acceptance lists.

  29. Juniors acceptance into 15s tournaments • 15s tournaments will reserve up to 5 places for Top 100 Juniors. This can be achieved in 2 ways: • The player is a current Top 100 Junior as at the entry deadline of the 15s tournament. • A player who has finished their last year competing on the ITF Junior Circuit can carry over their year-end Junior ranking only for the purposes of entering into 15s tournaments and only until the player reaches the age of 19. • As a reminder, if the player can be directly accepted into the Main Draw of a 15s tournament through their ATP/WTA or ITF World Tennis Ranking then that is how they will be accepted. • The Junior Exempt programme, which rewards Juniors who finish in the Junior year-end Top 20, will remain in place for 2019. Junior Exempts will continue to be part of the Direct Acceptance allocation. • The application of Age Eligibility Rules to boys and girls will be announced later in 2018.

  30. Draw composition – 15s (MEN/WOMEN) MAIN DRAW 32 WC 2 WC 2 Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 WC 1 WC 1 DA 1 DA 18 DA 2 DA 19 DA 20 DA 3 DA 4 DA 21 Q 4 Q 5 Q 6 DA 22 DA 5 DA 23 DA 6 DA 24 DA 7 DA 25 DA 8 WC 4 WC 4 WC 3 WC 3 DA 26 DA 9 DA 27 DA 10 DA 11 DA 28 DA 12 DA 29 DA 13 DA 30 DA 31 DA 14 DA 15 DA 32 DA 33 DA 16 DA 17 SE 0-2 JE 0-1 JR 3 JR 1 JR 2 DA 34 DA 35 DA 36 JR 4 JR 5 QUALIFYING DRAW 24 WC 5 JR x Up to 5 main draw places reserved for Top 100 Juniors

  31. Draw composition – 25s (MEN/WOMEN) MAIN DRAW 32 WC 2 WC 2 Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 WC 1 WC 1 DA 1 DA 18 DA 2 DA 19 DA 20 DA 3 DA 4 DA 21 Q 4 Q 5 Q 6 DA 22 DA 5 DA 23 DA 6 DA 24 DA 7 DA 25 DA 8 WC 4 WC 4 WC 3 WC 3 DA 26 DA 9 DA 27 DA 10 DA 11 DA 28 DA 12 DA 29 DA 13 DA 30 DA 31 DA 14 DA 15 DA 32 DA 33 DA 16 DA 17 SE 0-2 JE 0-1 IR 3 IR 1 IR 2 DA 34 DA 35 DA 36 DA 37 IR 4 IR 5 QUALIFYING DRAW 24 IR x Up to 5 main draw places reserved for players with ITF World Tennis Rankings

  32. Draw composition – ATP Challengers (MEN) DA 1 DA 2 DA 3 DA 4 DA 6 DA 5 DA 11 DA 7 DA 8 DA 9 DA 10 DA 12 DA 17 DA 18 DA 13 DA 14 DA 15 DA 16 MAIN DRAW 48 WC 2 Q 1 Q 2 WC 1 DA 19 DA 20 DA 21 DA 22 DA 23 DA 24 WC 4 WC 3 DA 30 DA 28 DA 29 DA 25 DA 26 DA 27 DA 31 DA 35 DA 36 DA 32 DA 34 DA 33 DA 37 IR 1 IR 5 IR 2 IR 6 IR 3 IR 7 IR 4 WC 5 QUALIFYING DRAW 4 WC 1 IR x 4 places reserved in the Main Draw 3 places reserved in the Qualifying Draw

  33. Draw composition – ATP Challengers (MEN) • Vast majority of ATP Challengers to be a 48 Main Draw / 4 Qualifying Draw in 2019 (56 Main Draw applications possible but need to meet criteria) • Reserved places for players with ITF World Tennis Ranking in all Challenger tournaments EXCEPT the current $150k+H level. • Main Draw: 4 places • Qualifying Draw: 3 places • ATP points awarded for Main Draw wins; 30 ITF World Tennis Ranking points awarded for Qualifying Draw wins; ATP points structure for 2018 not yet released

  34. Draw composition – 60s, 80s, 100s (WOMEN) MAIN DRAW 32 WC 2 WC 2 Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 WC 1 WC 1 DA 1 DA 2 DA 3 DA 4 DA 5 Q 4 Q 5 Q 6 DA 6 DA 7 DA 8 DA 9 DA 10 WC 4 WC 4 WC 3 WC 3 DA 13 DA 14 DA 15 DA 11 DA 12 DA 16 SE 0-2 JE 0-1 DA 17 DA 18 DA 19 DA 20 QUALIFYING DRAW 24 DA 21 DA 22

  35. 750 • Many players, coaches and administrators believe that a player needs to be in the Top 750 at the end of the year to be a “professional” in 2019, or compete at certain tournament levels. This is not correct. • Please distribute the following messages widely: • The number of ATP or WTA ranked players at the start of 2019 may be more or less than 750 but will depend entirely on how many players in 2018 earned ATP or WTA points at the tournament levels and rounds that will award those points in 2019. • In addition, a player does not have to be within the ATP or WTA Top 750 to enter tournaments awarding ATP or WTA points in 2019. • Players within the Top 750 will be able to play in 15s tournaments (existing play-down rules will remain). • The reason for the confusion among players, coaches, administrators is the ITF’s analysis that the professional game can support approximately 750 male and 750 female players. But this is a concept not a ranking “cut-off”.

  36. DOUBLES ACCEPTANCE

  37. DOUBLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (1) • All ITF tournaments will have a Doubles competition of a Main Draw of 16 teams. Doubles on-site sign-in will be on Monday at 2pm. • With tournaments being reduced to 7 days (Monday to Sunday), there will be no qualifying competition for Doubles. • In each ITF tournament, 13 of the 16 teams will be accepted by Direct Acceptance. 3 of the teams will be Wild Card teams. Major rule changes for 2019 • 15s tournaments (Men and Women) • Players must have been accepted into the Singles competition to be eligible for a Direct Acceptance place in the Doubles competition. Players accepted into the Singles Main Draw will have priority over those in the Qualifying competition. • Qualifiers into the Singles Main Draw will still be counted as being in the Qualifying competition for the purposes of the Doubles acceptance process, given that the Doubles draw will often take place before Singles qualifying is completed. On-site Alternates not accepted into Singles Qualifying will not be considered for Doubles Direct Acceptance. • Unused Doubles Direct Acceptance places will be reallocated as Wild Cards. Wild Card teams do not have to be entered or accepted into the Singles competition.

  38. DOUBLES – Player acceptance into tournaments (2) • Men’s 25s tournaments • Acceptance into Doubles will be based on the “Best of” concept of a player’s singles or doubles ATP rankings (or ITF World Tennis Rankings if needed). • ATP Challenger tournaments • ATP Challenger tournaments will reserve 2 spaces for the best teams based on the ITF World Tennis Ranking (see slide 39). Details will be announced in due course. • Women’s 25s-60s-80s-100s tournaments • Acceptance into Doubles will be based on the “Best of” concept of a player’s singles or doubles WTA rankings (or ITF World Tennis Rankings if needed). This is a change from 2018, where acceptance is solely based on Doubles rankings. • All Women’s tournaments • WTA ranking (singles or doubles) will take priority over ITF World Tennis Ranking (singles or doubles) for acceptance. National ranking not considered for Doubles acceptance.

  39. Doubles Draw – All Men’s / Women’s ITF World Tennis Tour tournaments WC 2 WC 1 DA 1 DA 2 DA 3 DA 4 DA 5 DA 6 WC 3 MAIN DRAW 16 DA 9 DA 7 DA 8 DA 11 DA 12 DA 10 DA 13 NO DOUBLES QUALIFYING for Women tournaments from 2019 onwards

  40. Doubles Draw – ATP Challenger tournaments WC 2 WC 1 DA 1 DA 2 DA 3 DA 4 DA 5 DA 6 WC 3 IR 1 IR 2 MAIN DRAW 16 DA 9 DA 7 DA 8 DA 11 DA 10 IR x 2 places reserved in the Main Draw for the best ITF World ranked team

  41. TOURNAMENTORGANISATION

  42. Removing uncertainty: features of ITF World Tennis Tour 15s tournaments and the ITF World Tennis Ranking • The ITF World Tennis Ranking is indispensable to the progression of players entering the professional game. The value of an ITF World Tennis Ranking will become clear from 2019. • Outside of the Top 250/300 players, all players will have an ITF World Tennis Ranking – more than those with an ATP or WTA ranking. • In the new system, reserving places for ITF World Ranked players ensures rapid tangible progression for the best players, instead of in the current system competing for ATP points with all other players. • Player fields at 15s tournaments will remain strong: players ranked as high as 300/400 (ATP/WTA) will enter. • Tournaments will also see the best of the new future talent with Junior Top 100 players competing. 85% of the ATP/WTA Top 500 were former Junior Top 100 players.

  43. Tournament timeline • Entry Deadline – 18 days prior to tournament • Withdrawal deadline – 13 days prior to tournament • Between the entry deadline and the freeze deadline, each tournament acceptance list at 15s and 25s level will have 2 alternates list, one for withdrawals from Direct Acceptances and one for withdrawals from the Reserved places. • At the Freeze deadline, there will only be 1 alternates list. Withdrawals from either Direct Acceptance or Reserved lists will be filled according to the Direct Acceptance criteria. • Freeze deadline – Thursday before the tournament • Qualifying sign-in / Special Exempt deadline • Sunday 6pm • Doubles sign-in • Monday 2pm

  44. Officiating requirements • Men’s 25s, Women’s 25s-60s-80s-100s • No change • Men’s 15s and Women’s 15s • Tournament supervisor/referee: • If a Gold/Silver badge supervisor is available in-country, a Gold/Silver badge supervisor must be used; • If a Gold/Silver badge is not available in-country, and no feasible solution can be found (i.e. proximity of another Gold/Silver badge supervisor), a White badge supervisor can be used if upgraded to “Approved White Badge” status following additional ITF training and approval of the ITF. • Chair Umpires • Reduction in the minimum number of White Badge Chair Umpires required from 2 to 1 (required from start of Qualifying until the Finals). • Recommendation: 2 White Badge Chair Umpires; or 1 White Badge and 1 Green Badge. • End-of-week supervisor, where required, must hold a White badge Referee certification or higher.

  45. Organisational Requirements • CONFIRMED FOR 2019 • No requirement for 3 consecutive weeks of 15s tournaments (men/women) • No requirement for 2 consecutive weeks of 25s tournaments (men/women) • Countries will continue to host consecutive weeks where it makes sense for their players but regional cooperation among nations to introduce local circuits is encouraged. • 7 day tournaments (not 9 or 10), Monday to Sunday including qualifying • Introduction of Main Draw entry fees for men (USD 40, USD 20 for doubles only) • Reduced women’s hospitality requirements at 25s / 15s level to be consistent with men’s requirements at the same level (twin rooms, 3 nights accommodation, safeguarding requirement)

  46. Example match schedule – Men’s or Women’s 1 day of qualifying – 4 match courts + 1 practice court (minimum) Total matches 18 12 12 12 6 3 1 64 Key: Singles qualifying Singles main draw Doubles Note: Requirement of sufficient day light hours (if outdoors and no lights available). Match schedule is not actual court assignments but minimum court requirements for two ITF events (not ATP or WTA combined events)

  47. Example match schedule – Men’s or Women’s2 days of qualifying – 4 match courts + 1 practice court (minimum) Total matches 12 16 14 12 6 3 1 64 Key: Singles qualifying Singles main draw Doubles Note: Requirement of sufficient day light hours (if outdoors and no lights available). Match schedule is not actual court assignments but minimum court requirements for two ITF events (not ATP or WTA combined events)

  48. Example match schedule – Men’s or Women’s1 day of qualifying – 3 match courts + 1 practice court (minimum) Total matches 18 12 12 12 6 3 1 64 Key: Singles qualifying Singles main draw Doubles Note: Requirement of sufficient day light hours (if outdoors and no lights available). Match schedule is not actual court assignments but minimum court requirements for two ITF events (not ATP or WTA combined events)

  49. Example match schedule – Men’s or Women’s2 days of qualifying – 3 match courts + 1 practice court (minimum) Total matches 12 16 14 12 6 3 1 64 Key: Singles qualifying Singles main draw Doubles Note: Requirement of sufficient day light hours (if outdoors and no lights available). Match schedule is not actual court assignments but minimum court requirements for two ITF events (not ATP or WTA combined events)

  50. Example match schedule – Combined Event1 day of qualifying – 6 match courts + 2 practice courts (minimum) Total matches 36 24 24 24 12 6 2 128 Note: Requirement of sufficient day light hours (if outdoors and no lights available). Match schedule is not actual court assignments but minimum court requirements for two ITF events (not ATP or WTA combined events) Key: Singles qual. Men Singles main draw Men Doubles Men Singles qual. Women Singles main draw WomenDoubles Women

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