Brisbane International
The Brisbane International is a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It is currently part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) World Tour and of the WTA Premier tournaments of the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) Tour. It is held annually in January at the Queensland Tennis Centre in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, just before the first Grand Slam tournament of the season, the Australian Open.
History
The origins of the Brisbane International trace back to the early 1970s, when the Grand Prix tennis circuit, formed in 1970, and which ran concurrently with other tours as the World Championship Tennis circuit, decided to feature on its calendar an event in Australia's Queensland region, to develop a South West Pacific season around the Australian Open –then taking place in Brisbane– alongside other Oceanian events of Sydney; Hobart; and Auckland. The Adelaide-based South Australian Tennis Championships, running as an amateur, then as a state championship, since 1880, were brought to the professional circuit in 1972. The first professional edition of the men's event, played, like the Australian Open, on outdoor grass courts, saw the victory of Soviet Alex Metreveli over Kim Warwick, while the women's event, still not featured in either the Commercial Union Grand Prix circuit or the Virginia Slims circuit, saw Australian Evonne Goolagong win the title.[1]
The tournament had a chaotic history over the following years, taking place on the professional tour again in 1974, in 1977, as the Marlboro-sponsored South Australian Men's Tennis Classic,[2] and in 1979, as the South Australian Open,[3] before it started a regular run in 1981 under the latter title. Moved from January to December in the Grand Prix circuit calendars of the early 1980s, the South Australian Open sealed its place as the opening event of the season in 1987, when it was scheduled again in January, following the return of the Australian Open as the first Grand Slam event of the year. After the surface change of the Australian Open, the tournament also switched to hard courts, starting with the 1988 edition. During the 1980s, the event saw the victories of Australian players as Wally Masur, Mark Woodforde, Mark Kratzmann or Darren Cahill. The taking over of the tour's organization in 1990 by the Association of Tennis Professionals led to several changes, when the tournament, an ATP World Series event, became the Australian Men's Hardcourt Championships, and the prize money increased from $93,000 to $125,000.
In 1997, the Corel WTA Tour created a new event –played on outdoor hardcourts– in Gold Coast, Queensland.[4] The Tier III Gold Coast Classic was added the three preexisting tournaments of Auckland, Sydney and Hobart, and became one of the two events held in the first week of the women's calendar, parallel to the men's Adelaide tournament. Various players, among which Ai Sugiyama, Justine Henin, Patty Schnyder or Venus Williams found success over the years at the low tier tune-up event for the Australian Open. The Gold Coast Classic became the Thalgo Australian Women's Hardcourts in 1998, took the sponsorship of Uncle Tobys in 2003, becoming Uncle Tobys Hardcourts, and changed names again in 2006 to Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts.[4]
Meanwhile, the ATP International Series Adelaide, which had evolved into the AAPT Championships in 1999, Next Generation Hardcourts in 2005, and Next Generation Adelaide International in 2006 had become one of the three stops of the calendar's first week, alongside the Qatar ExxonMobil Open of Doha, Qatar, and the Chennai Open of Chennai, India. Many popular players added their names to the honor roll in the 1990s and the early 2000s, with Thomas Muster, Goran Ivanišević, Jim Courier, Lleyton Hewitt, Tommy Haas, Tim Henman, Nikolay Davydenko or Novak Djokovic winning the singles - and Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde, Bob and Mike Bryan, Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram reaching the doubles finals.
As both the men's and the women's tour calendars were to undergo important changes from 2008 to 2009, with the WTA inaugurating its new roadmap of International and Premier tournaments, and the ATP Tour becoming the ATP World Tour, with new Masters 1000, 500 and 250 events, it was decided in 2006 to merge the Next Generation Adelaide International and the Mondial Australian Women's Hardcourts into a larger ATP-WTA joint tournament in Brisbane, leading, similarly to the joint Medibank International Sydney, to the Australian Open.[5] Tennis Australia chief Steve Wood commented on the shift: "One of the reasons we are doing this is that there's a rise of more lucrative overseas tournaments in the lead-up to the Australian Open offering increasingly attractive alternatives to the top players looking to prepare for the first Grand Slam. [...] So we really wanted them to invest in having them continue to prepare here in Australia, on the road to the Australian Open."[5] The first Brisbane International took place in Brisbane's newly built Tennyson Tennis Centre –and its Patrick Rafter-named Centre Court–, in January 2009.[6][7] In time for the 2012 event the tournament was promoted to a premier event on the WTA tour.[8]
Past finals
For the men's singles, Mike Bauer (1982–83), Mark Woodforde (1988–89), Nicklas Kulti (1991, 1993), Yevgeny Kafelnikov (1994, 1996) and Lleyton Hewitt (1998, 2000) co-hold the record for most titles with two, Bauer and Woodforde co-holding the record for most consecutive. Hewitt holds alone the record for most finals with three (1998–2000). In the women's singles, Patty Schnyder (1999, 2005) and Ai Sugiyama (1998, 2004) co-hold the record for most titles with two. Sugiyama also holds the record for most finals (1997–98, 2004).
Men's singles
Location |
Year |
Champion |
Runner-up |
Score |
Brisbane |
2012 |
|
|
|
2011 |
Robin Söderling |
Andy Roddick |
6–3, 7–5 |
2010 |
Andy Roddick |
Radek Štěpánek |
7–6(2), 7–6(7) |
2009 |
Radek Štěpánek |
Fernando Verdasco |
3–6, 6–3, 6–4 |
Adelaide |
2008 |
Michaël Llodra |
Jarkko Nieminen |
6–3, 6–4 |
2007 |
Novak Djokovic |
Chris Guccione |
6–3, 6–7(6), 6–4 |
2006 |
Florent Serra |
Xavier Malisse |
6–3, 6–4 |
2005 |
Joachim Johansson |
Taylor Dent |
7–5, 6–3 |
2004 |
Dominik Hrbatý |
Michaël Llodra |
6–4, 6–0 |
2003 |
Nikolay Davydenko |
Kristof Vliegen |
6–2, 7–6(3) |
2002 |
Tim Henman |
Mark Philippoussis |
6–4, 6–7(6), 6–3 |
2001 |
Tommy Haas |
Nicolás Massú |
6–3, 6–1 |
2000 |
Lleyton Hewitt |
Thomas Enqvist |
3–6, 6–3, 6–2 |
1999 |
Thomas Enqvist |
Lleyton Hewitt |
4–6, 6–1, 6–2 |
1998 |
Lleyton Hewitt |
Jason Stoltenberg |
3–6, 6–3, 7–6(4) |
1997 |
Todd Woodbridge |
Scott Draper |
6–2, 6–1 |
1996 |
Yevgeny Kafelnikov |
Byron Black |
7–6(0), 3–6, 6–1 |
1995 |
Jim Courier |
Arnaud Boetsch |
6–2, 7–5 |
1994 |
Yevgeny Kafelnikov |
Alexander Volkov |
6–4, 6–3 |
1993 |
Nicklas Kulti |
Christian Bergström |
3–6, 7–5, 6–4 |
1992 |
Goran Ivanišević |
Christian Bergström |
1–6, 7–6(5), 6–4 |
1991 |
Nicklas Kulti |
Michael Stich |
6–3, 1–6, 6–2 |
1990 |
Thomas Muster |
Jimmy Arias |
3–6, 6–2, 7–5 |
1989 |
Mark Woodforde |
Patrik Kühnen |
7–5, 1–6, 7–5 |
1988 |
Mark Woodforde |
Wally Masur |
6–2, 6–4 |
1987 |
Wally Masur |
Bill Scanlon |
6–4, 7–6 |
1986 |
Not Held |
1985 |
Eddie Edwards |
Peter Doohan |
6–2, 6–4 |
1984 |
Peter Doohan |
Huub van Boeckel |
1–6, 6–1, 6–4 |
1983 |
Mike Bauer |
Miloslav Mečíř |
3–6, 6–4, 6–1 |
1982 |
Mike Bauer |
Chris Johnstone |
4–6, 7–6, 6–2 |
1981 |
Mark Edmondson |
Brad Drewett |
7–5, 6–2 |
1980 |
Non-Tour Event |
1979 |
Kim Warwick |
Bernard Mitton |
7–5, 6–4 |
1978 |
Non-Tour Event |
1977 |
Victor Amaya |
Brian Teacher |
6–1, 6–4 |
1976 |
Non-Tour Event |
1975 |
Non-Tour Event |
1974 |
Dick Stockton |
Geoff Masters |
6–2, 6–3, 6–2 |
1973 |
Non-Tour Event |
1972 |
Alex Metreveli |
Kim Warwick |
6–3, 6–3, 7–6 |
Women's singles
Location |
Year |
Champion |
Runner-up |
Score |
Brisbane |
2012 |
|
|
|
2011 |
Petra Kvitová |
Andrea Petkovic |
6–1, 6–3 |
2010 |
Kim Clijsters |
Justine Henin |
6–3, 4–6, 7–6(6) |
2009 |
Victoria Azarenka |
Marion Bartoli |
6–3, 6–1 |
Gold Coast |
2008 |
Li Na |
Victoria Azarenka |
4–6, 6–3, 6–4 |
2007 |
Dinara Safina |
Martina Hingis |
6–3, 3–6, 7–5 |
2006 |
Lucie Šafářová |
Flavia Pennetta |
6–3, 6–4 |
2005 |
Patty Schnyder |
Samantha Stosur |
1–6, 6–3, 7–5 |
2004 |
Ai Sugiyama |
Nadia Petrova |
1–6, 6–1, 6–4 |
2003 |
Nathalie Dechy |
Marie-Gayanay Mikaelian |
6–3, 3–6, 6–3 |
2002 |
Venus Williams |
Justine Henin |
7–5, 6–2 |
2001 |
Justine Henin |
Silvia Farina Elia |
7–6(5), 6–4 |
2000 |
Silvija Talaja |
Conchita Martínez |
6–1, 3–6, 6–0 |
1999 |
Patty Schnyder |
Mary Pierce |
4–6, 7–6(5), 6–2 |
1998 |
Ai Sugiyama |
María Vento-Kabchi |
7–5, 6–0 |
1997 |
Elena Likhovtseva |
Ai Sugiyama |
3–6, 7–6(7), 6–3 |
Men's doubles
Location |
Year |
Champions |
Runners-up |
Score |
Brisbane |
2012 |
|
|
|
2011 |
Lukáš Dlouhý
Paul Hanley |
Robert Lindstedt
Horia Tecău |
6–4 retired |
2010 |
Jérémy Chardy
Marc Gicquel |
Lukáš Dlouhý
Leander Paes |
6–3, 7–6(5) |
2009 |
Marc Gicquel
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga |
Fernando Verdasco
Mischa Zverev |
6–4, 6–3 |
Adelaide |
2008 |
Martín García
Marcelo Melo |
Chris Guccione
Robert Smeets |
6–3, 3–6, [10–7] |
2007 |
Wesley Moodie
Todd Perry |
Novak Djokovic
Radek Štěpánek |
6–3, 4–6, [15–13] |
2006 |
Jonathan Erlich
Andy Ram |
Paul Hanley
Kevin Ullyett |
7–6(4), 7–6(10) |
2005 |
Xavier Malisse
Olivier Rochus |
Simon Aspelin
Todd Perry |
7–6(5), 6–4 |
2004 |
Bob Bryan
Mike Bryan |
Arnaud Clément
Michaël Llodra |
7–5, 6–3 |
2003 |
Jeff Coetzee
Chris Haggard |
Max Mirnyi
Jeff Morrison |
2–6, 6–4, 7–6(7) |
2002 |
Wayne Black
Kevin Ullyett |
Bob Bryan
Mike Bryan |
7–5, 6–2 |
2001 |
David Macpherson
Grant Stafford |
Wayne Arthurs
Todd Woodbridge |
6–7(5), 6–4, 6–4 |
2000 |
Mark Woodforde
Todd Woodbridge |
Lleyton Hewitt
Sandon Stolle |
6–4, 6–2 |
1999 |
Gustavo Kuerten
Nicolás Lapentti |
Jim Courier
Patrick Galbraith |
6–4, 6–4 |
1998 |
Joshua Eagle
Andrew Florent |
Ellis Ferreira
Rick Leach |
6–4, 6–7, 6–3 |
1997 |
Patrick Rafter
Bryan Shelton |
Todd Woodbridge
Mark Woodforde |
6–4, 1–6, 6–3 |
1996 |
Todd Woodbridge
Mark Woodforde |
Jonas Björkman
Tommy Ho |
7–5, 7–6 |
1995 |
Jim Courier
Patrick Rafter |
Byron Black
Grant Connell |
7–6, 6–4 |
1994 |
Mark Kratzmann
Andrew Kratzmann |
David Adams
Byron Black |
6–4, 6–3 |
1993 |
Todd Woodbridge
Mark Woodforde |
John Fitzgerald
Laurie Warder |
6–4, 7–5 |
1992 |
Goran Ivanišević
Marc Rosset |
Mark Kratzmann
Jason Stoltenberg |
7–6, 7–6 |
1991 |
Wayne Ferreira
Stefan Kruger |
Paul Haarhuis
Mark Koevermans |
6–4, 4–6, 6–4 |
1990 |
Andrew Castle
Nduka Odizor |
Alexander Mronz
Michiel Schapers |
7–6, 6–2 |
1989 |
Neil Broad
Stefan Kruger |
Mark Kratzmann
Glenn Layendecker |
6–2, 7–6 |
1988 |
Darren Cahill
Mark Kratzmann |
Carl Limberger
Mark Woodforde |
4–6, 6–2, 7–5 |
1987 |
Ivan Lendl
Bill Scanlon |
Peter Doohan
Laurie Warder |
6–7, 6–3, 6–4 |
1986 |
Not Held |
1985 |
Mark Edmondson
Kim Warwick |
Nelson Aerts
Tomm Warneke |
6–4, 6–4 |
1984 |
Broderick Dyke
Wally Masur |
Peter Doohan
Brian Levine |
4–6, 7–5, 6–1 |
1983 |
Craig Miller
Eric Sherbeck |
Broderick Dyke
Rod Frawley |
6–3, 4–6, 6–4 |
1982 |
Pat Cash
Chris Johnstone |
Broderick Dyke
Wayne Hampson |
6–3, 6–7, 7–6 |
1981 |
Colin Dibley
Chris Kachel |
Eddie Edwards
Craig Edwards |
6–3, 6–4 |
1980 |
Non-Tour Event |
1979 |
Colin Dibley
John James |
John Alexander
Phil Dent |
6–7, 7–6, 6–4 |
1978 |
Non-Tour Event |
1977 |
Cliff Letcher
Dick Stockton |
Syd Ball
Kim Warwick |
6–3, 6–4 |
1976 |
Non-Tour Event |
1975 |
Non-Tour Event |
1974 |
Grover Raz Reid
Allan Stone |
Mike Estep
Paul Kronk |
7–6, 6–4 |
1973 |
Non-Tour Event |
1972 |
Competition Not Held |
Women's doubles
Location |
Year |
Champions |
Runners-up |
Score |
Brisbane |
2012 |
|
|
|
2011 |
Alisa Kleybanova
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova |
Klaudia Jans
Alicja Rosolska |
6–3, 7–5 |
2010 |
Andrea Hlaváčková
Lucie Hradecká |
Melinda Czink
Arantxa Parra Santonja |
2–6, 7–6(3), 10–4 |
2009 |
Anna-Lena Grönefeld
Vania King |
Klaudia Jans
Alicja Rosolska |
3–6, 7–5, 10–5 |
Gold Coast |
2008 |
Dinara Safina
Ágnes Szávay |
Zi Yan
Jie Zheng |
6–1, 6–2 |
2007 |
Dinara Safina
Katarina Srebotnik |
Iveta Benešová
Galina Voskoboeva |
6–3, 6–4 |
2006 |
Dinara Safina
Meghann Shaughnessy |
Cara Black
Rennae Stubbs |
6–2, 6–3 |
2005 |
Elena Likhovtseva
Magdalena Maleeva |
Maria Elena Camerin
Silvia Farina Elia |
6–3, 5–7, 6–1 |
2004 |
Svetlana Kuznetsova
Elena Likhovtseva |
Liezel Huber
Magdalena Maleeva |
6–3, 6–4 |
2003 |
Svetlana Kuznetsova
Martina Navratilova |
Nathalie Dechy
Émilie Loit |
6–4, 6–4 |
2002 |
Justine Henin
Meghann Shaughnessy |
Asa Svensson
Miriam Oremans |
6–1, 7–6(6) |
2001 |
Giulia Casoni
Janette Husárová |
Katie Schlukebir
Meghann Shaughnessy |
7–6(9), 7–5 |
2000 |
Julie Halard-Decugis
Anna Kournikova |
Sabine Appelmans
Rita Grande |
6–3, 6–0 |
1999 |
Corina Morariu
Larisa Neiland |
Kristine Kunce
Irina Spîrlea |
6–3, 6–3 |
1998 |
Elena Likhovtseva
Ai Sugiyama |
Sung-hee Park
Shi-ting Wang |
1–6, 6–3, 6–4 |
1997 |
Naoko Kijimuta
Nana Miyagi |
Ruxandra Dragomir
Silvia Farina Elia |
7–6, 6–1 |
2011
References
External links