See also: Washington Open (tennis).
Date: | July 31 – August 8 |
Edition: | 52nd |
Surface: | Hard (outdoor) SportMaster Sport Surfaces |
Location: | Washington, D.C., United States |
Category: | ATP Tour 500 |
Champs: | Jannik Sinner |
Champd: | Raven Klaasen / Ben McLachlan |
Main Name: | Washington Open (tennis) Washington Open |
Before Year: | 2019 |
The 2021 Washington Open (called the Citi Open for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 52nd edition of the Washington Open. The event was part of the ATP Tour 500 series of the 2021 ATP Tour and part of the US Open Series leading up to the US Open grand slam in September. The Washington Open took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from July 31 to August 8, 2021.[1]
See main article: 2021 Citi Open – Singles.
See main article: 2021 Citi Open – Doubles.
Event | W | F | SF | QF | Round of 16 | Round of 32 | Round of 64 | width=85 | Q | width=85 | Q2 | width=85 | Q1 |
Singles[2] | 500 | 300 | 180 | 90 | 45 | 20 | 0 | 10 | 4 | 0 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Doubles | 0 | 45 | 25 |
Event | W | F | SF | QF | Round of 16 | Round of 32 | Round of 64 | width=85 | Q | width=85 | Q2 | width=85 | Q1 |
Singles | €350,755 | €178,500 | €91,500 | €48,000 | €24,400 | €13,300 | €7,520 | €3,685 | 1,970 | ||||
Doubles* | €118,700 | €60,000 | €30,500 | €15,970 | €8,250 |
Country | Player | Rank1 | Seed | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Spain | Rafael Nadal | 3 | 1 | |
Canada | Félix Auger-Aliassime | 15 | 2 | |
Australia | Alex de Minaur | 18 | 3 | |
Grigor Dimitrov | 21 | 4 | ||
Italy | Jannik Sinner | 23 | 5 | |
United Kingdom | Dan Evans | 27 | 6 | |
United Kingdom | Cameron Norrie | 29 | 7 | |
Reilly Opelka | 36 | 8 | ||
Kazakhstan | Alexander Bublik | 39 | 9 | |
Taylor Fritz | 42 | 10 | ||
Australia | John Millman | 44 | 11 | |
Sebastian Korda | 47 | 12 | ||
France | Benoît Paire | 49 | 13 | |
Lloyd Harris | 51 | 14 | ||
Serbia | Miomir Kecmanović | 52 | 15 | |
Frances Tiafoe | 54 | 16 |
The following players received wild cards into the singles main draw:
The following players received entry from the singles qualifying draw:
Country | Player | Country | Player | Rank1 | Seed | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | John Peers | Slovakia | Filip Polášek | 36 | 1 | |
United Kingdom | Neal Skupski | New Zealand | Michael Venus | 36 | 2 | |
India | Rohan Bopanna | Ivan Dodig | 53 | 3 | ||
Raven Klaasen | Japan | Ben McLachlan | 61 | 4 |
The following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:
The following pair received entry from the doubles qualifying draw:
Between 2011 and 2019, the Citi Open hosted conjoining men and women tournaments. However, amid the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) revoked its sanction of the Citi Open for the year's tour and added two events to its provisional calendar instead: the Top Seed Open in Lexington, Kentucky and the Prague Open.[4] After the Citi Open returned in 2021 from the event's eventual cancellation in the prior year,[5] the WTA stayed its revocation of the event's sanction, so the women's tournament did not return as many women's players had scheduling conflicts with the 2020 Summer Olympics.[6] In its place, event officials created the inaugural women's invitational as a three-day exhibition during the US Open Series. Coco Gauff, Jessica Pegula, and Jennifer Brady were the three original headliners,[7] [8] though Brady was later replaced by Victoria Azarenka.[9]
The players played in a round-robin format; the winner of each pair in their first matches would then play each other in the final match.[10] The games were played in a best-of-three set format with regular scoring and a 10-point "super tiebreak" to decide the third set. The player with the best record would be crowned the champion and in the case of a tie, the winner would be decided by the player who won the most sets or games. Because the tournament was not sanctioned by the WTA, the players would not accrue or lose any points. The prize money for the inaugural champion was set at $25,000.[11] On August 5, Gauff defeated Azarenka in the first match, 6–3, 6–1.[9] Azarenka was scheduled to play Pegula the following day, after Brady withdrew from the tournament, to decide the final match, but Azarenka herself later withdrew from the invitational after suffering an ankle injury.[12] On August 7, Pegula defeated Gauff in the final match, 4–6, 7–5, [10-8], to win the invitational.[13]