For close to two decades from the late nineties till 2017, tennis fans in the city ushered in the new year with the annual Chennai Open ATP tournament. From this year, the event moved to Pune and the city, once known as the cradle of tennis in the country, has been left without a premier tournament. But those things could change as early as 2020 with Indian tennis legend Vijay Amritraj, who was instrumental in getting the ATP event to India and Chennai, working hard to get a WTA tournament.
Amritraj, who was elected as the president of the Tamil Nadu Tennis Association in September this year, said, “within days of taking over, I made a request to the WTA to host a tournament here, probably in February after the Australian Open. I spoke to the WTA CEO and other officials and they are keen to come on board. We want to be in the front of the line if anything is coming up.”
The 65-year-old added, “we have even started discussions with the government immediately after I took over because their support has been very important in the past too.”
The event will be similar to the ATP 250 event that was held in Chennai and Amritraj said it will help attract higher ranked players while costing only half of the men’s event.
A quarterfinalist in both the Wimbledon and U.S. Open, Amritraj said that the association is also planning a legends event next year in September after the U.S. Open to improve the profile of the sport in the State by getting former players like Patrick Rafter, Mark Philippoussis, and Goran Ivanisevic, depending on their availability, to name a few.