2023 January ATP/WTA Pro Tennis Calendar

by Staff | December 28th, 2022, 5:40 pm
  • 3 Comments

The start of the 2023 tennis season is just hours away. The tour kicks off with a new combined team event dubbed the “United Cup”. The event features teams from 18 different countries playing in three locations (Perth, Brisbane, Sydney).

Each city will host 6 teams who will play in a round robin format which each tie consisting of 5 total matches (2 men’s singles, 2 women’s singles, 1 mixed). Players will earn ranking points depending on wins over the unprecedented 11-day sanctioned team event.

The tournament effectively replaces the ATP Cup and the Hopman Cup. And it brings both the ATP and the WTA together in partnership.


ATP MEN
Dec 29 – United Cup (Perth, Sydney, Brisbane)
Jan 1 – Adelaide 1, Pune
Jan 9 – Adelaide 2, Auckland
Jan 16 — Australian Open

WTA WOMEN
Dec 29 – United Cup (Perth, Sydney, Brisbane)
Jan 1 – Adelaide 1, Auckland
Jan 10 – Adelaide 2, Hobart
Jan 16 – Australian Open (qualifying on site)


You Might Like:
ATP Announces Early 2021 Schedule, Australian Open Feb 8 Start Confirmed
2022 January ATP/WTA Pro Tennis Calendar
January Off-Topic Thread
2009 Australian Open TV Schedule
ATP Chairman Andrea Gaudenzi: It’s Unknown When The Tour Will Resume

Don't miss any tennis action, stay connected with Tennis-X

Get the FREE TX daily newsletter

3 Comments for 2023 January ATP/WTA Pro Tennis Calendar

SG1 Says:

2023…the first season in a long time that will not include any mention of RF playing competitive tennis. Kind of hard to fathom as a tennis fan. Hope he finds a way to stay part of tennis. It’s good for the game.


chrisford1 Says:

Pro sports are partially built around the idea of the indispensable superstar. Until injured, retiring on age, ready to go earlier on falling hard from a peak or just losing the commitment. In my experience
Then dispensed with by necessity, and replaced as athletes from which the next indispensable stars come from. Though many superstars still are getting lots of airtime and attention often to the detraction of the new generations active players.
For what it is worth, we also lost Serena. And Venus, Nadal, and Murray all look close to the end. Rafa is a one of a kind and I am hoping I can live long enough to see the type of guy Rafa is as an adult and what his priorities become.


skeezer Says:

SG1,
Agreed. Tennis won’t be the same without RF, and Rafa is probably not far behind, which will close the era of the best Tennis ever.

Top story: 2024 Shanghai Masters Day 8: Sinner v Shelton, Alcaraz v Monfils; Djokovic Dominant