The WTA is moving its season-ending championships from Istanbul to Singapore and will revamp it into a 10-day event with music, entertainment and tennis-related symposiums.
Speaking ahead of yesterday's launch, WTA chief Stacey Allaster said, "We're ultimately in the entertainment business and trying to broaden our reach" and "expand our fan base."
The event will be held from October 17-26 this year at the Singapore Sports Hub's 7,500-seat indoor stadium, and prize money will be hiked by US$500,000 to US$6.5 million.
Allaster said the tour was spending "300 percent more" on the championships in Singapore than in the past. Singapore was chosen over the other two finalists: Monterrey, Mexico, and Tianjin, China.
The move to Singapore was well-timed to capitalize on growing interest in women's tennis in Asia, helped by Li Na's emergence as a top player. The Chinese won the Australian Open title on the weekend. Last year the WTA held 10 events in China, up from two in 2010.
The tournament invites the top eight singles players and will go from four to eight doubles teams. The expansion to ten days will also accommodate juniors and legends events, plus coaching and other industry-related conferences. It will start off with a weekend of music and entertainment followed by a week of tennis.
Singapore will be the ninth city to host the WTA Championships following Boca Raton, Florida; Los Angeles; Oakland, California; New York; Munich; Madrid; Doha, Qatar; and Istanbul.
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