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AAMI Classic

The AAMI Classic is a professional tennis exhibition singles-only tournament, played on outdoor hard courts. It is held annually in January, right before the Australian Open, at the Kooyong Stadium in Kooyong, Melbourne, Australia. Eight invited players participate in the tournament in a promotion/relegation format, playing three matches each over four days to determine the standings from the first place (won all three matches) to the eighth (lost all three matches). Exhibition matches also take place during the tournament, aside of the competition.

Contents


Competition format

2012]]. The AAMI Classic draw includes eight invited Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) players, seeded according to the ATP rankings of the week preceding the tournament. Four first round matches are played, after which the four winners advance to the semifinals, while the four losers are relegated to a play-off draw. The two semifinals of the main draw and of the play-off draw are then played, setting four new matches : the main draw final, to decide of the champion and of the runner-up, the main draw consolation match, to decide of the third and fourth places, the play-off draw final, to decide of the fifth and sixth places, and the play-off draw consolation match, to decide of the seventh and eighth places.[1]

The tournament takes place over four days, with the four first round matches taking place on the first day, the two first round matches of the play-off draw, and one semifinal of the main draw taking place on the second day, the final and the consolation match of the play-off draw, and the second semifinal of the main draw taking place on the third day, and the final and the consolation match of the main draw taking place on the fourth and last day.[1]

Unlike in official tournaments, players retiring during or withdrawing before a match are not automatically eliminated from the tournament, and can still participate to the play-offs or the consolation match –as in the 2008 event, when Nikolay Davydenko withdrew due to fatigue before his play-off draw first round match against Brydan Klein[2], but went on to play and win the play-off draw consolation match against Ivan Ljubi i .[3] Players who decide to withdraw from the competition due to injury are replaced by an alternate for the play-offs or the consolation match –as in the 2006 edition, when David Nalbandian's withdrawal allowed alternate Max Mirnyi to enter the draw.[4] All matches are played in a best-of-three sets with tie-break format.[1]

The AAMI Classic taking place the week before the first Grand Slam of the regular season, the Australian Open, exhibition matches are frequently organized by the event, outside of the competition, to allow top players lacking practice to play matches before the Open.[5]

History

Former World No. 1]] Andy Roddick co-holds the record of titles with Michael Chang and Andre Agassi, winning three times in 2006, 2007 and 2008Former World No. 1]] Andre Agassi appeared in six finals between 1998 and 2004, winning three and losing three1989 French Open champion Michael Chang won three back-to-back titles from 1995 to 1997, beating Yevgeny Kafelnikov once, Pete Sampras twice The first Kooyong exhibition tournament took place in 1988, the year the Australian Open moved from the courts of the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club, which had become too small to host the event, to the newly-built National Tennis Centre at Flinders Park (which would become known as Melbourne Park in 1996). Initiated by Colin Stubs, still the director of the tournament in 2009,[6] the first Kooyong Invitational was created to continue the tradition of having a world-class tennis tournament at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club. Set in December 1988, to allow participants to prepare for the 1989 Australian Open, and played on the club's traditional grass courts, the sixteen-men event comprised fifteen Australian players and Goran Ivani evi from Croatia, and eventually saw the victory of 1988 Australian Open runner-up Pat Cash over countryman Wally Masur in the final.[7]

As it started a sponsoring partnership with Colonial Mutual in 1990, the tournament (known as Colonial Mutual Classic from 1990[8] to 1992,[9] then Colonial Classic from 1993[10] to 2001[11]) changed its competition format to an eight-men round-robin tournament, with each player of the two four-men groups playing two round robin games, and a third match for the standings. The tournament's success increased during the Colonial-sponsored years, and started to attract more and more international players, outside of the Australian consistuency, as it became the most important warm-up event to the first Grand Slam of the season –the only one to be held in the same city as the Open, in Melbourne. The first non-Australian champion was crowned in 1991, when Australian Open quarterfinalist Goran Prpi from Croatia defeated Richard Fromberg for the title, and the first all-foreign final came in 1993, with eventual World No. 1 Thomas Muster from Austria edging Russian Alexander Volkov.[10] The 1993 Kooyong tournament also included for the first time an eight-players women's event, running concurrently with the men's.[12] The first women's Colonial Mutual Classic featured an all-Australian final, where 1992 Barcelona Olympics doubles bronze medalist Rachel McQuillan defeated fellow bronze medalist Nicole Provis in three sets.[13]

The next year, the Colonial Classic was held in mid-January one, just before the 1995 Australian Open, and switched from grass to hard courts, to make the playing conditions closer to that of the Rebound Ace-surfaced Grand Slam tournament. The new-style Colonial Classic (back to being a men's only tournament) saw American champions like Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi and Michael Chang starting to compete, with the latter starting a series of three victories at the event from 1995 to 1997. Eventual 2003 Wimbledon Championships runner-up Mark Philippoussis from Australia won the last edition played in a round-robin format in 1998, as the 1999 event was the first played under the current promotion/relegation system, with Swede Thomas Enqvist coming off as the winner. Agassi became the most successful player at the event after his 1998 runner-up finish, reaching five more finals consecutively from 2000 to 2004 (beating Philippoussis in 2000, Yevgeny Kafelnikov in 2001 and S bastien Grosjean in 2003). Commonwealth Bank took over the sponsorship of the tournament from 2002 to 2004, transforming the Colonial Classic into the Commonwealth Bank International,[14] before the event went sponsorless in 2005, only known as the Kooyong Classic, as World No. 1 Roger Federer from Switzerland collected his first title in Kooyong.[6]

Australian Associated Motor Insurers Limited (AAMI) eventually picked up the event's sponsorship in 2006 for a three-years contract, renewed in 2009 -starting the tournament's run as the AAMI Classic.[15] 2003 US Open champion Andy Roddick tied countrymen Chang and Agassi with three titles (2006, 2007, 2008), Roger Federer won his second title (2009), Fernando Verdasco became the first Spanish champion at the event (2010), and former World No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt (2011) and 19-year-old Bernard Tomic (2012) claimed back-to-back wins for Australia.

Questions rose recently concerning the Kooyong event's future, as new tune-up events for the Australian Open flourished, like the Mubadala World Tennis Championship in Abu Dhabi or the national year-end championships like the Masters France.[12] Different ways to improve the tournament studied by promoter Colin Stubs include lengthening it beyond four days (despite Roddick's withdrawal in 2009, due to the three-match format already being "too taxing" according to the American[16]), reviving the short-lived women's event, or allowing retired players to compete.[12]

Past finals

In men's singles, Michael Chang (1995 97), Andre Agassi (2000 01, 2003) and Andy Roddick (2006 08) co-hold the record for most titles with three victories each. Chang (1995 97) and Roddick (2006 08) share the record for most consecutive titles with three.

Men's singles

Year Champion Runner-up Score 3rd 4th From 5th to 8th
2012 Bernard Tomic Mardy Fish 6 4, 3 6, 7 5 J rgen Melzer Ga l Monfils Milos Raonic/ Kei Nishikori
Andy Roddick
Tom Berdych
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
2011 Lleyton Hewitt Ga l Monfils 7 5, 6-3 J rgen Melzer Nikolay Davydenko Mikhail Youzhny
Fernando Verdasco
Tom Berdych
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
2010 Fernando Verdasco Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7 5, 6-3 Novak Djokovic Juan Mart n del Potro Fernando Gonz lez
Ivan Ljubi i
Tommy Haas
Robin S derling
2009 Roger Federer Stanislas Wawrinka 6 1, 6-3 Fernando Verdasco Fernando Gonz lez Marin ili
Marcos Baghdatis
Carlos Moy
Ivan Ljubi i
2008 Andy Roddick Marcos Baghdatis 7 5, 6-3 Fernando Gonz lez Marat Safin Andy Murray
Brydan Klein
Nikolay Davydenko
Ivan Ljubi i
2007 Andy Roddick Roger Federer 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 Andy Murray Marat Safin Radek t p nek
Ivan Ljubi i
David Nalbandian/ Fernando Gonz lez
Tommy Haas
2006 Andy Roddick Tommy Haas 6-3, 7 6(8 6) Guillermo Coria Nicolas Kiefer/ Max Mirnyi Roger Federer
David Nalbandian/ Max Mirnyi
Ivan Ljubi i
Ga l Monfils
2005 Roger Federer Andy Roddick 6 4, 7 5 Tim Henman Andre Agassi David Nalbandian
Nicol s Mass
Gast n Gaudio
Ivan Ljubi i
2004 David Nalbandian Andre Agassi 6 2, 6 3 Roger Federer Andy Roddick Robby Ginepri
S bastien Grosjean
Taylor Dent
Thomas Johansson
2003 Andre Agassi S bastien Grosjean 6 2, 6 3 Richard Gasquet Mark Philippoussis lex Corretja
Younes El Aynaoui
Thomas Enqvist
Xavier Malisse / Hicham Arazi
2002 Pete Sampras Andre Agassi 7 6(8 6), 6 7(6 8), 6 3 Scott Draper Thomas Enqvist Taylor Dent
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
lex Corretja
Tommy Haas
2001 Andre Agassi Yevgeny Kafelnikov 6 3, 3 6, 6 3 Nicolas Escud Juan Carlos Ferrero Patrick Rafter
Marat Safin/ Nicol s Lapentti
Pete Sampras
Nicolas Kiefer
2000 Andre Agassi Mark Philippoussis walkover Pete Sampras Thomas Enqvist Richard Krajicek
Nicolas Kiefer
Wayne Ferreira
Yevgeny Kafelnikov
1999 Thomas Enqvist Mark Philippoussis 6 4, 6 1 Andre Agassi Michael Chang Yevgeny Kafelnikov
Petr Korda
Goran Ivani evi / Mikael Tillstr m
Tim Henman
1998 Mark Philippoussis Andre Agassi 6 3, 7 6(7 3) Gustavo Kuerten Goran Ivani evi Michael Chang/ Andrei Medvedev
Pete Sampras
Greg Rusedski
Thomas Muster
1997 Michael Chang Pete Sampras 4 6, 6 4, 6 2 Boris Becker Yevgeny Kafelnikov
1996 Michael Chang Yevgeny Kafelnikov 7 5, 6 1
1995 Michael Chang Pete Sampras 7 6(7 4), 6 3
1994 Not Held
1993 Thomas Muster Alexander Volkov 6 3, 1 6, 7 6(7 1)
1992 Neil Borwick Richard Fromberg 6 7(5 7), 7 6(13 11), 7 6(7 5)
1991 Goran Prpi Richard Fromberg 6 4, 6 7(6 8), 6 3
1990 Darren Cahill Todd Woodbridge 6-2, 6-3
1989 Mark Kratzmann Wally Masur 6 4, 1 6, 7 6
1988 Pat Cash Wally Masur 6 4, 7 6(7 4)

Women's singles

Year Champion Runner-up Score
1993 Rachel McQuillan Nicole Provis 6 2, 3 6, 7 5

References

External links



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