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Tennis fans, are you ready for 'Mumbai Open'?

July 25, 2017 14:56 IST

India gets WTA event after 5 years

Ankita Raina

IMAGE:  Ankita Raina, India’s top woman singles player. Photograph: Twitter

India will host its first WTA tournament in five years when the city of Mumbai stages a $ 125,000 event in November, giving home players an opportunity to compete with the world's top-50.

Yet again, it is Maharashtra State Lawn Tennis Association (MSLTA) which has come forward to bring the much-needed tournament to the country.

MSLTA had recently bagged the hosting rights of India's ATP World Tour event, Chennai Open and it was re-branded as Maharashtra Open, to be held in Pune.

"It's time that our players such as Ankita Raina, Karman Kaur Thandi, Rutuja Bhosale and others get to play at a better level and try to move up the rankings ladder. For the players' interest we have brought this event to Mumbai," MSLTA Secretary General Sunder Iyer said.

The last time India hosted a WTA event -- Royal Indian Open -- was in 2012 in Pune when current world number five Elina Svitolina had won the singles title by beating veteran Japanese Kimiko Date-Krumm.

There will be four wild cards each on offer in main draw and the Qualifiers of the Mumbai Open. Top players in the country at that time are likely to get those wild card entries.

India's best singles players, save for Ankita Raina (262), can't get direct entry into the main draws of WTA 125K level events with their current rankings. Karman Kaur Tahndi (349) and national champion Riya Bhatia (519) follow Raina in the ladder.

"It will be an opportunity for players to get some crucial points ahead of the Australian Open. Also, players who are to return from injuries and niggles, this event will serve their purpose. Players ranked between 11 and 50 will compete and it's good for our girls to get that exposure," Iyer said.

Sania Mirza

IMAGE:  Indian tennis player Sania Mirza (centre) waves the Indian flag with team members after winning the Fed Cup Asia-Oceana Group II doubles match against Philippines' Katharina Lehnert and Anna Clarice Patrimonio in Hyderabad in 2015. Photograph: PTI

So far, India has hosted only two $ 15,000 events -- one in Gwalior and the other in Aurangabad.

"I am very much looking forward to the WTA event at home. It will be a great exposure and experience for all of us since it's quite tough to enter a WTA event. I would like to request AITA to host more of these tournaments," Ankita Raina said.

Thandi said, "It will be great for women's tennis with that kind of event happening in India."

MSLTA has lined up three more $ 25000 events which will be held in Pune and Navi Mumbai and one $ 15000 tournament in Solapur.

Together with a $ 50,000 Challenger with all these women's events, lined up in November in Pune, MSLTA would spend close to $ 300,000 in organising these tournaments.

This is when other state associations, including DLTA, are struggling to generate funds for a single tournament.

Prashant Sutar, MSLTA Director (Development Committee), said if a proposal is put before corporates and the government with the "right vision", it's not difficult to raise money.

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