Tie Break Tens

Tie Break Tens is a short tennis format in which only tie-break matches are played.

There are no games or sets, only tie-break matches and the winner is the first player to reach 10 points and lead by a margin of two. Most other traditional rules of tennis are the same. The winner-take-all charity prize money is US$250,000 for each tournament. It is a short-format version of tennis, similar to other alternative forms of traditional sports, such as T20 Cricket and rugby sevens.

The inaugural Tie Break Tens tournament took place at the Royal Albert Hall on 5 December 2015. It was won by Kyle Edmund who beat Andy Murray in the finals.

Since then, tournaments have been played in Vienna, Madrid, Melbourne, New York, Indian Wells and Dubai with the world's current top tennis professionals competing for the grand prize.

Rules

Tie Break Tens is played using traditional tie-break rules. Players win by reaching 10 points (provided that they have a clear margin of two points). Rock-paper-scissors determines who serves first, and from which end of the court they play. The player who wins the toss, serves first. The other player then serves twice, and with the rest of the match continues with the players alternating serves every two points. Players change ends after every six points. Players are allowed an unlimited number of line-call challenges using review technology during each match, until an incorrect challenge is made. After this, no more challenges are allowed until the next match.

Format

A knock-out format is used, with quarterfinals, semifinals and final.

2015: London

The inaugural Tie Break Tens tournament took place on 5 December 2015 at the Royal Albert Hall in London. A round-robin format was used, with six players divided into two groups of three. It was staged in partnership with Champions Tennis and promoted by  IMG  with a winner-take-all prize of $250,000. Andy Murray, John McEnroe, Tim Henman, David Ferrer, Kyle Edmund and Champions Tennis qualifier  Xavier Malisse  participated in the competition. In the final, Edmund defeated Andy Murray 10-7 and took away the $250,000 prize, more than doubling his earnings for 2015.

Men's singles

Group 1 Tie Break Tens  Henman Tie Break Tens  McEnroe Tie Break Tens  Malisse Match W–L Point W–L Differential Standings
Tie Break Tens  Tim Henman 10–7 5–10 1–1 15–17 -2 2
Tie Break Tens  John McEnroe 7–10 7–10 0–2 14–20 -6 3
Q Tie Break Tens  Xavier Malisse 10–5 10–7 2–0 20–12 +8 1
Group 2 Tie Break Tens  Murray Tie Break Tens  Ferrer Tie Break Tens  Edmund Match W–L Point W–L Differential Standings
Tie Break Tens  Andy Murray 10–4 10–7 2–0 20–11 +9 1
Tie Break Tens  David Ferrer 4–10 3–10 0–2 7–20 -13 3
Tie Break Tens  Kyle Edmund 7–10 10–3 1–1 17–13 +4 2
Semifinals Final
      
Q Tie Break Tens  Xavier Malisse 4
  Tie Break Tens  Kyle Edmund 10
  Tie Break Tens  Kyle Edmund 10
  Tie Break Tens  Andy Murray 7
  Tie Break Tens  Andy Murray 10
  Tie Break Tens  Tim Henman 1

Source: Tie Break Tens

2016: Vienna

Tie Break Tens took place on 23 October 2016, the opening weekend of the Erste Bank Open 500 in Vienna. Andy Murray, Jo Wilfried Tsonga, Dominic Thiem, Tommy Haas, Goran Ivanišević and Marcus Willis competed. It also was competed as a round-robin. Dominic Thiem won, defeating Andy Murray 10–5 in the Final.

Men's singles

Group A Tie Break Tens  Thiem Tie Break Tens  Tsonga Tie Break Tens  Haas Match W–L Point W–L Differential Standings
Tie Break Tens  Dominic Thiem 10–4 10–3 2–0 20–7 +13 1
Tie Break Tens  Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 4–10 10–6 1–1 14–16 -2 2
Tie Break Tens  Tommy Haas 3–10 6–10 0–2 9–20 -11 3
Group B Tie Break Tens  Murray Tie Break Tens  Willis Tie Break Tens  Ivanišević Match W–L Point W–L Differential Standings
Tie Break Tens  Andy Murray 10–3 10–7 2–0 20–10 +10 1
Tie Break Tens  Marcus Willis 3–10 8–10 0–2 11–20 -9 3
Tie Break Tens  Goran Ivanišević 7–10 10–8 1–1 17–18 -1 2
Semifinals Final
    
Tie Break Tens  Dominic Thiem 10
Tie Break Tens  Goran Ivanišević 5
Tie Break Tens  Dominic Thiem 10
Tie Break Tens  Andy Murray 5
Tie Break Tens  Andy Murray 10
Tie Break Tens  Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7 Third place match
Tie Break Tens  Goran Ivanišević 8
Tie Break Tens  Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 10

Source: Tie Break Tens

2017: Madrid

Tie Break Tens Tens took place at the Caja Mágica in Madrid on 4 May 2017. It featured both men's and women's tournaments for the first time. Grigor Dimitrov won the men's title with Simona Halep taking the women's title. The knock-out format debuted here and has been used ever since.

Men's singles

Stan Wawrinka, Grigor Dimitrov, Lucas Pouille, Feliciano López, Dan Evans, Tomáš Berdych, Jack Sock and Fernando Verdasco competed in the men's tournament. Dimitrov defeated Lopez in the final.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Grigor Dimitrov 14
Tie Break Tens  Dan Evans 12
Tie Break Tens  Grigor Dimitrov 10
Tie Break Tens  Fernando Verdasco 8
Tie Break Tens  Lucas Pouille 6
Tie Break Tens  Fernando Verdasco 10
Tie Break Tens  Grigor Dimitrov 10
Tie Break Tens  Feliciano López 7
Tie Break Tens  Tomáš Berdych 12
Tie Break Tens  Jack Sock 10
Tie Break Tens  Tomáš Berdych 8
Tie Break Tens  Feliciano López 10
Tie Break Tens  Stan Wawrinka 1
Tie Break Tens  Feliciano López 10

Source: Tie Break Tens

Women's singles

Maria Sharapova, Garbiñe Muguruza, Agnieszka Radwańska, Johanna Konta, Simona Halep, Madison Keys, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Monica Puig played in the women's competition with Halep defeating Kuznetsova in the final.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Madison Keys 10
Tie Break Tens  Svetlana Kuznetsova 12
Tie Break Tens  Svetlana Kuznetsova 10
Tie Break Tens  Agnieszka Radwańska 6
Tie Break Tens  Agnieszka Radwańska 10
Tie Break Tens  Garbiñe Muguruza 5
Tie Break Tens  Svetlana Kuznetsova 6
Tie Break Tens  Simona Halep 10
Tie Break Tens  Johanna Konta 2
Tie Break Tens  Simona Halep 10
Tie Break Tens  Simona Halep 10
Tie Break Tens  Monica Puig 5
Tie Break Tens  Monica Puig 10
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sharapova 6

Source: Tie Break Tens

2018: Melbourne

The first Tie Break Tens competition of 2018 was played on 10 January at the Margaret Court Arena in Melbourne, Australia. It featured an 8-player men's singles tournament.

Men's singles

Initially, 5 of the 8 players were confirmed: Novak Djokovic, Nick Kyrgios, Rafael Nadal, Stan Wawrinka (withdrew, replaced by Milos Raonic) and former tennis player Lleyton Hewitt. Later, Dominic Thiem, Tomáš Berdych and Lucas Pouille also announced their participation, thus completing the field. Tomáš Berdych won the $250,000 prize defeating Nadal in the final 10–5.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Lleyton Hewitt 10
Tie Break Tens  Novak Djokovic 6
Tie Break Tens  Lleyton Hewitt 11
Tie Break Tens  Rafael Nadal 13
Tie Break Tens  Lucas Pouille 1
Tie Break Tens  Rafael Nadal 10
Tie Break Tens  Rafael Nadal 5
Tie Break Tens  Tomáš Berdych 10
Tie Break Tens  Tomáš Berdych 10
Tie Break Tens  Nick Kyrgios 8
Tie Break Tens  Tomáš Berdych 11
Tie Break Tens  Milos Raonic 9
Tie Break Tens  Milos Raonic 10
Tie Break Tens  Dominic Thiem 7

Source: Tie Break Tens

2018: New York

The women's only tournament was played on 5 March 2018 in New York City at Madison Square Garden. This was the first time the competition had been staged in the United States.

Women's singles

It featured an 8-player woman's singles tournament including Serena Williams, Venus Williams, CoCo Vandeweghe, Daniela Hantuchová, Elina Svitolina, Marion Bartoli, Shuai Zhang and Sorana Cîrstea.

It marked the return of Serena Williams playing her first singles competition since giving birth to her daughter.

Svitolina from Ukraine won the $250 000 winner-takes-all prize defeating Zhang in the final 10–3.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  CoCo Vandeweghe 10
Tie Break Tens  Daniela Hantuchová 7
Tie Break Tens  CoCo Vandeweghe 0
Tie Break Tens  Elina Svitolina 10
Tie Break Tens  Venus Williams 3
Tie Break Tens  Elina Svitolina 10
Tie Break Tens  Elina Svitolina 10
Tie Break Tens  Zhang Shuai 3
Tie Break Tens  Marion Bartoli 5
Tie Break Tens  Serena Williams 10
Tie Break Tens  Serena Williams 11
Tie Break Tens  Zhang Shuai 13
Tie Break Tens  Sorana Cîrstea 4
Tie Break Tens  Zhang Shuai 10

2019: Indian Wells

The men's singles tournament was played on 5 March 2019 at Indian Wells Tennis Garden. This was their first competition at Indian Wells.[citation needed]

Men's singles

It was an 8-player men's singles tournament including Dominic Thiem, Stan Wawrinka, Gaël Monfils, Milos Raonic, Taylor Fritz, Rafael Nadal, Marin Čilić and David Goffin. The tournament was played in Stadium 2 at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, in front of 8,000 people.

Raonic won the $150,000 prize by defeating Wawrinka 10–6 in the final.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Marin Čilić 11
Tie Break Tens  David Goffin 9
Tie Break Tens  Marin Čilić 3
Tie Break Tens  Milos Raonic 10
Tie Break Tens  Milos Raonic 10
Tie Break Tens  Gaël Monfils 7
Tie Break Tens  Milos Raonic 10
Tie Break Tens  Stan Wawrinka 6
Tie Break Tens  Dominic Thiem 5
Tie Break Tens  Stan Wawrinka 10
Tie Break Tens  Stan Wawrinka 13
Tie Break Tens  Rafael Nadal 11
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz 8
Tie Break Tens  Rafael Nadal 10

2021: Dubai

Men's singles

A men's singles tournament was played in Dubai on 22 October 2021 with AED 500,000 winner take all prize money at the Coca-Cola Arena. The 8 players were Gaël Monfils, Dan Evans, Taylor Fritz, Ramkumar Ramanathan, Zizou Bergs, Dustin Brown, Simon Roberts and Benjamin Hassan.

The winner of the tournament was Zizou Bergs from Belgium, who overcame Taylor Fitz after saving a championship point, 11–9.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Gaël Monfils 11
Tie Break Tens  Benjamin Hassan 9
Tie Break Tens  Gaël Monfils 9
Tie Break Tens  Zizou Bergs 11
Tie Break Tens  Zizou Bergs 10
Tie Break Tens  Dustin Brown 6
Tie Break Tens  Zizou Bergs 11
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz 9
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz 10
Tie Break Tens  Simon Roberts 3
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz 10
Tie Break Tens  Dan Evans 7
Tie Break Tens  Ramkumar Ramanathan 7
Tie Break Tens  Dan Evans 10

2022: Indian Wells

Women's singles

The 2022 tournament was organized as a women's singles event and was played on 8 March 2022 in honor of International Women's Day. The event was held at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden for the second time, ahead of the 2022 Indian Wells Masters. The eight-player field originally included Paula Badosa, Leylah Fernandez, Simona Halep, Ons Jabeur, Barbora Krejčíková, Naomi Osaka, Aryna Sabalenka, and Maria Sakkari. Amanda Anisimova later replaced Krejčíková after she withdrew following an elbow injury. Anisimova won the event and claimed US$150,000 in prize money.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Simona Halep 7
Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka 10
Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka 5
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari 10
Tie Break Tens  Ons Jabeur 6
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari 10
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari 7
Tie Break Tens  Amanda Anisimova 10
Tie Break Tens  Leylah Fernandez 3
Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa 10
Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa 6
Tie Break Tens  Amanda Anisimova 10
Tie Break Tens  Amanda Anisimova 10
Tie Break Tens  Naomi Osaka 3

2023: Indian Wells

Mixed doubles

The 2023 tournament was organized as the event's first mixed doubles tournament and was played on 7 March 2023. It was held at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, ahead of the 2023 Indian Wells Open. Emma Raducanu was scheduled to play with Cameron Norrie but withdrew before the tournament. The eight-team field included:

Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari
Tie Break Tens  Stefanos Tsitsipas
12
Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa
Tie Break Tens  Cameron Norrie
10
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari
Tie Break Tens  Stefanos Tsitsipas
7
Tie Break Tens  Iga Świątek
Tie Break Tens  Hubert Hurkacz
10
Tie Break Tens  Leylah Fernandez
Tie Break Tens  Félix Auger-Aliassime
6
Tie Break Tens  Iga Świątek
Tie Break Tens  Hubert Hurkacz
10
Tie Break Tens  Iga Świątek
Tie Break Tens  Hubert Hurkacz
8
Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz
10
Tie Break Tens  Ons Jabeur
Tie Break Tens  Casper Ruud
10
Tie Break Tens  Jessica Pegula
Tie Break Tens  Tommy Paul
5
Tie Break Tens  Ons Jabeur
Tie Break Tens  Casper Ruud
8
Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz
10
Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz
10
Tie Break Tens  Belinda Bencic
Tie Break Tens  Stan Wawrinka
4

2024: Indian Wells

Mixed doubles

The 2024 tournament was organized as the event's second mixed doubles tournament and was played on 5 March 2024. It was held at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden for a third consecutive year, ahead of the 2024 Indian Wells Open.

Before the tournament, Jessica Pegula was partnered with Tommy Paul and Elena Rybakina was partnered with Andrey Rublev; both Pegula and Rybakina withdrew and were replaced by Sloane Stephens and Maria Sakkari, respectively. The eight-team field included:

  1. Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka / Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz (quarterfinals)
  2. Tie Break Tens  Iga Świątek / Tie Break Tens  Hubert Hurkacz (quarterfinals)
  3. Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa / Tie Break Tens  Stefanos Tsitsipas (final)
  4. Tie Break Tens  Caroline Wozniacki / Tie Break Tens  Holger Rune (semifinals)
  5. Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari / Tie Break Tens  Andrey Rublev (quarterfinals)
  6. Tie Break Tens  Sloane Stephens / Tie Break Tens  Tommy Paul (quarterfinals)
  7. Tie Break Tens  Zheng Qinwen / Tie Break Tens  Frances Tiafoe (semifinals)
  8. Tie Break Tens  Emma Navarro / Tie Break Tens  Ben Shelton (champions)
Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Tie Break Tens  Sloane Stephens
Tie Break Tens  Tommy Paul
8
Tie Break Tens  Zheng Qinwen
Tie Break Tens  Frances Tiafoe
10
Tie Break Tens  Caroline Wozniacki
Tie Break Tens  Holger Rune
5
Tie Break Tens  Emma Navarro
Tie Break Tens  Ben Shelton
10
Tie Break Tens  Maria Sakkari
Tie Break Tens  Andrey Rublev
9
Tie Break Tens  Emma Navarro
Tie Break Tens  Ben Shelton
11
Tie Break Tens  Emma Navarro
Tie Break Tens  Ben Shelton
10
Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa
Tie Break Tens  Stefanos Tsitsipas
8
Tie Break Tens  Aryna Sabalenka
Tie Break Tens  Taylor Fritz
7
Tie Break Tens  Caroline Wozniacki
Tie Break Tens  Holger Rune
10
Tie Break Tens  Zheng Qinwen
Tie Break Tens  Frances Tiafoe
3
Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa
Tie Break Tens  Stefanos Tsitsipas
10
Tie Break Tens  Iga Świątek
Tie Break Tens  Hubert Hurkacz
2
Tie Break Tens  Paula Badosa
Tie Break Tens  Stefanos Tsitsipas
10

Media coverage

Each Tie Break Tens tournament is broadcast live around the world. Some of the broadcast partners have included: Sky Sports, Dubai Sports, Canal+, DAZN, Facebook Live, CNN Open Court, presented by Pat Cash, SuperSport, Teledeporte TVE, BeIN Sports, Dave ESPN 2 and ESPN 3, and Tennis Channel.

Sponsors

Past and current sponsors of the tournament include Voss Water, Betway, Tennis.com, Mutua, Rolex, Mercedes, Estrella, Wilson, TransferMate, FILA and Masimo, SlingerBag

See also

Notes

References

Tags:

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