Amateur tournaments The Four Majors The four majors or
Grand Slam tournaments, the four biggest competitions on the tennis circuit, are
Wimbledon, the
US Open, the
French Open, and the
Australian Open. Since the mid-1920s they became and have remained the more prestigious events in tennis. Winning these four tournaments in the same year is called the Calendar Grand Slam (a term borrowed from
bridge).
1877: Wimbledon The Championships, Wimbledon, were founded by the
All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in 1877 to raise money for the club. The first Championships were contested by 22 men and the winner received a Silver Gilt Cup proclaiming the winner to be "The All England Lawn Tennis Club Single Handed Champion of the World". The first Championships culminated a significant debate on how to standardize the rules. The following year, it was recognized as the official British Championships, although it was open to international competitors. In 1884 the Ladies Singles and Gentlemen's Doubles Championships were inaugurated, followed by the Ladies and Mixed Doubles in 1913.
Name 1877: The Championships
Surface 1877:
Grass Venue change 1877: Worple Road,
Wimbledon 1922: Church Road,
Wimbledon 1881: U.S. Open Tennis was first played in the U.S. on a grass court set up on the Estate of Col. William Appleton in
Nahant, Massachusetts by
James Dwight,
Richard Dudley Sears and Fred Sears in 1874. In 1881, the desire to play tennis competitively led to the establishment of tennis clubs. The U.S. National Men's Singles Championship, now the
US Open, was first held in 1881 at
Newport, Rhode Island. The U.S. National Women's Singles Championships were first held in 1887 in Philadelphia. The tournament was made officially one of the tennis 'Majors' from 1924 by the
International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF).
Name change 1881: U.S. National Championship 1968: U.S. Open
Surface change 1881:
Grass 1975:
Clay Har-Tru 1978:
Hard DecoTurf '''Venue change (men's championship)''' 1881:
Newport 1915:
Forest Hills 1921:
Germantown 1924: Forest Hills 1978:
Flushing Meadows 1891/1925: French Open Tennis was predominantly a sport of the English-speaking world, dominated by Great Britain and the United States. It was also popular in France, where the
French Open dates to 1891 as the Championat de France International de Tennis. This tournament was not recognised as a Major or Grand Slam tournament until it was opened to all nationalities in 1925.
Name change 1891: Championnat de France 1925: Championnats Internationaux de France 1928: Tournoi de Roland Garros
Surface change 1891:
Clay and Sand 1909: Clay
Venue change 1891–1908: shared by Tennis Club de Paris/Ile de Puteaux, Paris/Racing Club de France 1909: Societe Athletique de la Villa Primrose, Bordeaux 1910: Racing Club de France, Paris 1925: Stade Français, Paris 1926: Racing Club de France, Paris 1927: Stade Français, Paris 1928:
Stade Roland Garros, Paris
1905: Australian Open The
Australian Open was first played in 1905 as The Australasian (Australia and New Zealand) Championships. Because of its geographic remoteness, historically, the event did not gain attendance from the top tennis players. It became one of the major tennis tournaments starting in 1924 (designated by the ILTF). In 1927, because of New Zealand tennis authorities releasing their commitments to the tournament, it became known as the Australian Championships. For most of the 1970s and the early 1980s, the event lacked participation from top ranked tennis professionals. Since its move to
Melbourne Park in 1988, the Australian Open has gained the popularity of the other three majors.
Name change 1905: Australasian Championships 1927: Australian Championships 1969: Australian Open
Surface change 1905:
Grass 1988:
Hard Rebound Ace 2008: Hard
Plexicushion 2020: Hard
GreenSet Venue change 1905–1923: alternated irregularly between
Melbourne,
Brisbane,
Sydney,
Perth (3 events each),
Adelaide (2 events),
Christchurch, and
Hastings (1 event each) 1924–1955: alternated cyclically between Melbourne, Sydney, and Adelaide (9 events each) 1956–1969: alternated cyclically between Brisbane, Melbourne (4 events each), Sydney, and Adelaide (3 events each) 1970: White City Tennis Club, Sydney 1972:
Kooyong 1988:
Melbourne Park The Davis Cup In 1898,
Dwight F. Davis of the Harvard University tennis team designed a tournament format with the idea of challenging the British to a tennis showdown. The first match, between the
United States and
Great Britain was held in
Boston, Massachusetts in
1900. The American team, of which Dwight Davis was a part, surprised the British by winning the first three matches. By
1905 the tournament had expanded to include
Belgium,
Austria,
France, and
Australasia, a combined team from Australia and New Zealand that competed jointly until
1913. The tournament initially was known as the International Lawn Tennis Challenge. It was renamed the Davis Cup following the death of Dwight Davis in 1945. The tournament has vastly expanded and, on its 100th anniversary in 1999, 130 nations competed.
International Tennis Federation 1913 also saw 12 national tennis associations agree at a Paris conference to form the
International Lawn Tennis Federation (ILTF), renamed in 1977 as the current
International Tennis Federation (ITF). The rules the association promulgated in 1924 have remained remarkably stable in the ensuing century, the one major change being the addition of the tie-break system designed by
James Van Alen. The same year, tennis withdrew from the Olympics after the 1924 Games but returned 60 years later as a 21-and-under demonstration event in 1984. This reinstatement was credited by the efforts by the then ITF President
Philippe Chatrier, ITF General Secretary David Gray and ITF Vice President Pablo Llorens as well as support from IOC President
Juan Antonio Samaranch. The success of the event was overwhelming, and the IOC decided to reintroduce tennis as a full medal sport at Seoul in 1988.
The Fed Cup The idea of a Davis Cup-style tournament for national women's teams is surprisingly old—it was first proposed in 1919 by
Hazel Hotchkiss Wightman. After she was turned down, she donated a trophy in 1923 that would be known as the
Wightman Cup, awarded in an annual match between the two strongest women's tennis nations of the time, the United States and Great Britain. Wightman's original idea for a worldwide women's team tournament would bear fruit more than 40 years later in 1962, when
Nell Hopman persuaded the ITF to begin sponsoring such an event. The first Federation Cup was played in
1963 as part of the ITF's 50th anniversary celebrations; it involved 16 countries and was played over one week. By the 1990s, over 70 nations competed each year, and regional qualifiers were introduced in
1992. In
1995, the ITF introduced a new Davis Cup-style format for the competition and rechristened it the Fed Cup.
The professional circuit In 1926, promoter
C.C. Pyle established the first professional tour with a group of American and French players playing exhibition matches to paying audiences. The most notable early professionals were American
Vinnie Richards and Frenchwoman
Suzanne Lenglen. Players turning pro could not compete in the major (amateur) tournaments. Before the Open Era, the leading professional players were under contract with a professional promoter who controlled their appearances. For example, in 1926, Lenglen and Richards toured North America along with
Paul Féret and
Mary K. Browne under contract to Charles C. Pyle. The main events of the professional circuit comprised head-to-head competition and by-invitation Pro Championships, which were the equivalent of the Grand Slam tournaments on the professional circuit. Suzanne Lenglen was the leading player in the first year of the professional circuit, and after she retired in February 1927, few female players played on the professional circuit before the Open Era.
Pro tours In the years before the Open Era, professionals often played more frequently on head-to-head tours than in tournaments because tours paid much better than tournaments and the number of professional tournaments was small. For example,
Fred Perry earned U.S. $91,000 ($ today) in a 1937 North American tour against
Ellsworth Vines but won only U.S. $450 ($) for his 1938 victory at the
U.S. Pro Tennis Championships. Vines probably never entered a tournament in 1937 and 1938. In 1937, Vines played 70 matches on two tours and no tournament matches. Even in the 1950s, some professionals continued to play tour matches. During his first five months as a professional (January through May 1957),
Ken Rosewall played 76 matches on a tour against
Pancho Gonzales but only 9 tournament matches. Joe McCauley determined that for 1952, only 7 professional tournaments were played by the top international players, and 2 other professional tournaments (the British Pro and the German Pro) were reserved for domestic players. Only during the 1960s did professional tournaments become more significant than tours.
Pro Championships (Pro Slams) In addition to head-to-head events several annual professional tournaments were called championship tournaments. The most prestigious was usually the
Wembley Championship, held at the
Wembley Arena in England, played between 1934 and 1990. The oldest was the
U.S. Pro Tennis Championships, played between 1927 and 1999. Between 1954 and 1962, it was played indoors in Cleveland and was called the World Professional Championships. The third major tournament was the
French Pro Championship, played between 1930 and 1968. The British and American championships continued into the Open Era but devolved to the status of minor tournaments after the late 1960s. The
Tournament of Champions was held between 1957 and 1959, the 1957 Australian editions taking place in Sydney White City and Melbourne Kooyong, while the U.S. editions in 1957, 1958 and 1959 took place at
Forest Hills, Queens. There was also the
Wimbledon Pro tournament held in August 1967, the first tournament where professional tennis players were allowed to play at Wimbledon. ==Open Era==