Grand Prix tennis circuit
The Grand Prix tennis circuit was a professional tennis tour for male players that existed from 1970 through 1989. The Grand Prix and World Championship Tennis were the two predecessors to the current tour for male players, the ATP Tour, with the Grand Prix being more prominent.
Background
- The National Tennis League, run by George McCall and Fred Podesta.
- *Rod Laver, Roy Emerson, Ken Rosewall, Andrés Gimeno, Pancho Gonzales, and Fred Stolle
- World Championship Tennis, run by David F. Dixon, Albert G. Hill Jr., and Lamar Hunt.
- *Handsome Eight: John Newcombe, Tony Roche, Niki Pilić, Roger Taylor, Pierre Barthès, Butch Buchholz, Cliff Drysdale, and Dennis Ralston
Formation of the Grand Prix
When only a few contract players showed up for the 1970 French Open, the International Lawn Tennis Federation approved Kramer's Grand Prix proposal. In April 1970, its president Ben Barnett announced the creation of the Grand Prix circuit, on an experimental basis during its first year.
ILTF—WCT rivalry and the Association of Tennis Professionals
The first World Championship Tennis tournament was held 1-3 February 1968 in Kansas City, U. S. The first NTL tournament was held 18-21 March 1968 in São Paulo, Brazil. In July 1970, the WCT absorbed the NTL. In 1971, WCT ran a twenty-tournament circuit with the year-ending WCT Finals held in November. At the end of 1970, a panel of journalists had ranked the best players in the world. The best thirty-two men based on this ranking were invited to play the 1971 WCT circuit, which included Ilie Năstase, Stan Smith, Jan Kodeš, Željko Franulović, and Clark Graebner.The Australian Open was part of the WCT circuit while the French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open were Grand Prix events. The conflict between the ILTF and WCT was so strong that Rosewall, Gimeno, Laver, Emerson, and other WCT players boycotted the 1971 US Open. The third professional circuit that year was the U. S. Indoor Circuit run by Bill Riordan, the future manager of Jimmy Connors.
In July 1971, the ITLF voted to ban all WCT contract professionals from competing in ITLF tournaments and from using ITLF facilities from the beginning of 1972 onwards. The 1972 editions of the French Open and the Wimbledon Championships excluded all contract professional players. Then in April 1972, the ITLF and WCT agreed to divide the 1973 tour into a WCT circuit that ran from January through May and a Grand Prix circuit that ran for the rest of the year. The conflict between the ITLF and WCT led all tennis players to attend the 1972 US Open where they agreed to form their own syndicate, the Association of Tennis Professionals, through the efforts of Jack Kramer, Donald Dell, and Cliff Drysdale.
In 1973, there were four rival professional circuits: the WCT circuit battled with the U. S. Indoor Circuit from January to April and the Grand Prix until July; both tours competed with the "European Spring Circuit" until June.
Integration and the end
The WCT and Grand Prix circuits were separate until 1978, when the Grand Prix circuit integrated the WCT circuit. In 1982, the WCT circuit split from the Grand Prix again and created a more complex WCT ranking, similar to the ATP ranking. The split was short-lived, however, and in 1985 the Grand Prix absorbed the four remaining WCT tournaments.During the 1988 US Open the ATP, led by then-World No. 1 Mats Wilander, staged an impromptu meeting known as the "Parking Lot Press Conference" during failed negotiations with the MTC over the organisation of the Grand Prix and key issues such as player fatigue. During this press conference, the ATP declared that it would be starting its own tour in 1990, meaning that the 1989 Grand Prix would effectively be its last.
Governance
The governance of the Grand Prix was led by the Men's International Professional Tennis Council from 1974 through 1989. The MIPTC's duties included imposing fines for violations of its Code of Conduct, drug testing, and administrating the Grand Prix circuit. It also moved the Australian Open from its December date - which had been adopted in 1977 so that it could be included in the Grand Prix points system – to January for the 1987 edition so that the Grand Prix Masters could be held in December from 1986 onwards. It failed, however, to prevent the number of tournaments on the Grand Prix circuit from growing, with 48 being held in 1974 compared to 75 in 1989.Sponsors and Grand Prix tour names
Based on USLTA Tennis Yearbooks and Guides and World of Tennis yearbooks the history of sponsors is as follows:- 1970 Pepsi-Cola Grand Prix
- 1971 Pepsi-Cola Grand Prix
- 1972 Commercial Union Assurance Grand Prix
- 1973 Commercial Union Assurance Grand Prix
- 1974 Commercial Union Assurance Grand Prix
- 1975 Commercial Union Assurance Grand Prix
- 1976 Commercial Union Assurance Grand Prix
- 1977 Colgate-Palmolive Grand Prix
- 1978 Colgate-Palmolive Grand Prix
- 1979 Colgate-Palmolive Grand Prix
- 1980 Volvo Grand Prix
- 1981 Volvo Grand Prix
- 1982 Volvo Grand Prix
- 1983 Volvo Grand Prix
- 1984 Volvo Grand Prix
- 1985 Nabisco Grand Prix
- 1986 Nabisco Grand Prix
- 1987 Nabisco Grand Prix
- 1988 Nabisco Grand Prix
- 1989 Nabisco Grand Prix
Formation of the ATP Tour
Grand Prix season-end rankings
NB: All rankings were calculated using the Grand Prix points system and do not necessarily reflect the ATP rankings at the same time.1970
- 1. Cliff Richey
- 2. Arthur Ashe
- 3. Ken Rosewall
- 4. Rod Laver
- 5. Stan Smith
- 6. Željko Franulović
- 7. John Newcombe
- 8. Jan Kodeš
- 9. Tony Roche
- 10. Bob Carmichael
- 1. Stan Smith
- 2. Ilie Năstase
- 3. Željko Franulović
- 4. Jan Kodeš
- 5. Cliff Richey
- 6. John Newcombe
- 7. Pierre Barthès
- 8. Ken Rosewall
- 9. Clark Graebner
- 10. Tom Gorman
- 1. Ilie Năstase
- 2. Stan Smith
- 3. Manuel Orantes
- 4. Jan Kodeš
- 5. Andrés Gimeno
- 6. Bob Hewitt
- 7. Jimmy Connors
- 8. Tom Gorman
- 9. Andrew Pattison
- 10. Patrick Proisy
- 1. Ilie Nästase
- 2. John Newcombe
- 3. Tom Okker
- 4. Jimmy Connors
- 5. Manuel Orantes
- 6. Jan Kodeš
- 7. Stan Smith
- 8. Tom Gorman
- 9. Björn Borg
- 10. Arthur Ashe
- 1. Guillermo Vilas
- 2. Jimmy Connors
- 3. Manuel Orantes
- 4. Björn Borg
- 5. Raúl Ramírez
- 6. Ilie Năstase
- 7. Onny Parun
- 8. Harold Solomon
- 9. Arthur Ashe
- 10. Stan Smith
1975
- 1. Guillermo Vilas
- 2. Manuel Orantes
- 3. Björn Borg
- 4. Arthur Ashe
- 5. Ilie Năstase
- 6. Jimmy Connors
- 7. Raúl Ramírez
- 8. Adriano Panatta
- 9. Harold Solomon
- 10. Eddie Dibbs
- 1. Raúl Ramírez
- 2. Manuel Orantes
- 3. Jimmy Connors
- 4. Eddie Dibbs
- 5. Harold Solomon
- 6. Guillermo Vilas
- 7. Roscoe Tanner
- 8. Wojciech Fibak
- 9. Brian Gottfried
- 10. Björn Borg
- 1. Guillermo Vilas
- 2. Brian Gottfried
- 3. Björn Borg
- 4. Manuel Orantes
- 5. Eddie Dibbs
- 6. Roscoe Tanner
- 7. Raúl Ramírez
- 8. Jimmy Connors
- 9. Vitas Gerulaitis
- 10. Harold Solomon
- 1. Jimmy Connors
- 2. Björn Borg
- 3. Eddie Dibbs
- 4. Raúl Ramirez
- 5. Harold Solomon
- 6. John McEnroe
- 7. Guillermo Vilas
- 8. Brian Gottfried
- 9. Corrado Barazzutti
- 10. Arthur Ashe
- 1. John McEnroe
- 2. Björn Borg
- 3. Jimmy Connors
- 4. Guillermo Vilas
- 5. Vitas Gerulaitis
- 6. Roscoe Tanner
- 7. José Higueras
- 8. Harold Solomon
- 9. Eddie Dibbs
- 10. Víctor Pecci
1980
- 1. John McEnroe
- 2. Ivan Lendl
- 3. Jimmy Connors
- 4. Björn Borg
- 5. Gene Mayer
- 6. Harold Solomon
- 7. Guillermo Vilas
- 8. José Luis Clerc
- 9. Eliot Teltscher
- 10. Brian Teacher
- 1. Ivan Lendl
- 2. John McEnroe
- 3. Jimmy Connors
- 4. José Luis Clerc
- 5. Guillermo Vilas
- 6. Björn Borg
- 7. Roscoe Tanner
- 8. Eliot Teltscher
- 9. Vitas Gerulaitis
- 10. Yannick Noah
- 1. Jimmy Connors
- 2. Guillermo Vilas
- 3. Ivan Lendl
- 4. John McEnroe
- 5. Mats Wilander
- 6. Vitas Gerulaitis
- 7. José Higueras
- 8. Johan Kriek
- 9. Andrés Gómez
- 10. Steve Denton
- 1. Mats Wilander
- 2. Ivan Lendl
- 3. John McEnroe
- 4. Jimmy Connors
- 5. Yannick Noah
- 6. Jimmy Arias
- 7. José Higueras
- 8. Andrés Gómez
- 9. José Luis Clerc
- 10. Eliot Teltscher
- 1. John McEnroe
- 2. Jimmy Connors
- 3. Ivan Lendl
- 4. Mats Wilander
- 5. Andrés Gómez
- 6. Joakim Nyström
- 7. Henrik Sundström
- 8. Eliot Teltscher
- 9. Anders Järryd
- 10. Tomáš Šmíd
1985
- 1. Ivan Lendl
- 2. John McEnroe
- 3. Mats Wilander
- 4. Stefan Edberg
- 5. Boris Becker
- 6. Jimmy Connors
- 7. Yannick Noah
- 8. Anders Järryd
- 9. Johan Kriek
- 10. Joakim Nyström
- 1. Ivan Lendl
- 2. Boris Becker
- 3. Stefan Edberg
- 4. Joakim Nyström
- 5. Yannick Noah
- 6. Mats Wilander
- 7. Henri Leconte
- 8. Andrés Gómez
- 9. Jimmy Connors
- 10. Miloslav Mečíř
- 1. Ivan Lendl
- 2. Stefan Edberg
- 3. Mats Wilander
- 4. Miloslav Mečíř
- 5. Boris Becker
- 6. Jimmy Connors
- 7. Pat Cash
- 8. Brad Gilbert
- 9. Tim Mayotte
- 10. Andrés Gómez
- 1. Mats Wilander
- 2. Boris Becker
- 3. Stefan Edberg
- 4. Andre Agassi
- 5. Ivan Lendl
- 6. Henri Leconte
- 7. Jimmy Connors
- 8. Tim Mayotte
- 9. Jakob Hlasek
- 10. Kent Carlsson
- 1. Ivan Lendl
- 2. Boris Becker
- 3. Stefan Edberg
- 4. Brad Gilbert
- 5. John McEnroe
- 6. Michael Chang
- 7. Andre Agassi
- 8. Aaron Krickstein
- 9. Alberto Mancini
- 10. Jay Berger
Grand Prix circuit wins by player
Name | Titles | |
1. | Ivan Lendl | 5 |
2. | John McEnroe | 3 |
2. | Guillermo Vilas | 3 |
4. | Jimmy Connors | 2 |
4. | Ilie Nastase | 2 |
4. | Mats Wilander | 2 |
7. | Raúl Ramírez | 1 |
7. | Cliff Richey | 1 |
7. | Stan Smith | 1 |