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Alex de Miñaur’s great year started in Acapulco

  • The Australian tennis player’s record during 2023 was 46 wins and 26 losses, which allowed him to enter the Top 10 in January 2024 
  • In 2023 Alex de Miñaur reached five finals, one of which he won.

Mexico City, February 15, 2024.- Tennis player Alex de Miñaur will arrive at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC as the reigning champion after defeating American Tommy Paul last year in a match that was decided in three sets, but that was not the only final the Australian reached, as he was close to lifting four other championships throughout the season to consolidate the best of his career.

After Acapulco, the Australian reached the prelude to four titles, but did not have the same luck as in Mexico. 

In June, the Australian reached the final of the Queen’s Club in London, a tournament that serves as preparation for Wimbledon, where he lost to the Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz after leaving the likes of Andy Murray, Diego Schwartzman, Adrian Mannarino and Holger Rune in the way.

In July he returned to Mexico to take part in the Mifel Tennis Open by Telcel Oppo 2023 in Los Cabos and played in the final match against Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas.

Weeks after Los Cabos, Alex de Miñaur reached the final of the Toronto Masters, but did not have a good match and was defeated by the Italian Jannik Sinner, thus adding his third lost final of the year.

Curiously, in November he faced Sinner again, but now in the Davis Cup Finals held in Malaga, Spain. 

His record during 2023 was 46 wins and 26 losses, which allowed him to enter the Top 10 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings in January and achieve the best position of his career by reaching the 10th step. 

At the beginning of the 2024 season, the 24-year-old Australian player lost in the round of 16 of the Australian Open against German Alexander Zverev; however, in Acapulco he will try to defend his title and continue climbing positions in the ranking.

Eleven Top 20 players will brighten up the XXXI edition of the TELCEL Mexican Open presented by HSBC 2024

  • The tournament will feature four Top 10 players: Alexander Zverev (No. 6), Holger Rune (No. 7), Taylor Fritz (No.9) and Stefanos Tsitsipas (No.10).
  • At the ATP 500 in Acapulco, 11 players from the top 20 of the ranking will play
  • Australian Alex de Miñaur, champion in 2023, will seek to defend his title.

Mexico City, January 30, 2024.- The Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC in its XXXI edition, to be played from February 26 to March 2 in Acapulco, will feature eleven players ranked in the Top 20 of the Pepperstone ATP Rankings and four of them are in the Top 10.

Germany’s Alexander Zverev (No.6), Denmark’s Holger Rune (No.7), American Taylor Fritz (No.9) and Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas (No.10) headline a list of top players who will be present at the Acapulco ATP 500.

This list is joined by Australian Alex de Miñaur (No. 11), current champion of the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC, Norwegian Casper Ruud (No. 12), Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov (No. 13) and Americans Frances Tiafoe (No. 14), Tommy Paul (No. 15) -finalist in the previous edition- and Ben Shelton (No. 16), as well as British Cameron Norrie (No. 19).

“We are very happy to have eleven tennis players in the tournament who are among the top 20 players in the world. It will be a great show and a challenge that we take on with great pleasure at Mextenis, having two competitions in consecutive weeks. Acapulco is the best stop players can make prior to the Indian Wells Masters 1000 and we thank all those who will visit our home in this year of solidarity to put on a great show,” said Alvaro Falla, CEO of Mextenis.

Germany’s Alexander Zverev is a semifinalist at the Australian Open and will again seek the title in Acapulco, which he won in the 2021 edition, while Denmark’s Holger Rune reached a few weeks ago the final of the tournament of Brisbane.

American Taylor Fritz also had a good start to the season this 2024 by reaching the quarterfinals of the Australian Open and for Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas it will be his third appearance at the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC.

Defending champion Alex de Miñaur, 24, also stands out after achieving the best ranking of his career in January. He is among the players who will be in Mexico for two consecutive weeks after confirming his participation in the Cabo Tennis Open as well.

Norwegian Casper Ruud returns to Acapulco, as does Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov, who in the first week of this year lifted the title in the Brisbane tournament, defeating Danish Holger Rune. It is worth mentioning that Dimitrov was already Acapulco champion in the 2014 edition.

Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime (No. 30), winner of five titles on the ATP circuit (Florence, Rotterdam, Antwerp and twice in Basel) will also be part of the main draw of the tournament. Other players completing the list are American Christopher Eubanks (No. 32), Serbian Laslo Djere (No. 34), Italian Matteo Arnaldi (No. 38), Austrian Sebastian Ofner (No. 40) and Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic (No. 41).

The cut off list of players closed at 48th place in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, including Britain’s Daniel Evans (No. 42), Australians Max Purcell (No. 43) and Jordan Thompson (No. 44), Portugal’s Nuno Borges (No. 47) and American Mackenzie McDonald (No.48).

Tiafoe and the battle for the U.S. No. 1 ranking

  • The American is looking to return to the level that took him to the ATP Top 10 in the summer of 2023 and Acapulco is the ideal scenario.

Frances Tiafoe has confessed that reaching the semifinals of the US Open in 2022 is something that holds a special place in his heart. That year he defeated four-time New York champion Rafael Nadal and became the first American to reach that stage since Andy Roddick in 2006.

Since then his career took a complete turn, he became a celebrity in his country, brands wanted to relate to him, several sponsorships were closed, but with the same fame came the pressure to increase his level and take the next 

step. Also a debate resurfaced and has taken on more strength, who could return American tennis to its glory?

There is no doubt that Taylor Fritz has been the most consistent, but his compatriots Tommy Paul, Ben Shelton, Sebastian Korda and of course Big Foe, who at 25 years old has shown that he has the ability to give great stories accompanied by his unmatched charisma. In the second season of Break Point on Netflix he reveals himself, he wants to make his mark as an Arthur Ashe or the Williams sisters.

The popular series that follows several players on the tour makes it clear that Tiafoe is one of the most loved by his peers. At the same time, his compatriots know that they have to have respect for him, which is why there 

is a healthy rivalry between them, who have shared the road to professionalism since they were teenagers.

Frances has been playing since the age of three, made the leap to professional in 2015 and two years later, at the beginning of 2017 he was already among the top 100 of the ATP. Years of ascent followed, where he won his first title in Delray Beach in 2018, there he beat one of his idols, Juan Martin del Potro. He also won the Arthur Ashe Humanitarian Award in 2020.

He got his second and third title in 2023 season in which he won the trophy in Stuttgart on grass and Houston on clay. He remains within the Top 20 of the ATP ranking, but the goal in 2024 is not only to add more titles, but to return to the Top 10 and be the best of his country. 

For this purpose, the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC is one of the venues that could best suit his performance.

Let’s dream of a spectacular week(e)nd in Acapulco with Casper Ruud

  • The Norwegian tennis player shared his ‘Spotify Wrapped’ confirming his taste for the music of Canadian singer ‘The Weeknd’
  • The tournaments in the American continent are going well for the Oslo-born player and he will be looking for a new title in Mexican soil

Mexico City, January 19, 2023.- Casper Ruud’s passion for sports – not only tennis, but also golf – is complemented by his extreme taste for music, especially the music of Canadian singer and producer Abel Makkonen Tesfaye, better known as ‘The Weeknd’.

Each year, the Spotify platform shares a summary (Spotify Wrapped) of what each user listens to most frequently over the past twelve months. In 2023, what the Norwegian tennis player listened to the most was precisely The Weeknd.

On several occasions, the Oslo-born tennis player and winner of 10 titles in the ATP circuit, has shared his taste for music and has uploaded different videos to his social networks enjoying the concerts of the Canadian artist.

Casper Ruud’s love for sports is not limited to tennis, a passion he inherited from his father and coach, Christian Ruud, who until before his son appeared on the ATP circuit, was considered the best Norwegian tennis player in history.

When Christian Ruud retired, he started going to the golf courses and it was in those recreational times that Casper also took a liking to this sport to the extent that at the age of 14 he had to decide whether he would continue his sports career with a racket or with a golf club, we all know how this story ended.

Casper Ruud’s career has been meteoric since that August 2015 when he started scoring in the ATP ranking in the 1645th place, until his best position in his career, climbing up to the number 2 ATP ranking in December 2022.

The tournaments in the American continent are given to the Norwegian tennis player, since the first title in his career he won in Buenos Aires (2020) and he did it again in 2022, he also won in San Diego, California in 2021 and hopefully in 2024 he will be among the contenders for the title in Acapulco.

Rune turns to Becker to boost his level in 2024

  • The young Dane is looking forward to Boris Becker as his coach for 2024

Mexico City, january 17, 2024.- If a tennis legend like Boris Becker is interested in working with you in your 20s, you’re doing something right in your professional career. Holger Rune is one of the youngsters who overcame the status of tennis promise when he beat Novak Djokovic (Paris 2022) at the age of 19 in a Masters 1000 final and went from being outside the Top 100 to making his debut in the ATP Top 10 in less than a year. Three titles and two finals were key.

He closed 2023 with a level recovery after sneaking into the Nitto ATP Finals, but with only one title in the season there were signs that Rune was missing something in his development and teamwork. The answer could be six-time Grand Slam winner Boris Becker of Germany, who has known success since he was a teenager after he became the youngest Wimbledon winner at the age of 17 in 1985.

The two began a trial period in October, but now are enjoying officially their coach-player alliance for the 2024 season. Previously Rune was the pupil of Patrick Mouratoglou since 2016, former coach of Serena Williams, but they ended their relationship in September. Intense on court and with infinite potential, his entourage agrees, the Dane’s personality and mentality can take him far, not for nothing Becker has stated that they will look for his best version. The 55-year-old German coached Djokovic between 2013 and 2016, when he conquered six of his 24 Grand Slams.

On his own style, Rune stated “If everyone was the same, it would be a bit boring.” His rapid rise was perhaps somewhat overshadowed by the precocious success of Carlos Alcaraz, with whom he has an age difference of just six days, but Rune is motivated by such a rivalry in the making “I hope to be like Roger and Rafa. That’s what we’re looking for, to be the best players of all time and the best players we can be.”

Tsitsipas does not renounce his father

  • The Greek changed coaches last year, but decided to return to his father Apostolos Tsitsipas as his coach.

Mexico City, January 12, 2024.- In Mexico we say that “blood calls” when family ties are strengthened and endure despite adversity. This popular saying or Mexican proverb applies very well to what Stefanos Tsitsipas experienced in recent months after concluding the relationship with his father as his coach, starting a new stage with Mark Philippoussis as his coach and weeks later returning to his father Apostolos Tsitsipas.

The father-son bond has been successful since the beginning of his career. At his side, the Greek has managed to win 10 titles, including two championships at the Monte-Carlo Masters 1000 (2020 and 2021) and lifted in 2019 the ATP Finals title in London. The working relationship between Stafanos and Apostolos had a break at the beginning of 2023, but the Greek tennis player, current champion of the Mifel Tennis Open by Telcel Oppo, failed to adapt to the style and training program of Australian Mark Philippoussis, so he decided to return to his “origins”.

Just at the Paris Masters 1000, Stafanos Tsitsipas reached 300 career victories, no small feat for a 25-year- old tennis player. To reach this figure, he owes much to the experience and support of his father from the stands as coach. Since the beginning of his career as a professional in 2016, Tsitsipas had a rapid and sustained rise in the ATP rankings, on October 23, 2017 he entered the Top 100 of the best players in the world and in less than a year (in October 2018) he was already in the group of the best 20 tennis players on the planet. 

Undoubtedly, having the Greek again in Mexican lands will be a show for the fans that will gather in February in Acapulco, and, what better, than accompanied by his father and mentor in his sporting career.

Grigor Dimitrov, maturity, drive and experience.

  • With an explosive rebound between the end of 2023 and the beginning of 2024, the Bulgarian is close to returning to the Top-10.

Mexico City, January 8, 2024 – At 32 years old, Grigor Dimitrov has shown maturity, drive and experience. Proof of this is the explosive rebound between the end of the 2023 season and the beginning of 2024, results with which the Bulgarian is close to returning to the Top 10 of the ATP.

Dimitrov started 2024 with the same upward pace with which he closed 2023 and in the first weekend of the season he claimed the Brisbane ATP 250 title for the second time, defeating Denmark’s Holger Rune 7-6, 6-4 in the final. The tournament opens the season of the men’s circuit, so it is considered as a reference for the first months of activity.

It was Dimitrov’s ninth career title and his first since 2017 when he won the Nitto ATP Finals. That year was his best in terms of titles as he added four, including his first in Brisbane.

Among the tournaments won by Grigor is the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC in 2014. In that final at the Acapulco Open 500 he beat South Africa’s Kevin Anderson in three sets, while in the semifinal he also beat Britain’s Andy Murray in three sets.

Dimitrov has fans in Mexico who will be happy to see his incredible comeback at the age of 32, at the height of his tennis maturity.

In 2024 Dimitrov, born on May 16, 1991 in Haskovo, will play his 17th season in the ATP, the professional tennis circuit where he arrived in 2008 at just 17 years old and in which in November 2017 he reached his best position as world number 3.

This 2024 boasts a rebound in the rankings thanks to the last two Masters In Shanghai he reached the semifinals and in Paris the final, which he lost to Novak Djokovic. The Bulgarian is looking to return to the Top 10.

In detail, it could be said that Dimitrov’s level rose during the second half of 2023, since in the Paris Masters 1000 he also defeated three players with better ranking, the Russian Daniil Medvedev (No.3 ATP), the Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas (No. 6) and the Polish Hubert Hurkacz (No. 9).

With that points won and the title in Brisbane, Grigor advanced in the ATP ranking from 17th to 13th place and with that he returned to the group of the top 15 in the world after five years, since November 2018 he was not in that zone and in that drop of play he reached outside the 70 in the world.

The goal now is to sign a 2024 season better than that of 2023 in which it recorded 44 wins and 22 losses

2023: The year Zverev pushed his own limits.

  • The German tennis player recovered from an ankle injury and is playing in the ATP Finals. 
  • During his recovery, “Sascha” took the opportunity to create his Foundation and encourage children suffering from diabetes to overcome their own limits.

Mexico City, November 15, 2023 – There is no doubt that Alexander Zverev is a star on the court, with 21 titles on the ATP circuit at the age of 26; however, he also has an altruistic facet.  

In August 2022, the Hamburg-born tennis player created his foundation to support children suffering from type 1 diabetes and prevent more people from being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, driven mainly because “Sascha” himself has suffered from this disease (type 1 diabetes) since he was 4 years old.

Tuesday, November 14 marked World Diabetes Day, a date established since 1991 by the World Health Organization (WHO), and to remember this date the German tennis player uploaded a video to his Instagram account sending a motivational message for people who have been diagnosed with this condition to break their own limits and obstacles to achieve their dreams. 

If we are talking about complex moments, this 2023 has not been easy for Zverev in the sporting arena, as an ankle injury kept him out of the circuit for almost seven months. After recovering, he returned to the Top 10 of the ranking and was able to compete in the ATP Finals in Turin, Italy, at the end of the year. 

Throughout this 2023, the German tennis player overcame his injury and overcame his own limits, as the motto of his foundation says: “The only limit is the one you set for yourself”. 

He won two tournaments that helped him climb up the rankings and regain his rhythm of play, the first one in his hometown in Hamburg during the summer, and the second title he won in Chengdu, China last September. 

Surely in Acapulco we will see a “Sascha” eager to add more titles and overcoming his own limits on the court, as well as promoting his initiatives with his Alexander Zverev Foundation.  

Technical data

Name: Alexander Zverev

Age: 26 years old

Date and place of birth: April 20, 1997 in Hamburg, Germany

Current ATP ranking: 7th (as of November 13, 2023)

Best ATP ranking: 2nd

Coach: Alexander Zverev (father)

ATP titles: 21 championships

MEXTENIS renews its commitment to acapulco

  • MEXTENIS RENEWS ITS COMMITMENT TO ACAPULCO AND MAINTAINS THE “ABIERTO MEXICANO TELCEL PRESENTADO POR HSBC”IN THE PORT FOR 2024

Acapulco, Guerrero, December 14, 2023}

With great enthusiasm and optimism, we are pleased to announce that the “Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC”will take place in Acapulco from February 24 to March 2, 2024. This event marks a significant milestone in the reconstruction and revitalization of this iconic city. By hosting the tournament in Acapulco, we not only promote tennis but also have a positive impact on the local economy and community, bringing vitality to sectors such as tourism, transportation, gastronomy, and hospitality, including job creation in the region. With this celebration, we reaffirm to the world that Acapulco is open and standing strong.

In the words of Álvaro Falla, tournament director, “We express our recognition and gratitude for the great work and support of the people of Guerrero, the audience that has purchased tickets, all our sponsors for their continuous support, and tennis led by the ATP.”

We also thank all the states and venues that supported us and provided the possibility of holding the tournament in other locations. This support was vital to keep hope alive and make the thirty-first edition possible.

Today, the tournament not only celebrates tennis but also represents the unity and renewal necessary to build an even greater Acapulco. Together, we will make it shine again.

Welcome to the “Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC! ”

Always with you, Acapulco!

MEXTENIS

Organizing Committee of the “Abierto Mexicano Telcel presentado por HSBC

MEXTENIS Press Release

Mexico City, Mexico, November 8, 2023

To our fans,

Acapulco needs our help more than ever after the devastating passage of Hurricane Otis. The
impact of this disaster on the city and its inhabitants is immense, and as the Mextenis family,
we are committed to providing long-term support to contribute to its recovery. We are grateful
for the support of our sponsors and together with the government authorities we will work
towards Acapulco’s recovery.

This commitment to the destination is not ephemeral; it is a solid bond that we have forged since
2001, and we reaffirm it in these difficult times. We recognize the importance of this city in the
history of our tournament and in the lives of its residents.

Last Monday, November 6, executives and a Mextenis team visited the facilities of the GNP Seguros
Arena, owned by Grupo Mundo Imperial and where the Abierto Mexicano Telcel presented by HSBC
is held, to review the conditions in which it is located.

After the visit, Mextenis will meet with all the parties involved to study, evaluate and analyze the
different scenarios to hold the XXXI edition of the tournament in 2024 and will announce a decision
as soon as possible.

Also, during this tour in Acapulco, the first aid truck was delivered with the proceeds from the collection
centers established by Mextenis, which will be sent continuously. The collection centers continue to
receive canned goods, bottled water, powdered milk, as well as personal hygiene and cleaning items,
medicines and clothing.

Also remember the alliance we have with the organization Construyendo to receive donations
at the following link:

Or:
Construyendo Comunidades Integrales AC
Banco Santander : Cuenta 014180655063052440

Mextenis is a community united by the passion for the white sport and a deep affection for Acapulco, our home.  
#FuerzaAcapulco #UnidosXAca.

Thank you very much

Organizing Committee

Mextenis

CONTACT

info@abiertomexicanodetenis.com

P. de los Tamarindos 400 A,
B. de las Lomas, C.P. 05120,
Cuajimalpa, CDMX.

+52 55 2167 3232


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