Tournaments
Every tournament, every draw
Grand Slams, Masters 1000, ATP and WTA tour events. Venues, surfaces, draws, historical champions.
The professional tennis calendar spans 11 months and four surfaces. Grand Slams are the defining events: two weeks, best of five sets for men, best of three for women, on hard court, clay, grass, and hard court again. Between the four Slams, the Masters 1000 series provides the next tier of competition, followed by ATP 500, ATP 250, WTA 1000, WTA 500, and WTA 250 events. Each tournament has a surface, a draw size, a court speed rating, and a statistical personality shaped by decades of results.
Grand Slam profiles
Australian Open
Hard (GreenSet)
- Venue
- Melbourne Park
- Dates
- January
- Champion
- Player A
Roland Garros
Clay (terre battue)
- Venue
- Stade Roland Garros
- Dates
- May -- June
- Champion
- Player C
Wimbledon
Grass
- Venue
- All England Club
- Dates
- June -- July
- Champion
- Player A
US Open
Hard (DecoTurf)
- Venue
- Flushing Meadows
- Dates
- Aug -- Sep
- Champion
- Upcoming
Wimbledon: the data
The Championships at the All England Club have been played since 1877, making Wimbledon the oldest tennis tournament in the world. Grass produces the fastest court speed rating of any Grand Slam surface: lower bounce, less time for the returner, and the highest ace frequency of any venue on tour.
The average match duration at Wimbledon is 2h 04m -- the shortest of any Slam. This is a direct consequence of surface speed. Roland Garros, at 2h 38m, reflects the opposite: clay slows the ball, extends rallies, and turns every service game into a physical negotiation.
SW19 remains the spiritual home of tennis. The data confirms what tradition suggests: grass rewards the serve, punishes the returner, and produces the most dramatic tiebreaks in the sport.
“147 years of Wimbledon. Every champion. Every number.”
Wimbledon in numbers
1877 -- first Championships
14,979 -- Centre Court capacity
Fast -- court speed rating
2h 04m -- average match duration
4 -- unseeded champions in history
Masters 1000 events
Indian Wells
Hard
- Venue
- Indian Wells Tennis Garden
- Dates
- March
- Champion
- Player B
Miami Open
Hard
- Venue
- Hard Rock Stadium
- Dates
- March
- Champion
- Player A
Monte Carlo
Clay
- Venue
- Monte-Carlo Country Club
- Dates
- April
- Champion
- Player C
Madrid Open
Clay
- Venue
- Caja Mágica
- Dates
- April -- May
- Champion
- Player C
Rome Masters
Clay
- Venue
- Foro Italico
- Dates
- May
- Champion
- Player C
Paris Masters
Indoor hard
- Venue
- Accor Arena
- Dates
- October -- November
- Champion
- Player D
Season calendar
The full 2026 tour calendar below covers Grand Slams, Masters 1000, and selected ATP/WTA events. Sort by date, surface, or category to plan your viewing or research.
| Date | Tournament | Surface | Category | City | Draw |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | Australian Open | Hard | Grand Slam | Melbourne | 128 |
| Mar | Indian Wells | Hard | Masters 1000 | Indian Wells | 96 |
| Mar | Miami Open | Hard | Masters 1000 | Miami | 96 |
| Apr | Monte Carlo | Clay | Masters 1000 | Monte Carlo | 56 |
| Apr | Madrid Open | Clay | Masters 1000 | Madrid | 96 |
| May | Rome Masters | Clay | Masters 1000 | Rome | 96 |
| May | Roland Garros | Clay | Grand Slam | Paris | 128 |
| Jun | Queen's Club | Grass | ATP 500 | London | 32 |
| Jul | Wimbledon | Grass | Grand Slam | London | 128 |
| Aug | US Open | Hard | Grand Slam | New York | 128 |
| Oct | Shanghai Masters | Hard | Masters 1000 | Shanghai | 96 |
| Nov | Paris Masters | Indoor hard | Masters 1000 | Paris | 48 |
The calendar reveals the rhythm of professional tennis: a hard-court opening in January, the European clay swing from April to June, a brief grass-court window in June-July, and a return to hard courts for the North American and Asian swings. Each surface transition reshuffles the competitive hierarchy.
“The Grand Slam venue profiles are the most complete I've seen anywhere. Court speed ratings, historical champions, match duration averages -- it's all there.”