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DATE: 12-18 February, 2018
SURFACE: Clay
PRIZE MONEY: $568,190 US
FIELD SIZE: 28
DEFENDING CHAMPION: Alexandr Dolgopolov
Seeds:
TBA
The Tournament:
Originally the "Argentine Championships," the tournament dates back to 1921. Now the Argentina Open presentado por Buenos Aires Ciudad is the second stop of the Latin American "Golden Swing", and is contested on clay at the Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club, known as the "Cathedral of Argentinean tennis". Argentine champions include Guillermo Coria, Gaston Gaudio, Juan Monaco and David Nalbandian.
About Buenos Aires:
It's easy to sell Buenos Aires on its major charms: beautiful 19th C. architecture, wide boulevards...Paris and Madrid with a South American spin; to swoon over the Tango, and the frankly very beautiful inhabitants. It has a quaint cafe life, and an historic football rivalry (Boca v. River.) But Buenos Aires has a very modern side, too. Palermo is the center of vibrant film and fashion communities. And then there's the Bomba del Tiempo, a weekly Monday night drum festival in an old warehouse that offers not much more than a cold beer, a hard floor to stand on - and a transcendental musical experience. For all of its Old World elegance, BA also has a lot of 21st C. flair that is all its own.
SURFACE: Clay
PRIZE MONEY: $568,190 US
FIELD SIZE: 28
DEFENDING CHAMPION: Alexandr Dolgopolov
Seeds:
TBA
The Tournament:
Originally the "Argentine Championships," the tournament dates back to 1921. Now the Argentina Open presentado por Buenos Aires Ciudad is the second stop of the Latin American "Golden Swing", and is contested on clay at the Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club, known as the "Cathedral of Argentinean tennis". Argentine champions include Guillermo Coria, Gaston Gaudio, Juan Monaco and David Nalbandian.
About Buenos Aires:
It's easy to sell Buenos Aires on its major charms: beautiful 19th C. architecture, wide boulevards...Paris and Madrid with a South American spin; to swoon over the Tango, and the frankly very beautiful inhabitants. It has a quaint cafe life, and an historic football rivalry (Boca v. River.) But Buenos Aires has a very modern side, too. Palermo is the center of vibrant film and fashion communities. And then there's the Bomba del Tiempo, a weekly Monday night drum festival in an old warehouse that offers not much more than a cold beer, a hard floor to stand on - and a transcendental musical experience. For all of its Old World elegance, BA also has a lot of 21st C. flair that is all its own.