Ultimate Tennis Showdown

The Ultimate Tennis Showdown (UTS) is an international individual tennis league that was founded in 2020. The competition was organized by tennis coach Patrick Mouratoglou and businessman Alex Popyrin, father of professional tennis player Alexei Popyrin, in response to the disruption of the tennis season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

Ultimate Tennis Showdown
Tournament information
Founded2020 (2020)
LocationBiot, France (UTS 1-2, 4),
Antwerp, Belgium (UTS 3),
Los Angeles, United States (UTS 5),
Frankfurt, Germany (UTS 6),
Seoul, South Korea (UTS 7)
SurfaceHard – outdoors
Websitehttps://utslive.tv/

The first three events were held in 2020; the first two were organized at the Mouratoglou Academy in Biot near Nice and the third was held in Antwerp. In 2021, UTS returned to the Mouratoglou Academy for its fourth edition. After a two-year absence, UTS returned in July 2023 with a series of three events in the United States, Germany, and South Korea, designed to culminate in a new "Grand Final" at the end of the season.

All events use a modified scoring format, with matches divided into timed quarters. Among the features UTS has built into the tournament to differentiate the game are "power-up cards" that can affect the amount of points a player can accrue within a quarter.

Format

UTS matches use a different format in comparison to traditional rules, including matches being divided into timed quarters rather than sets, a 15-second shot clock for serves and the ability to take a coaching timeout once per-set, and "cards" — which allow players to affect the game (such as taking away the opponent's second serve).[2] Until UTS 4, even if a player had a majority in quarters, all 4 quarters were played for averaging purposes. If two players are equal in the amount of quarters won, a 'sudden death' is played, where the first player to win two consecutive points wins the match. Introduced in UTS 4, players only have one serve per point, where lets are played; and 'KO Mode', where if a player is leading by 10 points in the quarter, it is declared over.[3]

The UTS also does not enforce a code of conduct.[4][5][6]

Past results

Men

Edition Champions Runners-up Score
UTS 1 (2020)Italy Matteo Berrettini
The Hammer
Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas
The Greek God
16–15, 15–12, 12–14, 8–15, 3–2
UTS 2 (2020)Germany Alexander Zverev
The Lion
Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime
The Panther
19–10, 11–13, 10–18, 18–8, 3–1
UTS 3 (2020)Australia Alex de Minaur
The Demon
France Richard Gasquet
The Virtuoso
24–9, 15–14, 20–10
UTS 4 (2021)France Corentin Moutet
The Tornado
United States Taylor Fritz
The Hotshot
12–14, 15–11, 13–12, 16–8
UTS 5 (2023)China Wu Yibing
The Great Wall
United States Taylor Fritz (2)
The Hotshot
11–16, 7–20, 12–11, 16–9, 2–0
UTS 6 (2023) Andrey Rublev
Rublo
Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
G-Unit
14–13, 12–17, 11–10, 17–16
UTS 7 (2023)

Women

Edition Champions Runners-up Score
UTS 2 (2020)Russia Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
The Thunder
France Alizé Cornet
The Volcano
16–8, 12–11, 11–14, 9–16, 3–1

UTS 1

The first edition of UTS took place between June 26 and July 5, 2020.

In the first edition, 10 players competed in a round robin format, with the top 4 players advancing to the playoffs. "The Hammer" Matteo Berrettini won the event, defeating "The Greek God" Stefanos Tsitsipas in the final 16–15, 15–12, 12–14, 8–15, 3–2.

Players

Ranking

Below is a table showing the ranking of each competitor at the end of the round robin stage:[7]

UTS Rankings
# Player Record
1  Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE)9–2
2  Richard Gasquet (FRA)7–3
3  Matteo Berrettini (ITA)7–3
4  David Goffin (BEL)5–5
5  Feliciano López (ESP)4–5
6  Elliot Benchetrit (FRA)3–3
7  Corentin Moutet (FRA)3–4
8  Alexei Popyrin (AUS)3–6
9  Dustin Brown (GER)2–6
10  Benoît Paire (FRA)2–7

UTS1 Finals

Semifinals Final
              
1 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 15 13 13
4 Belgium David Goffin 11 11 12
1 Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas 15 12 14 15 2
3 Italy Matteo Berrettini 16 15 12 8 3
2 France Richard Gasquet 8 14 12 13 1
3 Italy Matteo Berrettini 24 12 16 10 2

UTS 2

The second edition of UTS took place between July 30 and August 2, 2020.

Here, 11 players competed. In the group stage, 8 players were placed in two groups of 4 (one was replaced midway through the tournament), where only the top players of each could qualify from each to reach the Final 4 where "The Lion" Alexander Zverev and "The Panther" Félix Auger-Aliassime had already qualified. "The Hammer" Matteo Berrettini was the defending champion in the men's tournament, but chose not to participate. Zverev won the event, defeating Auger-Aliassime in the final 19–10, 11–13, 10–18, 18–8, 3–1.

This was the first edition of UTS to have a women's tournament. 4 players participated in a playoff style format. "The Thunder" Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova defeated "The Volcano" Alizé Cornet in the final 16–8, 12–11, 11–14, 9–16, 3–1.

Group A

Group B

Final

Women's Participants

Group A

"Grigor"
Bulgaria Dimitrov
"The Virtuoso"
France Gasquet
"El Torero"
Spain López
"The Sniper"
Australia Popyrin

"Le Mousquetaire"
France Nicolas Mahut
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"Grigor"
Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
10–15, 10–13, 11–14, 10–18 10–17, 15–14, 16–12, 12–16, [0–2] 14–11, 13–15, 15–14, 12–10
(w/ Mahut)
1–2 3–8 (27%) 148–173 (46%) 3
"The Virtuoso"
France Richard Gasquet
15–10, 13–10, 14–11, 18–10 14–12, 18–14, 18–10, 15–17 15–13, 19–9, 12–16, 13–10
(w/ Popyrin)
3–0 10–2 (83%) 184–142 (56%) 1
"El Torero"
Spain Feliciano López
17–10, 14–15, 12–16, 16–12, [2–0] 12–14, 14–18, 10–18, 17–15 17–8, 11–19, 17–13, 13–12
(w/ Popyrin)
2–1 7–6 (54%) 167–170 (50%) 2
"The Sniper"
Australia Alexei Popyrin

"Le Mousquetaire"
France Nicolas Mahut
11–14, 15–13, 14–15, 10–12
(w/ Mahut)
13–15, 9–19, 16–12, 10–13
(w/ Popyrin)
8–17, 19–11, 13–17, 12–13
(w/ Popyrin)
0–2
0–1
2–6 (25%)
1–3 (25%)
100–117 (46%)
50–51 (50%)
X
4

Group B

"The Rebel"
France Paire
"The Artist"
Germany Brown
"The Tornado"
France Moutet
"El Fuego"
Spain Verdasco
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"The Rebel"
France Benoît Paire
20–15, 21–13, 17–19, 21–14 15–18, 11–18, 8–14 ret. 13–17, 11–19, 14–17, 20–12 1–2 4–6 (40%) 171–176 (49%) 4
"The Artist"
Germany Dustin Brown
15–20, 13–21, 19–17, 14–21 18–12, 13–17, 13–14, 19–9, [2–0] 19–16, 20–13, 16–20, 16–17, [0–2] 1–2 6–8 (43%) 195–197 (50%) 3
"The Tornado"
France Corentin Moutet
18–15, 18–11, 14–8 ret. 12–18, 17–13, 14–13, 9–19, [1–3] 19–13, 13–16, 12–16, 16–13, [3–1] 2–1 8–5 (62%) 162–155 (51%) 1
"El Fuego"
Spain Fernando Verdasco
17–13, 19–11, 17–14, 12–20 16–19, 13–20, 20–16, 17–16, [1-2] 13–19, 16–13, 16–12, 13–16, [2–1] 2–1 8–6 (57%) 189–189 (50%) 2

Men's Finals

Match for Seeding Semifinals Final
  Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime 11 15 12 11 0
  Germany Alexander Zverev 10 14 14 14 2 1 Germany Alexander Zverev 17 10 17 13
4 France Corentin Moutet 12 13 12 11
1 Germany Alexander Zverev 19 11 10 18 3
2 Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime 10 13 18 8 1
3 France Richard Gasquet 19 12 12 7
2 Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime 15 17 20 23

Women's Finals

Semifinals Final
              
  Tunisia Ons Jabeur 14 10 10
  Russia Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 16 15 16
  Russia Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 16 12 11 9 3
France Alizé Cornet 8 11 14 16 1
  France Alizé Cornet 16 16 13
Czech Republic Brenda Fruhvirtová 11 10 12

UTS 3

The third edition of UTS took place from October 16 to October 18, 2020. It had 2 groups of 3 players in a round-robin format, where the top players of each group advanced to the final. The Women's edition did not return.

"The Lion" Alexander Zverev was the defending champion, but decided not to participate.

"The Demon" Alex de Minaur won the event, defeating "The Virtuoso" Richard Gasquet 24–9, 15–14, 20–10 in the final. De Minaur was the first player to win the event without dropping a quarter.

Group A

Group B

Group A

"The Demon"
Australia de Minaur
"The Viper"
United Kingdom Evans
"The Survivor"
Spain Andújar
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"The Demon"
Australia Alex de Minaur
13–12, 23–9, 21–10, 19–13 23–5, 13–11, 17–13, 18–10 2–0 8–0 (100%) 167–83 (67%) 1
"The Viper"
United Kingdom Dan Evans
12–13, 9–23, 10–21, 13–19 14–15, 21–12, 16–17, 15–14, [4–2] 1–1 3–6 (33%) 100–124 (45%) 2
"The Survivor"
Spain Pablo Andújar
5–23, 11–13, 13–17, 10–18 15–14, 12–21, 17–16, 14–15, [2–4] 0–2 2–7 (22%) 97–127 (43%) 3

Group B

"The Hotshot"
United States Fritz
"The Virtuoso"
France Gasquet
"El Torero"
Spain López
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"The Hotshot"
United States Taylor Fritz
15–18, 14–17, 21–12, 19–11, [1–2] 17–15, 16–14, 18–13, 17–15 1–1 6–3 (67%) 137–115 (54%) 2
"The Virtuoso"
France Richard Gasquet
18–15, 17–14, 11–21, 11–19, [2–1] 16–14, 19–11, 17–10, 16–14 2–0 7–2 (78%) 125–122 (51%) 1
"El Torero"
Spain Feliciano López
15–17, 14–16, 13–18, 15–17 14–16, 11–19, 10–17, 14–16 0–2 0–8 (0%) 106–136 (44%) 3

Finals

Final
       
  Australia Alex de Minaur 24 15 20
France Richard Gasquet 9 14 10

UTS 4

The fourth edition of UTS took place on May 24 and 25, 2021.

It was played on the clay courts at Mouratoglou's academy rather than the hard courts. A rule change meant that each player would only have one serve per point. This season also introduced 'KO Mode', where if a player is leading by 10 points, the quarter is declared over.

"The Demon" Alex de Minaur was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.

"The Tornado" Corentin Moutet won the event, defeating "The Hotshot" Taylor Fritz 12–14, 15–11, 13–12, 16–8.

Group A

Group B

Group A

"The Chessmaster"
Russia Medvedev
"The Hotshot"
United States Fritz
"Fogna"
Italy Fognini
"The Tornado"
France Moutet
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"The Chessmaster"
Russia Daniil Medvedev
19–14, 14–15, 13–14, 9–19KO 19–11, 14–12, 18–12 18–11, 13–16, 10–16, 10–18 1–2 5–7 (42%) 157–158 (50%) 3
"The Hotshot"
United States Taylor Fritz
14–19, 15–14, 14–13, 19–9KO 16–14, 12–2, 16–15 11–14, 12–13, 15–14, 11–12 2–1 7–4 (64%) 155–139 (53%) 2
"Fogna"
Italy Fabio Fognini
11-19, 12-14, 12-18 14-16, 2-12, 15-16 3–13KO, 6–16KO, 16–15, 15–13, [2–4] 0–3 2–9 (18%) 106–152 (41%) 4
"The Tornado"
France Corentin Moutet
11–18, 16–13, 16–10, 18–10 14–11, 13–12, 14–15, 12–11 13-3KO, 16-6KO, 15-16, 13-15, [4-2] 3–0 9–4 (69%) 171–140 (55%) 1

Group B

"El Peque"
Argentina Schwartzman
"Grigor"
Bulgaria Dimitrov

"Le Mousquetaire"
France Mahut
"El Tanque"
Chile Garín
"The Bublik Enemy"
Kazakhstan Bublik
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"El Peque"
Argentina Diego Schwartzman
13–14, 12–10, 17–9, 15–10
(w/ Dimitrov)
12–14, 16–6KO, 12–16, 14–11, [2–1] 15–14, 20–10KO, 18–13 3–0 9–3 (75%) 164–127 (56%) 1
"Grigor"
Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov

"Le Mousquetaire"
France Nicolas Mahut
14–13, 10–12, 9–17, 10–15
(w/ Dimitrov)
12–7, 6–16KO, 5–15KO, 9–13
(w/ Dimitrov)
12–13, 13–17, 11–21KO
(w/ Mahut)
0–2
0–1
2–6 (25%)
0–3 (0%)
75–108 (41%)
36–51 (41%)
X
4
"El Tanque"
Chile Cristian Garín
14–12, 6–16KO, 16–12, 11–14, [1–2] 7–12, 16–6KO, 15–5KO, 13–9
(w/ Dimitrov)
15–5KO, 15–13, 16–12 2–1 8–5 (62%) 149–118 (56%) 2
"The Bublik Enemy"
Kazakhstan Alexander Bublik
14–15, 10–20KO, 13–18 13-12, 17-13, 21-11KO
(w/ Mahut
5–15KO, 13–15, 12–16 1–2 3–6 (33%) 118–135 (47%) 3

Finals

Semifinals Final
              
  France Corentin Moutet 18KO 12 16
Chile Cristian Garín 8 11 11
  France Corentin Moutet 12 15 13 16
United States Taylor Fritz 14 11 12 8
  Argentina Diego Schwartzman 14 13 14
United States Taylor Fritz 16 14 17

UTS 5: Los Angeles

After a two-year absence, UTS returned in July 2023 with the fifth edition of the tournament, known as UTS Los Angeles. UTS 5 was held in Los Angeles at the Dignity Health Sports Park between 21 July and 23 July, and was the first edition to be staged outside of Europe. It was the first tournament in a series of three events leading up to the "Grand Final" in December 2023.[8]

"The Tornado" Corentin Moutet was the defending champion, but chose not to participate.

"The Great Wall" Wu Yibing won the event, defeating "The Hotshot" Taylor Fritz 11–16, 7–20, 12–11, 16–9, 2–0.[9]

Group A

Group B

Group A

"The Hotshot"
United States Fritz
"The Great Wall"
China Wu
"El Peque"
Argentina Schwartzman
"The Rebel"
France Paire
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"The Hotshot"
United States Taylor Fritz
14–18, 12–14, 17–9, 13–11, [2–0] 18–11, 10–17, 6–19, 19–6, [2–1] 22–10, 17–11, 19–13 3–0 9–4 (69%) 171–140 (55%) 1
"The Great Wall"
China Wu Yibing
18–14, 14–12, 9–17, 11–13, [0–2] 20–6, 8–12, 9–18, 19–12, [4–3] 8–22, 15–14, 12–15, 14–11, [3–2] 2–1 8–7 (53%) 164–173 (49%) 2
"El Peque"
Argentina Diego Schwartzman
11–18, 17–10, 19–6, 6–19, [2–3] 6–20, 12–8, 18–9, 12–19, [3–4] 13–17, 17–16, 14–13, 13–17, [2–1] 1–2 7–8 (47%) 165–180 (48%) 3
"The Rebel"
France Benoît Paire
10–22, 11–17, 13–19 22–8, 14–15, 15–13, 11–14, [2–3] 17–13, 16–17, 13–14, 17–13, [1–2] 0–3 4–9 (31%) 163–170 (49%) 4

Group B

"Big Foe"
United States Tiafoe
"The Bublik Enemy"
Kazakhstan Bublik
"The Mountain"
United States Shelton
"La Monf"
France Monfils
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"Big Foe"
United States Frances Tiafoe
14–19, 11–17, 11–17 7–13, 15–8, 15–13, 10–16, [2–1] 12–13, 11–13, 15–7, 9–10 1–2 4–8 (33%) 132–147 (47%) 4
"The Bublik Enemy"
Kazakhstan Alexander Bublik
19–14, 17–11, 17–11 17–16, 14–17, 15–18, 10–20 13–18, 14–18, 11–16 1–2 4–6 (40%) 147–159 (48%) 3
"The Mountain"
United States Ben Shelton
13–7, 8–15, 13–15, 16–10, [1–2] 16–17, 17–14, 18–15, 20–10 15–16, 12–13, 17–14, 18–14, [2–0] 2–1 8–6 (57%) 186–162 (53%) 2
"La Monf"
France Gaël Monfils
13–12, 13–11, 7–15, 10–9 18–13, 18–14, 16–11 16–15, 13–12, 14–17, 14–18, [0–2] 2–1 8–4 (67%) 151–148 (51%) 1

Finals

Semifinals Final
              
  United States Taylor Fritz 18 14 9 18 2
  France Gaël Monfils 10 15 18 13 0
  United States Taylor Fritz 16 20 11 9 0
China Wu Yibing 11 7 12 16 2
  China Wu Yibing 17 5 20 17
United States Ben Shelton 15 20 15 11

UTS 6: Frankfurt

The sixth edition of the tournament, the second of 2023 and known as UTS Frankfurt, took place from 15 September to 17 September at the Süwag Energie Arena in Frankfurt. It was the second in a series of three events in 2023 leading up to the "Grand Final" in December 2023.[11]

Groups

Group placements were announced on 3 August 2023.[12]

Group A

Group B

Group A

"G-Unit"
Bulgaria Dimitrov
"The Thunder"
Germany Struff
"The Iceman"
Norway Ruud
"The Rebel"
France Paire
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"G-Unit"
Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov
14–17, 18–11, 17–9, 14–13 9–15, 15–18, 17–11, 13–10, [0–2] 11–17, 11–16, 15–14, 19–15, [4–3] 2–1 9–5 (64%) 177–171 (51%) 2
"The Thunder"
Germany Jan-Lennard Struff
17–14, 11–18, 9–17, 13–14 6–22, 13–12, 8–17, 11–16 13–16, 16–17, 14–16 0–3 2–9 (18%) 131–179 (42%) 4
"The Iceman"
Norway Casper Ruud
15–9, 18–15, 11–17, 10–13, [2–0] 22–6, 12–13, 17–8, 16–11 9–14, 12–13, 19–15, 12–13 2–1 7–6 (54%) 175–147 (54%) 3
"The Rebel"
France Benoît Paire
17–11, 16–11, 14–15, 15–19, [3–4] 16–13, 17–16, 16–14 14–9, 13–12, 5–19, 13–12 2–1 8–4 (67%) 159–155 (51%) 1

Group B

"Rublo"
Rublev
"El Peque"
Argentina Schwartzman
"La Monf"
France Monfils
"The Rocket"
United States Eubanks
RR
W–L
Quarter
W–L
Point
W–L
Standings
"Rublo"
Andrey Rublev
10–14, 13–16, 16–7, 8–16 19–11, 16–14, 12–13, 13–12 18–12, 18–12, 20–15 2–1 7–4 (64%) 163–142 (53%) 2
"El Peque"
Argentina Diego Schwartzman
14–10, 16–13, 7–16, 16–8 18–9, 24–5, 16–13 15–12, 19–12, 22–11 3–0 9–1 (90%) 167–109 (61%) 1
"La Monf"
France Gaël Monfils
11–19, 14–16, 13–12, 12–13 9–18, 5–24, 13–16 19–16, 13–15, 14–15, 11–20 0–3 2–9 (18%) 137–184 (43%) 4
"The Rocket"
United States Christopher Eubanks
12–18, 12–18, 15–20 12–15, 12–19, 11–22 16–19, 15–13, 15–14, 20–11 1–2 3–7 (30%) 140–169 (45%) 3

Finals

Semifinals Final
              
  Argentina Diego Schwartzman 9 9 21 22 0
  Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov 15 14 7 4 2
  Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov 13 17 10 16
Andrey Rublev 14 12 11 17
  France Benoît Paire 8 13 13
Andrey Rublev 21 14 17

UTS 7: Seoul

The seventh edition of the tournament, the third of 2023 and known as UTS Seoul, will take place from 30 November to 3 December at the Korea International Exhibition Center in Goyang, a satellite city of Seoul. It will be the third in a series of three events in 2023 leading up to the "Grand Final" in December 2023.

Confirmed players include "The Machine" (Kwon Soon-woo), who will be making his UTS debut, "The King" (Nick Kyrgios), "La Monf" (Gaël Monfils), and "The Bublik Enemy" (Alexander Bublik).[17]

UTS Grand Final 2023

UTS will host its inaugural Grand Final from 7 December to 10 December 2023 following the conclusion of all three global events held throughout the year. Each champion from UTS 5, UTS 6, and UTS 7 will automatically qualify for the tournament.[12][17]

See also

Notes

  1. Paire replaced "The King" (Nick Kyrgios) after Kyrgios withdrew before the tournament.[10]
  2. Dimitrov replaced "The Chessmaster" (Daniil Medvedev) after Medvedev withdrew due to fatigue.[13]
  3. Dimitrov changed his nickname to "G-Unit" after formerly bearing the nickname of "Grigor" in his first UTS appearance in UTS 2.[14]
  4. Struff replaced "The King" (Nick Kyrgios) after Kyrgios withdrew due to injury.[15]
  5. Ruud replaced "The Bot" (Reilly Opelka) after Opelka withdrew due to injury.[16]

References

  1. "Serena's coach and Aussie dad launch indie tennis league". The Sydney Morning Herald. 2020-04-18. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  2. "Breaking down the Ultimate Tennis Showdown's crazy new rules". 2020-06-12. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  3. "UTS4 Rulebook: New season, new rules, no second serves!". 2021-05-19. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  4. "No. 3 Thiem to play in Ultimate Tennis Showdown". ESPN.com. 2020-06-11. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  5. "What we learned from tennis' COVID-19 shutdown". ESPN.com. 2020-07-20. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  6. Wolken, Dan. "New brand of tennis: Serena Williams' coach pushes for faster pace and a more dynamic show". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  7. https://utslive.tv/
  8. "UTS Announce a Thrilling Tennis Event in Los Angeles with Nick Kyrgios, Taylor Fritz and Diego Schwartzman Opening the Eight-Man Field". Tennis. Associated Press. 2 May 2023. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  9. Gray, Bren (23 July 2023). ""It's nothing like the tennis we're used to" – Stunning comeback sees Wu Yibing defeat Taylor Fritz in UTS Los Angeles final". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  10. Ramchandani, Haresh (19 July 2023). "Benoit 'The Rebel' Paire replaces Kyrgios in UTS Los Angeles". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  11. Dunn, Carrie (14 June 2023). "Medvedev, Rublev and Kyrgios to lead the field at UTS Frankfurt in Sept". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  12. Dunn, Carrie (3 August 2023). "Chris "The Rocket" Eubanks completes UTS Frankfurt line-up". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  13. Dunn, Carrie (14 September 2023). ""He just said, 'I'm completely empty'" – Mouratoglou on why Medvedev is missing UTS Frankfurt". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  14. Cambers, Simon (15 September 2023). "Grigor Dimitrov "The G-Unit" hits ground running at UTS with win over Jan-Lennard Struff "The Thunder"". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  15. Dunn, Carrie (18 August 2023). ""The Thunder" Struff replaces Kyrgios in UTS Frankfurt line-up". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  16. Malachy, Jamie (6 September 2023). "Reilly 'The Bot' Opelka set to be replaced by Casper 'The Iceman' Ruud as big-serving American withdraws from UTS Frankfurt". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  17. Dunn, Carrie (10 August 2023). "Seoul confirmed as next stop for UTS Tour – with home favourite Soonwoo Kwon to join line-up". Tennis Majors. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
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