Sports

Australian Open 2025 draw ceremony: Live streaming info, ranking points, prize money details

Australian Open 2025 draw ceremony: Live streaming info, ranking points, prize money details

The Australian Open 2025 main draw ceremony for singles will be held at the steps of Margaret Court Arena on January 9 (Thursday) at 2:30 pm local time (9 am IST) in Melbourne.

The doubles draw will be held on January 11 (Saturday) at 3 pm local time (9:30 am IST) while the mixed doubles will take place on January 14 (Tuesday) at 6 pm local time (12:30 pm IST)

This year’s Australian Open is set to begin from January 12 and conclude on January 26 at Melbourne Park.

The Australian Open 2025 draw ceremony will be live streamed on the Australian Open YouTube channel and Facebook page.

Men’s Singles

Winner: 2,000 points (AUD 3,500,000)

Runner-up: 1,300 points (AUD 1,900,000)

Semifinals: 800 points (AUD 1,100,000)

Quarterfinals: 400 points (AUD 665,000)

Fourth Round: 200 points (AUD 420,000)

Third Round: 100 points (AUD 290,000)

Second Round: 50 points (AUD 200,000)

First Round: 10 points (AUD 132,000)

Women’s Singles

Winner: 2,000 points (AUD 3,500,000)

Runner-up: 1,300 points (AUD 1,900,000)

Semifinals: 780 points (AUD 1,100,000)

Quarterfinals: 430 points (AUD 665,000)

Fourth Round: 240 points (AUD 420,000)

Third Round: 130 points (AUD 290,000)

Second Round: 70 points (AUD 200,000)

First Round: 10 points (AUD 132,000)

Men’s Doubles

Winner: 2,000 points (AUD 810,000)

Runner-up: 1,200 points (AUD 440,000)

Semifinals: 720 points (AUD 250,000)

Quarterfinals: 360 points (AUD 142,000)

Third Round: 180 points (AUD 82,000)

Second Round: 90 points (AUD 58,000)

First Round: 0 points (AUD 40,000)

Women’s Doubles

Winner: 2,000 points (AUD 810,000)

Runner-up: 1,300 points (AUD 440,000)

Semifinals: 780 points (AUD 250,000)

Quarterfinals: 430 points (AUD 142,000)

Third Round: 240 points (AUD 82,000)

Second Round: 130 points (AUD 58,000)

First Round: 10 points (AUD 40,000)

The total prize money for this year’s Australian Open is AUD 96.5 million, up nearly 12 per cent compared to last year.

The men’s and women’s singles winners will each receive AUD 3.5 million.

Italy’s Jannik Sinner is the defending champion in men’s singles while in women’s singles, it is Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka.

In men’s doubles, the Indo-Australian pair of Rohan Bopanna and Matthew Ebden won the title last year but they will be playing with different partners this time. In women’s doubles, the Taipei-Belgian duo of Hsieu Su-wei and Elise Mertens were the winners last year but won’t play together in the 2025 edition.

The Taipei-Polish pair of Hsieh and Jan Zielinski won the mixed doubles title last year.

Tokito Oda of Japan and Diede de Groot of the Netherlands were the winners in men’s and women’s wheelchair singles.

Dutchman Sam Schroeder won the wheelchair quad singles.

Wheelchair men’s doubles title was clinched by the all-British duo of Alfie Hewitt and Gordon Reid while in the women’s category, de Groot and her compatriot Jiske Griffioen lifted the winner’s trophy.

The British-American team of Andy Lapthorne and David Wagner emerged victorious in wheelchair quad doubles.

Japan’s Rei Sakamoto and Slovakia’s Renata Jamrichova won the boys’ and girls’ singles title, respectively while the boys’ and girls’ doubles titles were clinched by all-American pairs of Maxwell Exsted and Cooper Woestendick, and Tyra Caterina Grant and Iva Jovic, respectively.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Sports

New Zealand Rugby referees embark on training mission to boost SL rugby standards

New Zealand Rugby referees embark on training mission to boost SL rugby standards A delegation of seasoned New Zealand rugby
Sports

Asalanka and Hasaranga guide SL to victory against visiting New Zealand Team

Asalanka and Hasaranga guide SL to victory against visiting New Zealand Team In a challenging chase of 136 runs, Sri