The Golden Swing is a series of four tennis tournaments that are part of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) tour, held every February in Latin America. The four tournaments have been termed the ‘Golden Swing’ in honour of Chilean Olympic gold medalists Nicolas Massú and Fernando González.[1]

The series began in 2001, linking four tournaments in Latin America: Viña del Mar (Chile), Buenos Aires (Argentina), Costa do Sauípe (Brazil) and Acapulco (Mexico).[2]

Since the series started in 2001, no player has won more than two titles in one year.

Tournaments

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In 2010, the Chile Open was moved from Viña del Mar to Santiago. However, the tournament returned to Viña de Mar only two years later. In 2015, the tournament was bought by investors in Colombia, and moved to Quito, Ecuador.[3] The Ecuador Open's last event was 2018, after which it ceased due to lack of funding, and moved to Córdoba, Argentina.[4]

In 2012, the Brasil Open was moved from Costa do Sauípe to São Paulo and transitioned from outdoors to indoors.[5]

Starting in 2014, the Mexican Open switched from clay to hard courts, serving as a lead-up to the first ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event of the season in Indian Wells, United States.[6] The same year, Brazilian investors purchased the ATP 500 level tournament from Memphis which was played on indoor hard courts. They moved it to Rio de Janeiro as the new anchor tournament of the Golden Swing.[7]

In 2019, the Brasil Open was scrapped, and replaced with the Chile Open, with a new edition in 2020. Six years passed between editions of an ATP tournament in Chile.[8]

Tournaments as of 2020

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Tournament Country Location Current Venue Court surface Category
Córdoba Open Argentina Córdoba Polo Deportivo Kempes[9] Clay (2019–2024) ATP Tour 250
Argentina Open Argentina Buenos Aires Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club Clay (1970–1989, 1993–1995, 2001–present) ATP Tour 250
Rio Open Brazil Rio de Janeiro Jockey Club Brasileiro Clay (2014–present) ATP Tour 500
Chile Open Chile Viña del Mar (2001–09, 2012–2014)
Santiago (1993–1998, 2010–11, 2020–present)
Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo Clay (1993–1998, 2000–2014, 2020–present) ATP Tour 250

Former Golden Swing tournaments

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The Ecuador Open and Brasil Open have been disbanded while the Mexican Open has rebranded itself as a hard court lead-up tournament to the Indian Wells and Miami Masters.

Tournament Country Location Last/Current Venue Court surface Category
Ecuador Open Ecuador Quito (2015–2018) Club Jacarandá[10] Clay (2015–2018) ATP World Tour 250
Mexican Open Mexico Acapulco (2001–present)
Mexico City (1993–1998, 2000)
Fairmont Acapulco Princess Clay (1993–1998, 2000–2013)
Hard (2014–present)
ATP World Tour 500
Brasil Open Brazil Costa do Sauípe (2001–11)
São Paulo (2012–2019)
Complexo Desportivo Constâncio Vaz Guimarães Hard (2001–03)
Clay (2004–11)
Indoor clay (2012–2019)
ATP World Tour 250

Champions by year

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Win number out of total wins are shown in parentheses for players with more than one Golden Swing title since the series started in 2001. Purple shading indicates the tournament was played on hard courts.

Year Viña del Mar / Santiago Buenos Aires Costa do Sauípe / São Paulo Acapulco
2001   Guillermo Coria (1/2)   Gustavo Kuerten (1/3)   Jan Vacek   Gustavo Kuerten (2/3)
2002   Fernando González (1/4)   Nicolás Massú (1/2)   Gustavo Kuerten   Carlos Moyà (1/4)
2003   David Sánchez   Carlos Moyà (2/4)   Sjeng Schalken   Agustín Calleri
2004   Fernando González (2/4)   Guillermo Coria (2/2)   Gustavo Kuerten (3/3)   Carlos Moyà (3/4)
2005   Gastón Gaudio (1/2)   Gastón Gaudio (2/2)   Rafael Nadal (1/6)   Rafael Nadal (2/6)
2006   José Acasuso   Carlos Moyà (4/4)   Nicolás Massú (2/2)   Luis Horna (1/2)
2007   Luis Horna (2/2)   Juan Mónaco (1/2)   Guillermo Cañas   Juan Ignacio Chela
2008   Fernando González (3/4)   David Nalbandian   Nicolás Almagro (1/6)   Nicolás Almagro (2/6)
2009   Fernando González (4/4)   Tommy Robredo (1/3)   Tommy Robredo (2/3)   Nicolás Almagro (3/6)
2010   Thomaz Bellucci   Juan Carlos Ferrero (1/2)   Juan Carlos Ferrero (2/2)   David Ferrer (1/7)
2011   Tommy Robredo (3/3)   Nicolás Almagro (4/6)   Nicolás Almagro (5/6)   David Ferrer (2/7)
2012   Juan Mónaco (2/2)   David Ferrer (3/7)   Nicolás Almagro (6/6)   David Ferrer (4/7)
2013   Horacio Zeballos   David Ferrer (5/7)   Rafael Nadal (3/6)   Rafael Nadal (4/6)
Viña del Mar Buenos Aires Rio de Janeiro São Paulo
2014   Fabio Fognini (1/2)   David Ferrer (6/7)   Rafael Nadal (5/6)   Federico Delbonis
Quito Buenos Aires Rio de Janeiro São Paulo
2015   Víctor Estrella Burgos (1/3)   Rafael Nadal (6/6)   David Ferrer (7/7)   Pablo Cuevas (1/4)
2016   Víctor Estrella Burgos (2/3)   Dominic Thiem (1/3)   Pablo Cuevas (2/4)   Pablo Cuevas (3/4)
2017   Víctor Estrella Burgos (3/3)   Alexandr Dolgopolov   Dominic Thiem (2/3)   Pablo Cuevas (4/4)
2018   Roberto Carballés Baena   Dominic Thiem (3/3)   Diego Schwartzman (1/2)   Fabio Fognini (2/2)
Córdoba Buenos Aires Rio de Janeiro São Paulo
2019   Juan Ignacio Londero   Marco Cecchinato   Laslo Djere   Guido Pella
Córdoba Buenos Aires Rio de Janeiro Santiago
2020   Cristian Garín (1/3)   Casper Ruud (1/2)   Cristian Garín (2/3)   Thiago Seyboth Wild
2021   Juan Manuel Cerúndolo   Diego Schwartzman (2/2) Not held   Cristian Garín (3/3)
2022   Albert Ramos Viñolas   Casper Ruud (2/2)   Carlos Alcaraz (1/2)   Pedro Martínez
2023   Sebastián Báez (1/3)   Carlos Alcaraz (2/2)   Cameron Norrie   Nicolás Jarry
2024   Luciano Darderi   Facundo Díaz Acosta   Sebastián Báez (2/3)   Sebastián Báez (3/3)

Multiple winners

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David Ferrer won 7 Golden Swing tournaments, more than any other player.
Rank Country Player Winning span  
 
 
   
 
 
 
Total
1   Spain David Ferrer 2010–2015 0 3 4 0 7
2   Spain Nicolás Almagro 2007–2012 0 1 2 3 6
2   Spain Rafael Nadal 2005–2015 0 1 3 2 6
4   Spain Carlos Moyà 2002–2006 0 2 2 0 4
4   Chile Fernando González 2002–2009 4 0 0 0 4
4   Uruguay Pablo Cuevas 2015–2017 0 0 1 3 4
7   Argentina Sebastián Báez 2023–2024 1 0 1 1 3
7   Dominican Republic Victor Estrella Burgos 2015–2017 3 0 0 0 3
7   Chile Cristian Garín 2020–2021 1 0 1 1 3
7   Brazil Gustavo Kuerten 2001–2004 0 1 1 1 3
7   Spain Tommy Robredo 2009–2011 1 1 0 1 3
7   Austria Dominic Thiem 2016–2018 0 2 1 0 3
12   Spain Carlos Alcaraz 2022–2023 0 1 1 0 2
12   Argentina Guillermo Coria 2001–2004 1 1 0 0 2
12   Spain Juan Carlos Ferrero 2010 0 1 0 1 2
12   Italy Fabio Fognini 2014–2018 1 0 0 1 2
12   Argentina Gastón Gaudio 2005 1 1 0 0 2
12   Peru Luis Horna 2006–2007 1 0 1 0 2
12   Chile Nicolas Massú 2002–2006 0 1 0 1 2
12   Argentina Juan Mónaco 2007–2012 1 1 0 0 2
12   Argentina Diego Schwartzman 2018–2021 0 1 1 0 2
12   Norway Casper Ruud 2020–2022 0 2 0 0 2

References

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  1. ^ "Movistar Open". ATP's official site. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  2. ^ "Almagro On Cusp Of Golden History". ATP's official site. 25 February 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  3. ^ "QUITO TO HOST 250 EVENT FROM 2015". ATP's official site. 4 September 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-24.
  4. ^ "ATP 250 Tournament in Quito is Canceled Due to Lack of Financial Support". Tennis World USA. 26 August 2018.
  5. ^ "Brasil Open To Move To Sao Paulo". ATP's official site. 5 October 2011. Retrieved 2011-01-25.
  6. ^ "The Crowning Jewel Of The Golden Swing". ATP's official site. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  7. ^ "ATP APPROVES EVENT IN RIO DE JANEIRO FROM 2014". ATP's official site. 24 April 2012. Retrieved 2014-11-24.
  8. ^ Ignacio Leal (2019-10-15). "Agendado para febrero de 2020 en Santiago: Chile vuelve a tener un torneo ATP". La Tercera. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  9. ^ "ATP Córdoba – Entry List: Dominic Thiem and Fabio Fognini lead the field".
  10. ^ "Sede". Archived from the original on 2019-01-13. Retrieved 2019-01-13.