The
Abierto GNP Seguros Monterrey Open is incoming with the tournament taking place from August 18-24 in the week before the US Open. The tournament will feature up to 10 of the 32 seeds from the last Grand Slam of the year, led by
Ekaterina Alexandrova and
Diana Shnaider as the favorites and the only two top-20 players in the draw.
It will also be an opportunity to see other notable names looking to get into the best rhythm for Flushing Meadows. Former US Open finalist
Leylah Fernandez and former Australian Open champion
Sofia Kenin will be among the high-profile names in a draw that also features
Anna Kalinskaya, Donna Vekic, and the defending champion Linda Noskova.
Several of the WTA's biggest stars will be fine-tuning their game to compete in New York—the biggest goal of the North American hardcourt swing—but there will also be competition in the Mexican city, where Noskova, Vekic, Fernandez, and
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova are among the former champions who will be present in the draw.
Draw and Results Monterrey Open
Prize Money
The total Prize Money for the 2025 Monterrey Open is $1,064,510. The full breakdowns is now set with $164,000 going to the winner in Monterrey. The finalist gets $101,000. While semi-finalists receive $59,005.
| Stage |
Prize Money |
Points |
| Round of 32 |
$ 11,300 |
1 pt |
| Round of 16 |
$ 15,825 |
60 pt |
| Quarterfinals |
$ 31,100 |
108 pt |
| Semifinals |
$ 59,005 |
195 pt |
| Final |
$ 101,000 |
325 pt |
| Winner |
$ 164,000 |
500 pt |
Predictions
Samuel Gill, Head Editor for TennisUpToDate.com sees a first time winner and one that has previously not been able to get over a final duck.
Anna Kalinskaya is my pick for the next week in Monterrey. While it is perhaps outlandish given the fact that she has lost multiple finals, she has to get over that hurdle if her form continues.
She was superb in Cincinnati and this prediction is subject to her actually playing in Monterrey as given her gripes about scheduling and playing late, she may not bother. If not her, it could be a resurgence for Diana Shnaider or a continuation for Leylah Fernandez me thinks. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and a resurgent Veronika Kudermetova can't be counted out either.
Favourites
*** Anna Kalinskaya
** Leylah Fernandez, Diana Shnaider
* Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Veronika Kudermetova, Rebecca Sramkova
Entry List Monterrey Open
Alexandrova and Shnaider headline the draw
The Russian Ekaterina Alexandrova is probably the player in the draw who has been in the best form this year and has not received enough credit for it. She has a 30-15 record this season, with one title at the WTA 500 Linz Open, a semifinal appearance at the WTA 1000 Qatar Open, and a couple of fourth rounds at the recent French Open and Wimbledon. The 30-year-old Russian only gets better with age, and this season she has five wins against top-10 players.
However, the start of the hardcourt swing has not been very promising; she was surprisingly eliminated in Hamburg by Hungarian Anna Bondar in the quarterfinals and failed to get past the first round at the Canadian Open against China's Zhu Lin. We will have to see if she can regroup in the coming weeks and if Monterrey can be a final chance to build confidence before another Grand Slam, where her goal will surely be to finally get past the fourth round, a stage she has never surpassed in her career at a major.
On the other hand, the Russian Diana Shnaider has lost momentum in recent months. She has only five wins and six losses since the start of Roland Garros two months ago, and only one victory in her last five appearances, including an early exit in Montreal against Marie Bouzkova. The Russian spent months hovering around the top 10 but has lost ground, currently sitting at No. 18. Nevertheless, the 21-year-old has already shown her talent, and with a draw free of the Tour's biggest stars, she will have a chance to compete for the title.
Former Champions aim for glory
The player who has had the most success at the tournament is the Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, with an absolute record of four titles (2010, '11, '13, '17), making it the stage that has brought her the most success. The 34-year-old veteran has managed to stay around the top 30 during the last season with consistent results that always make her a tough name for anyone to face. In Monterrey, there is no doubt a special motivation, and she will be a name to consider, despite not securing a spot among the eight seeds in the tournament.
One player who will be seeded is the defending champion, Linda Noskova, a recent finalist at the Prague Open in late July. She was eliminated early at the Canadian Open against Jaqueline Cristian, although the short three-day turnaround between her final and her match in Montreal—combined with the long trip and change of conditions—could explain the drop in performance of the Czech star, who will be a name to watch during the rest of the hardcourt swing. At 20 years old, her only title came in Monterrey, and she needs to defend it to avoid a significant drop in the rankings.
Also returning to Monterrey will be two-time champion Leylah Fernandez, who won the title in 2022 and 2023. As in all recent seasons, she is looking to get into a good rhythm before the US Open, where she was a finalist in 2021, falling in the memorable final to Emma Raducanu. Leylah recently lifted her first WTA 500 title at the DC Open, and despite an early exit in Montreal, she has shown that she has everything it takes to return to a spot among the best, just as she captivated the world at Flushing Meadows four years ago.
| Seed |
Player |
Entry Rankings |
| 1 | Ekaterina Alexandrova | 15 |
| 2 | Diana Shnaider | 17 |
| 3 | Beatriz Haddad Maia | 21 |
| 4 | Elise Mertens | 22 |
| 5 | Linda Noskova | 23 |
| 6 | Magdalena Frech | 25 |
| 7 | Sofia Kenin | 26 |
| 8 | Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova | 29 |
| 9 | Rebecca Sramkova | 33 |
| 10 | Leylah Fernandez | 35 |
| 11 | Tatjana Maria | 38 |
| 12 | Veronika Kudermetova | 39 |
| 13 | Anna Kalinskaya | 42 |
Read alsoloadingLatest Comments- So she actually CAN think clearly!
If she wants to play tennis, make it a priority. Learn from Life choices (like having a kid with her rapper ex). Today's game is a grueling exercise in Humility if one is not fully dedicated; or does not have the time to do The Work. Raducanu is a shining example of someone with the talent but lacks the drive, attitude, and/or devotion it takes to maintain 100% capacity of everything the Tour demands.
- It's as if troubled 'Condescending Collins' is competing with The Williams' for the daily spotlight. Some just do not know when to quit.
Go fix yourselves and stop informing the public of your personal problems. The general public has their own issues in Life.
- Coach Macci and Martina Navratilova are seemingly the only reasonable voices coming out of the tennis circuit in regards to Iga at the moment.
People like Stubbs, Gilbert, and anti-Social Media dwellers have very little or nothing to offer. What they are indeed is... predictable. Why certain media think their input is of value is a mystery. Perhaps easy filler for their publications?
Media, in general, could/should consider their poor choices and lazy habits of running to the Loudest Mouths for "expert advice".
Certain Internet 'news sources' might do their own research and STOP COPYING & PASTING the first articles to hit the web with little-to-no editing or true journalism.
As for Iga (and any athlete) they are not robots. They are Human Beings and Humans, as we all know, are not infallable. Leave the expert criticisms and "solutions" to these athletes and their teams.
Disgruntled bettors and so-called "experts" are not a solution!
- Sab has more disappointments to come. She's more or less been 'skating' by many of her opponents.
Perhaps less Social Media, TV commercials, and photo-ops... otherwise those distractions will gaurantee a slide in ranking. Take that hint from the downfall of some of her colleagues.
- No kidding. Obviously this did not cross an editor's cubicle.
Other than the mediocre grammar... there are more comma's in this mess than in 'War and Peace' !!
- Sketchy chair ump in Eala's match.
I lost count how many times Siegemund walked to her box and talked between serves!!
- WTF is wrong with you people at WTA??
The Williams Freebies have gone on far too long!!
WTA is resembling a certain Orange President who feels he is free to do as he pleases; and does so despite the fact the entire world knows this game of 'untouchables' is not going to end well for any of these Losers.
- Why is this article so poorly written, and seeming not proofread?
- Lena ends any "rivalry" talk today
- It's embarrassing how tennis media (especially this rag) refuses to give Doubles their due respect.
Considering Siniakova's 11 hours of tennis in 3 days -- then winning the Indian Wells Doubles Title -- one would think an alleged tennis news source would highlight it.
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