Defending champion Iga Swiatek was on hand for the draw ceremony at the WTA Finals Riyadh presented by PIF to see how this year’s groups shook out for the season-ending championships.
For the second straight year, the year-end No.1 ranking will come down to the final event of the season, as World No.1 Aryna Sabalenka looks to hold off No.2 Swiatek down the final stretch.
Road to the WTA Finals: Sabalenka | Swiatek | Gauff | Paolini | Rybakina | Pegula
Here’s how the singles and doubles draws shook out:
Singles Draw
Purple Group[1] Aryna Sabalenka[4] Jasmine Paolini[5] Elena Rybakina[7] Zheng Qinwen
Orange Group[2] Iga Swiatek[3] Coco Gauff[6] Jessica Pegula[8] Barbora Krejcikova
Doubles Draw
Green Group[1] Lyudmyla Kichenok & Jelena Ostapenko[3] Hsieh Su-Wei & Elise Mertens[6] Nicole Melichar-Martinez & Ellen Perez[8] Katerina Siniakova & Taylor Townsend
White Group[2] Gabriela Dabrowski & Erin Routliffe[4] Sara Errani & Jasmine Paolini[5] Caroline Dolehide & Desirae Krawczyk[7] Chan Hao-Ching & Veronika Kudermetova
How the draw is made: The top two seeds are placed atop the opposite groups. Players/teams are then randomly drawn from each subsequent pair of seeds so that Seeds 3 and 4, Seeds 5 and 6, and Seeds 7 and 8 are in opposite groups.
Tournament format: Round-robin play begins on Saturday, Nov. 2 at 3:30 p.m. on the indoor hard courts at the King Saud University Sports Arena. The top two finishers out of each group will advance to the semifinals on Friday, Nov. 8, with the winners advancing to the final on Saturday, Nov.9.
Top-seeded Sabalenka and the Purple Group will get underway on Saturday, with the Orange Group set to begin on Sunday.
Order of Play: Day 1
[3] Hsieh/Mertens vs. [6] Melichar-Martinez/Perez[1] Sabalenka vs. [7] Zheng[4] Paolini vs. [5] Rybakina[1] Kichenok/Ostapenko vs. [8] Siniakova/Townsend
Order of Play: Day 2
[2] Dabrowski/Routliffe vs. [7] Chan/Kudermetova[2] Swiatek vs. [8] Krejcikova[3] Gauff vs. [6] Pegula[4] Errrani/Paolini vs. [5] Dolehide/Krawczyk
In the 53rd staging of the Hologic WTA Tour’s crown-jewel event, this season’s eight best singles players and doubles teams will battle it out for a record-setting total prize money purse of $15,250,000, with an undefeated singles champion set to take home over $5 million.