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Old 08-21-2008, 04:06 PM   #1
AntonioMQ

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Default DeVilliers to Step Down
August 21, 2008

Etienne de Villiers To Step Down As ATP Executive Chairman After Three Years Of Innovation and Change

London, U.K. Etienne de Villiers, Executive Chairman and President of the ATP, governing body of the men's professional tennis circuit, today announced that he will not be renewing his contract at the end of the 2008 season. Executive Chairman since June 2005, Mr de Villiers has overseen the most extensive set of changes to the ATP Tour since its inception in 1990.

The changes, which will see $1 billion of new investment into the ATP Tour, include record breaking levels of prize money for players, new, world class tournaments, an enhanced, healthier calendar structure, unprecedented levels of promotional spend and a new brand look and identity based on extensive consumer research, designed to make the Tour more fan friendly.

Etienne de Villiers said:

"I was tasked by the ATP Board, three years ago, to create a vision that would involve bold changes for our sport. I believe that has now been achieved. I believe we have delivered the biggest modernisation of the ATP Tour since its inception, have attracted unprecedented levels of investment into men's tennis and have begun to feed the growing appetite for men's tennis globally, both in established and emerging markets. I am incredibly proud of what the Board and my dedicated team have achieved for men's tennis and I am honoured to have played a part in taking our great sport to the next level. Now that this much needed change has been realised I believe this is the right time for someone new to build on this strong platform. I leave knowing, without doubt, that finally our players, tournaments and above all our fans have the foundations of a world class sport they truly deserve."

Heineken Auckland Open Chief Executive and ATP Board member Graham Pearce said:

"Etienne has been an outstanding leader for our sport over his three year term, not least in the past months as we were forced to defend ourselves, successfully, in a Delaware court of law. He was asked to instigate change to our sport and he has done that and more. The levels of investment into facilities and promotion, as well as rises in prize money, are unprecedented for our sport and are set to take men's tennis to the next stage of global popularity. Etienne has put in place a programme of change that is far reaching and exciting, and the end result is a sport that will be reinvigorated and ready to fulfil its true potential. Men's tennis owes him a huge debt."

Etienne de Villiers joined the ATP in June 2005 as Chairman and became Executive Chairman and President in November 2005. As well as overhauling the management structure of the ATP, Mr de Villiers undertook for the first time, extensive, global research to understand the fan's perspective of the sport. The result was the overhauling of the doubles format to create a more popular version of the team game; fan friendly initiatives such as Hawkeye being introduced to the ATP Tour; a series of measures designed to improve player health including the end of 5 set finals and byes for seeded players at Masters tournaments resulting in substantial increases in player turn out and the first increases of player prize money in over five years.

Mr de Villiers, working with the tennis industry, has also put in place a series of changes designed to unlock the potential of men's tennis, not least the creation of a new ATP World Tour calendar with key tournaments strategically placed to ensure 'swings' of events leading into the sport's five 'pillars' - the four Grand Slams and the ‘Barclays ATP World Tour Finals’ (formerly known as the Tennis Masters Cup). Working together with the Sony Ericcson WTA, in 2011 five of the nine ‘Masters 1000s’, the ATP’s top tier, will be major mandatory combined events - a format that fans acknowledge is one of the sport’s major attractions and mirrors the success of the Grand Slams.

In addition, post US Open, the calendar will now be strengthened by an Asian swing of three weeks that will showcase the world's best players at new tournaments - Shanghai "Masters 1000", and the Tokyo and Beijing "500s". This will be followed by an enhanced European indoor swing concluding at the new look Barclays ATP World Tour Finals in London's iconic O2 Arena. The new Tour calendar ensures a healthier schedule for players, with less travel across continents and less congested sections of the season.

Mr de Villiers will fulfil his current three year term as ATP Executive Chairman, a term that ends in December 2008 and will now assist the ATP Board in their recruitment of a successor.
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Old 08-21-2008, 04:13 PM   #2
Caunnysup

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He's a modest man, isn't he?

Who's next - another money guy, most likely?
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Old 08-21-2008, 04:13 PM   #3
fuesquemill

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So ... will the DeVilliers Stadium honoring his achievements be placed at Hamburg or Monte Carlo?
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Old 08-21-2008, 04:19 PM   #4
zlopikanikanz

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So ... will the DeVilliers Stadium honoring his achievements be placed at Hamburg or Monte Carlo?
Nice
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Old 08-21-2008, 04:32 PM   #5
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So ... will the DeVilliers Stadium honoring his achievements be placed at Hamburg or Monte Carlo?
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Old 08-22-2008, 03:37 AM   #6
Mediconlinee

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Per Cronin:

Some players have also thrown in their hats for Monte Carlo tournament director Zeljko Franulovic to be named the new head of the tour.

http://www.tennisreporters.net/index.html
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Old 08-23-2008, 06:15 AM   #7
Edqpdnuu

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Per Cronin:

Some players have also thrown in their hats for Monte Carlo tournament director Zeljko Franulovic to be named the new head of the tour.

http://www.tennisreporters.net/index.html
From their mouths to God's ears. The moves ET made have left a bad taste in a lot of people's mouths.
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Old 12-30-2008, 04:37 PM   #8
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Aussie vies for top ATP post

Leo Schlink
December 30, 2008 08:40pm

HIGHLY respected international tennis administrator Brad Drewett is on the cusp of assuming overall leadership of the men's game.

Drewett, 50, is rumoured to have reached the final two in the ATP's global search for its new executive chairman and president.

Sources said Adam Helfant, a Harvard graduate and Nike executive, and Drewett were the preferred candidates for the job.

Drewett is understood to have the support of key tennis figures because of his extensive background and achievements in the sport.

Based in Sydney, Drewett has run the ATP's international group operations since 1993.

He is viewed as the architect behind China's entry into tennis, capped by several successful years as tournament director of the Masters Cup in Shanghai.

Drewett, who earned a career-high ranking of world No.34, has long been regarded as the pick of the ATP's potential leaders.

South African ex-Disney executive Etienne de Villiers has held the post for the past three years.

Drewett's contention for the role is a tribute to his managerial skills.

The New South Welshman retains support at the highest levels of grand slam tennis -- a factor that has not escaped the attention of top players Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer.

Nadal, Federer and Novak Djokovic, who are on the ATP player council, have made it clear they want leadership from an administrator with a strong understanding of tennis.

De Villiers, who came from an entertainment and business background, was innovative and intelligent, but became estranged from the top players.

Drewett twice won the Australian Open junior boys title in 1975 and 1977. He won two singles and seven doubles titles, reaching the Australian Open quarter-finals in 1976.

The ATP is likely to reveal De Villier's successor before the Australian Open at Melbourne Park, starting on January 19.

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sto...0-3162,00.html
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