Miami, FL
Miami 2025: Dates, draws, prize money and everything you need to know
With the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells headed towards its exciting conclusion, we can also begin to turn our attention to the second and final leg of the Sunshine Double: the Miami Open presented by Itaú.
Main-draw play in Miami kicks off on Tuesday, March 18 with the year’s fourth WTA 1000 title on the line. The best of the best on the Hologic WTA Tour will test their skills in Hard Rock Stadium, home of the NFL’s Miami Dolphins.
Over 8.9 million dollars is up for grabs at the outdoor hard-court event. The singles champion will take home $1.12 million, along with 1,000 precious PIF WTA Ranking points and one of the WTA’s most prestigious trophies.
Here are the key facts you should keep front of mind about the 2025 Miami Open — and keep this post flagged for updates as the tournament edges even closer:
Miami: Draws | Scores | Order of play
Main-Draw Start Date: Tuesday, March 18
Singles Final: Saturday, March 29, not before 3 p.m.
Doubles Final: Sunday, March 30 at 12:30 p.m.
Qualifying Dates: Sunday, March 16 – Monday, March 17
Main-Draw Ceremony: Sunday, March 16 at 12 noon
Singles Main-Draw Size: 96 players (including 12 qualifiers and 8 wild cards, with first-round byes for the 32 seeded players)
Doubles Main-Draw Size: 32 teams
Time Zone: Eastern Daylight Time (GMT -4)
And here are some key storylines to think about as play gets rolling in Southeast Florida:
- World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka will aim to capture her first Miami Open title this season. Sabalenka has won many of the tour’s most prestigious hard-court tournaments, including three Grand Slam titles on this surface, but she has never advanced beyond the Miami quarterfinals in six appearances.
- World No. 2 Iga Swiatek, on the other hand, won the Miami title in 2022. That year, she completed the Sunshine Double by winning Indian Wells and Miami consecutively. She is one of four women to pull off the Sunshine Double in singles, along with Stefanie Graf (1994 and 1996), Kim Clijsters (2005) and Victoria Azarenka (2016).
- Elena Rybakina nearly joined that list in 2023, winning that year’s Indian Wells title and making it all the way to the Miami final before losing to Petra Kvitova. Rybakina has come achingly close at Miami twice in a row, also finishing as runner-up to Danielle Collins in 2024. The Kazakh is 10-2 in Miami over the last two years.
- Coming into her home event, World No. 3 Coco Gauff seeks her first Miami Open title as well. The Floridian started the year 9-0 (leading the United States to the United Cup team title and reaching the Australian Open quarterfinals) but will seek to improve upon a 2-3 record in her last five matches.
- Danielle Collins, another Floridian, returns to Miami as the defending champion. Collins won the first WTA 1000 title of her career here last year, kickstarting a 15-match winning streak that included another title at WTA 500 Charleston the following week.
- Petra Kvitova, who won the Miami Open title two years ago, will also be back — this time as a wild card in her return from maternity leave. Former World No. 2 Kvitova, who gave birth to son Petr last July, will play the third event of her comeback after opening losses in Austin and Indian Wells.
- Victoria Azarenka will contest this year’s event as a three-time Miami champion (2009, 2011 and 2016). She and Venus Williams are tied for the third-most Miami Open singles titles, trailing only Serena Williams (8) and Stefanie Graf (5) — all of them are former World No. 1 players.
Miami ranking points and prize money
First round: 10 points | $23,760
Second round: 35 points | $35,260
Third round: 65 points | $60,400
Round of 16: 120 points | $103,225
Quarterfinals: 215 points | $189,075
Semifinals: 390 points | $332,160
Finalist: 650 points | $597,890
Champion: 1000 points | $1,124,380
Stay tuned for more updates!
Miami, FL
City of Miami celebrates reopening of Flagler Street as part of beautification project
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Miami, FL
Shooting in northwest Miami-Dade leaves man in critical condition, sheriff’s office says
An investigation is underway at a northwest Miami-Dade apartment complex after the sheriff’s office said a man was shot by his girlfriend after a “heated dispute” early Wednesday morning.
Few details have been released, but the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office said the incident took place at an apartment complex located off Northwest 7th Avenue.
The sheriff’s office said that a man became involved in a “heated dispute” with his girlfriend, and she shot him in the right arm.
He was rushed to a hospital by Miami-Dade Fire Rescue in critical condition.
The woman is in custody.
The identities of those who were involved have not yet been released.
No other information was available.
Miami, FL
Miami Heat-Brooklyn Nets Injury Report, Betting Lines, How to Watch, Lineups & More
Game date, time and location: Tuesday, Mar. 3, 7:30 p.m. EST, Kaseya Center, Miami, Florida
TV: FanDuel Sports Network Sun, YES Network (Brooklyn)
Radio: 104.3 FM (Miami/Ft. Lauderdale), ESPN 106.3 FM, (West Palm Beach), FOX Sports Radio 105.9 FM (Ft. Myers/Naples), 1450 AM (Suart), 97.7 FM (Florida Keys), WAQI 710 AM (Spanish-language broadcast, South Florida), WFAN 101.9 FM/660 AM (Brooklyn)
VITALS: The Miami Heat (32-29) and Brooklyn Nets (15-45) meet for the second of three regular season matchups. Earlier this season, Miami recorded a, 106-95, win in Brooklyn on December 18 and has now won four of the last five overall against the Nets.
It also marks the first of consecutive games against Brooklyn with the teams facing each other again on Thursday. The Heat are 83-61 all-time versus the Nets during the regular season, including 44-26 in home games and 39-35 in road games.
PROJECTED STARTERS
HEAT
G Davion Mitchell
G Tyler Herro
C Bam Adebayo
F Pelle Larsson
F Andrew Wiggins
NETS
G Nolan Traore
G Terance Mann
C Nic Claxton
F Michael Porter Jr.
F Noah Clowney
INJURY REPORT
HEAT
Davion Mitchell: Questionable – Shoulder
Norman Powell: Out – Groin
Nikola Jovic: Out – Back
Trevor Keels: Available – G League
Jahmir Young: Available – G League
Vlad Goldin: Available – G League
Terry Rozier: Out – Not with team
NETS
Nic Claxton: Probable – Thumb
Egor Demin: Out – Foot
QUOTABLE
Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra: “Regardless of the scheme is, I always go back to that, it’s just about committing to doing hard things. We were really moving in the zone, taking away airspace and scrambling to challenge shots at the rim. In a lot of these losses in the last month we’ve just been giving up shots at the rim and threes.”
For more Miami Heat information and conversation, check out Off The Floor.
Alexander Toledo is a contributor to Miami Heat On SI and producer/co-host of the Five on the Floor podcast, covering the Heat and NBA. He can be reached at Twitter: @tropicalblanket
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