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HomeSportRain Disrupts Early Miami Open Schedule as Tournament Tries to Catch Up

Rain Disrupts Early Miami Open Schedule as Tournament Tries to Catch Up

Weather has played an outsized role in the opening days of this year’s Miami Open, forcing schedule changes and creating early complications for players, organizers, and fans.

Rain washed out the tournament’s opening day of qualifying, pushing those matches into an already busy schedule and leaving the event to play catch-up almost immediately. Additional weather delays followed during the first week, slowing the start of play and adding uncertainty across the grounds at Hard Rock Stadium.

For a tournament that thrives on momentum, the interruptions have created a less predictable start. Players have had to adjust warm-up routines and remain on standby as match times shifted. That can be especially difficult for qualifiers and lower-ranked players, who often face tighter turnaround times and less room for error.

The delays have also affected fans, many of whom arrived expecting full days of tennis only to encounter long waits and shifting match schedules. Even so, the tournament atmosphere has largely held up, with spectators continuing to fill the grounds despite the stop-and-start conditions.

South Florida weather is hardly a surprise in March, but it remains one of the factors that can most quickly reshape a major tennis event. At a combined ATP and WTA tournament like the Miami Open, even a single washout can ripple through the draw and complicate scheduling for days afterward.

The concern for organizers now is whether the worst of the disruption has passed or whether more weather problems could continue to affect play as the event moves deeper into the main draw. If conditions improve, the tournament should have a chance to settle into a more normal rhythm. If rain lingers, the Miami Open could face additional pressure to keep the schedule on track.

For now, weather has become one of the defining early storylines of the week, reminding everyone that in Miami, the forecast can be almost as important as the draw.

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Steven Hodel
Steven Hodel
Steven Hodel is the Tennis Correspondent for The Tico Times, covering the ATP and WTA tours, the four Grand Slams, the Masters 1000 series, and the Latin American professional and junior circuits. Based in Costa Rica, he writes for English-speaking readers across Central America and the wider region, with particular focus on Latin American players on tour and the growing tennis community in Costa Rica. He works in English and Spanish, drawing on regional sources from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and the Costa Rican Tennis Federation. Reach him at steve@ticotimes.net or ion X at @theticotimes
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