Australian Open’s wild new event: A$1 million prize for just 5 points!

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Following the US Open’s efforts to attract a wider audience through a revamped mixed doubles format, the 2026 Australian Open is taking innovation to an entirely new, controversial level. Tournament organizers have announced a bold, attention-grabbing concept: the One Point Slam. This fast-tracked event will condense entire matches into a single, high-stakes point, meaning that a player can take home a A$1 million ($700k) prize by winning just five points.

Does this sound shocking? Unbelievable? Here’s how it will work.

Carlos Alcaraz
Carlos Alcaraz

World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz will headline the professional roster for the condensed tournament, which will feature 10 amateur players going up against 22 tennis pros. True to its name, every contest in the One Point Slam will hinge on a single rally. So, we can conclude that there will be 32 players in the draw and the winner will play five matches, i.e. five points.

The champion of this unconventional showdown will walk away with 1 million Australian dollars (700,000 American dollars), which is a sum just shy of what semifinalists in the main men’s and women’s draws earn at the Grand Slam in Melbourne.

The event will kick off during the opening weekend of the Australian Open. Naturally, the player who serves will have immense advantage. A pre-match game of “rock, paper, scissors” will determine which competitor serves!

“Entries will open soon at clubs across the country, and during Opening Week, finalists will compete for a chance to face the pros on Rod Laver Arena,” Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley gave more information on the format. “With more big names to be announced soon, you now have a million reasons to pick up a racquet and get ready for January.”

Despite the excitement from organizers, reactions online have been mixed. Posters on Tennis Forumshared some skeptical and humorous takes:

“As pro sport makes greater and greater (and more and more ridiculous) attempts to appeal to the growing number of people whose attention span is less than 7 seconds (due in large part to ‘technology’ grooming people to accept nothing less than instant gratification), pro sport inherently gets closer and closer to being nothing more than a video game.”

This feels really out of touch considering where the world is right now with inflation and everything; and yes this includes lower-ranked tennis players, too. Imagine the winning ceremony with a cringe interview question being ‘OMG, did you ever make $1 million dollars by only winning eight points?'”

“I think 5-set matches are a little too long, but one point? Blink your eyes and you miss the whole match? :rolleyes:”

The One Point Slam is obviously designed to create buzz and inject spectacle into the Australian Open. What’s your take, is it outrageous to hand out such big money for so few points, or a smart way to refresh the sport?

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