Miami Open scale & access
The Miami Open (Hard Rock Stadium) is running March 17–29 as its 41st edition with combined prize money of $18.83 million — every match is being carried on Tennis Channel with broader digital streaming options listed for viewers. ( )
The tournament site lists a campus of 27 tennis courts on the Hard Rock Stadium grounds — 10 competition courts (including Stadium Court and the Grandstand) plus 17 practice courts. (miamiopen.com) The Miami Open ticketing page shows Stadium Court configured for 16,222 fans for tournament sessions. (miamiopen.com) Organizers describe the Grandstand as seating “over 5,000” spectators for marquee outer-court matches. (miamiopen.com) Main-draw sizes are listed as a 96-player singles draw with a 48-player qualifying draw and 32-team doubles draws on the official draws pages. (miamiopen.com) Tournament entries and seeds are headlined by top names such as Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner and Alexander Zverev, while Novak Djokovic officially withdrew from Miami citing a right-shoulder injury. (perfect-tennis.com) (atptour.com) The ATP lists the men’s prize pool at $9,415,725 and confirms the singles champion’s payday at $1,151,380. (atptour.com) Coverage and digital access extend beyond linear channels: the tournament’s “Where to Watch” page says Tennis Channel 2 is available free on platforms including YouTube TV, Hulu+ Live TV, Roku, Fubo, Sling, Samsung TV Plus, DirecTV Stream and Peacock. (miamiopen.com) The Tennis Channel App is promoted as a source to stream all courts, and the broadcaster is offering a limited-time first-year subscription price of $77 with code SUNSHINE77 (renewing at $109.99/year thereafter). (miamiopen.com) The tournament’s ticketing structure includes Single Session, Grandstand, Grounds Pass and premium hospitality packages, with a Single Session ticket providing a reserved Stadium Court seat plus access to outer courts and campus amenities. (miamiopen.com) Organizers posted that Sunday qualifying matches and practice sessions were cancelled because of inclement weather, with the official update moving opening-day play to the following day; local outlets and the tournament noted the washout affected the scheduled qualifying program. (miamiopen.com) (local10.com)