1881

The tournament was founded in Montreal and became one of Canada’s oldest sporting traditions.

1890s – 1920s

The event steadily grew and established itself as a major annual tennis championship.

1930s – 1960s

Tennis legends and unforgettable rivalries elevated the tournament globally.

1970s – 2000s

International stars transformed the Canadian Open into a world-class event.

2000s – PRESENT

MODERN CLASSIC

Today the tournament continues to deliver iconic matches and historic moments.

The Origins Where It All Began in 1881

Tennis in Canada did not start in a fancy stadium. It started on a simple grass court at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club in the summer of 1881.

No prize money. No global TV deals. Just players competing for a silver cup.

The first-ever champion was Isidore F. Hellmuth, a man who not only won the title but also helped organise the entire event.  Back then, it was called the Canadian National Championships. A national competition, not yet the global stage it would become.

The women’s addition in 1892 was significant. It made this one of the earliest tournaments in the world to include a competitive women’s event. For over 80 years, the tournament stayed strictly amateur. No professionals. No prize money. Pure competition.

From the Amateur Era to the Open Era

For most of its early life, the Canadian Open history was built entirely on amateur tennis. No professionals. No prize money. Just pure competition. That changed in 1968 when the Open Era began.

Canadian Open History

Key turning points:

Suddenly the best players in the world were showing up in Canada. The tournament’s reputation grew fast. Through the 1970s and 1980s the Canadian Open became a proving ground for legends. Ivan Lendl was the undisputed king, winning six titles between 1980 and 1989. No player in Canadian Open history has matched that record since.

Other champions from this era:

The Canadian Open was no longer just a national event. It was a legitimate stop on the world tennis calendar.

The Name Changes: A Complete Timeline

This is where a lot of fans get confused. The tournament has gone through several name changes over the years. Same event, same cities, same prestige. Just different names depending on who was sponsoring it.

Here is the complete Canadian Open timeline:

EraOfficial NameNotes
1881-1967Canadian National ChampionshipsAmateur era, no prize money
1968-1969Canadian OpenOpen Era begins, pros allowed
1970-1978Rothmans Canadian OpenFirst tobacco sponsor
1979-1996Player’s International Canadian OpenSecond tobacco sponsor
1997-2000du Maurier OpenThird tobacco sponsor
2001-2004Rogers AT&T CupRogers Communications takes over
2005-2020Rogers CupRogers becomes sole sponsor
2021-PresentNational Bank Open presented by RogersCurrent official name

So when someone says Rogers Cup, Canadian Open, or National Bank Open, they are all talking about the same tournament. The Canadian Open name change in 2021 was the biggest rebrand in decades. National Bank of Canada became the title sponsor, but Rogers stayed on as a presenting partner, keeping their name in the title too.

One more thing worth knowing. The 2020 tournament was cancelled completely due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was the first time since World War II that the event did not take place.

The Rogers Cup Era: When the Tournament Went Global

From 2005 to 2020, the Rogers Cup era turned this tournament into a global must-watch event. Bigger crowds. Bigger prize money. Bigger names. The Big Three all competed here regularly. Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic all left their mark on Canadian Open history.

Men’s highlights

PlayerTitles Won
Rafael Nadal2005, 2019
Novak Djokovic2007, 2011, 2016
Roger Federer2004, 2006
Andy Murray2009, 2015
The Roger's Cup
roger's cup
PlayerTitles Won
Serena WilliamsMultiple titles
Simona Halep2016, 2018
Bianca Andreescu2019
wtp roger's cup
roger's cup wta

The 2019 women’s final was unforgettable. Bianca Andreescu, a young Canadian from Mississauga, defeated Serena Williams on home soil in Toronto. The crowd went wild. Then came 2020. The pandemic cancelled the tournament for the first time since World War II. A painful pause for a tournament with so much history.

The National Bank Open Era: A New Name, A New Chapter

In 2021, the tournament came back stronger after the COVID pause and arrived with a brand new identity.

National Bank of Canada became the title sponsor. The event was officially renamed the National Bank Open presented by Rogers. A fresh name, but the same legendary tournament.

The modern era also brought structural changes:

  • Expanded to a 12-day format
  • The main draw grew to 96 players
  • The top 32 seeds now receive a first-round bye
  • Both ATP and WTA events are held in the same week
  • Cities alternate annually between Montreal and Toronto

The prize money grew significantly, too. By 2026, the WTA prize pool reached over 7.4 million dollars, reflecting a strong push toward equal pay across both tours. And the champions kept coming.

(National Bank Open) A New Name
YearMen’s ChampionWomen’s Champion
2021Camille LichtsteinerIga Swiatek
2022Pablo Carreno BustaCaroline Garcia
2023Jannik SinnerCoco Gauff
2024Alexei PopyrinJessica Pegula
2025Ben SheltonVictoria Mboko

The 2025 edition produced a moment nobody saw coming. Victoria Mboko, a 19-year-old Canadian, defeated Naomi Osaka in the Montreal final. A home champion. On home soil. The crowd was electric.

The Canadian Open history was made again.

Canadian Players in History: The Home Heroes

This is what makes the Canadian Open history truly special for local fans. For most of the tournament’s existence, Canadians watched the biggest names in tennis come to their country and take the trophy home. Winning on home soil was rare. Almost impossible, But that has changed in a big way.

Canadian champions through the years

PlayerTitleYear
Robert BedardMen’s Singles1954, 1955, 1958
Faye UrbanWomen’s Singles1969
Bianca AndreescuWomen’s Singles2019
Victoria MbokoWomen’s Singles2025

Robert Bedard was the last Canadian man to win the title, back in 1958. That record still stands today.

On the women’s side, Victoria Mboko’s 2025 victory was the first Canadian women’s title since Bianca Andreescu in 2019. Two Canadian women’s champions in six years. A sign of something special building in Canadian tennis.

  • Felix Auger-Aliassime, one of the most exciting players on the ATP tour
  • Leylah Fernandez, a Grand Slam finalist with a massive fan following
  • Denis Shapovalov, who has lit up the Canadian Open crowd many times
  • Victoria Mboko, the reigning women’s champion and Canada’s newest star

Canadian tennis is no longer just watching from the sidelines. It is competing at the highest level. And the home crowd feels every single point.

Canadian Open Records and Milestones

Every great tournament builds a book of records over time. The Canadian Open history is full of them.

Most titles Men’s Singles

PlayerTitles
Ivan Lendl6
John McEnroe3
Rafael Nadal3
Andre Agassi3

Ivan Lendl is the undisputed king of this tournament. Six titles between 1980 and 1989. Nobody has come close since.

Canadian open men's records
Canadian Open Milestones

Most titles Women’s Singles

PlayerTitles
Martina Navratilova5
Chris Evert4
Serena Williams3
Steffi Graf3

Other key milestones worth knowing

  • First held in 1881, making it one of the oldest active tennis tournaments in the world
  • Women first competed officially in 1892
  • Hard courts were introduced in 1979
  • The Montreal and Toronto rotation started in 1981
  • The first cancellation since World War II happened in 2020 due to COVID-19
  • Expanded to a 96-player draw in the modern National Bank Open era

These numbers tell a story of a tournament that has grown, adapted, and survived for over 140 years. That kind of legacy does not happen by accident.

FAQs

The Canadian Open started in 1881 at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club as the Canadian National Championships. It is one of the oldest active tennis tournaments in the world. Over 140 years, it has gone through multiple name changes, two world wars interruptions, and grown into a major ATP 1000 and WTA 1000 event held across Montreal and Toronto.

The tournament has had several names. It was the Canadian National Championships from 1881 to 1967, then the Canadian Open from 1968, then various tobacco-sponsored names through the 1970s to 1990s, then the Rogers Cup from 2005 to 2020, and finally the National Bank Open presented by Rogers from 2021 onward.

Ivan Lendl holds the men’s record with six titles, all won between 1980 and 1989. On the women’s side, Martina Navratilova leads with five titles.

Yes, Robert Bedard won the men’s title three times in the 1950s. On the women’s side, Bianca Andreescu won in 2019, and Victoria Mboko made history in 2025 by defeating Naomi Osaka in Montreal.

The tournament was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was the first cancellation since World War II. The event returned in 2021 with a new sponsor and a new name.