Over 100 people stopped by the Merchant of Tennis in Toronto on February 8th to launch the Caribbean Cup Tennis Series. The launch was a great evening that raised funds for Helping Hands Jamaica Foundation.
Read MoreJamaican born Karl Hale, Rogers Cup tournament director, teamed up with over 150 people on Thursday in Toronto, Canada, to launch the Caribbean Cup Tennis Series, which now comprises six masters tournaments: Anguilla Cup, Antigua Cup, Barbados Cup, Cayman Cup, Jamaica Cup, St Vincent Cup and the Year End Championships in Curacao.
Read MoreRogers Cup tournament director Karl Hale, a native of Jamaica, is expanding a series of events in the Caribbean.
The proceeds go to charity. And the tournaments – junior ITF, senior and exhibition – help raise the sport’s profile in the islands.
The newest event is in St. Vincent. The series is now up to six, with a “year-end” championship in Curaçao (winners get a trip to the US Open).
Read MoreKarl Hale, Rogers Cup Tournament Director and Jamaican born, teamed up with the Merchant of Tennis and over 100 people on Feb 8th, 2018 in Leaside to launch the Caribbean Cup Tennis Series, which comprises of six masters tournaments in Anguilla, Antigua, Barbados, Cayman, Jamaica, St. Vincent and the Year End Championships in Curacao. The launch was a great evening that raised over $10,000 for Helping Hands Jamaica Foundation.
Read MoreTORONTO- The 2018 Caribbean Cup Tennis Series Calendar release. A tournament schedule that will feature 6 masters tournaments, 14 series tournaments, in 6 countries, 1,500 athletes, throughout the Caribbean (Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Cayman Islands, Jamaica and St. Vincent and Grenadines). In addition to the Masters Final Championship which will be announced in February.
Read MoreFormer Davis Cup player, Jamaican native Karl Hale’s newest venture is the Caribbean Cup Tennis Series — a seven event series featuring top junior, seniors and professional tennis players from around the world. The Caribbean Cup Series is centered on the four Cs — Caribbean, Competition, Charity and Camaraderie.
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