
China Open Game Online - Play Free Fun Racket Sports Games
China Open returns from the Flash era with a fierce burst of tennis action, now fully playable on modern devices and ready to test your champion spirit! Step onto the court, face down determined opponents, and battle your way through grueling rallies fueled by pure grit and heart. Every match demands focus, precision, and the will to push past blood, sweat, and tears as you chase the ultimate title. Do you have the skill-and the stamina-to rise to the top? Grab your racket and find out. Have fun and fight for glory!
10,688 play times
How to Play China Open Game
Use the Arrow Keys to move, and spacebar to hit. When you are serving hold spacebar and use arrows to aim.
Fun Facts About China Open
China Open is an annual professional tennis tournament held in Beijing, China. The men's singles and doubles events were first held in 1993. In 2006, the China Open became the first tournament outside of the United States to use the Hawk-Eye system in match play. Novak Djokovic is the only player to have won the title six times. Djokovic holds the record for consecutive wins with four titles. In doubles, the Bryan Brothers are the only doubles pair to have won consecutive titles. Svetlana Kuznetsova and Serena Williams hold the record for most titles won in the women's tournament, with two titles each.
Tennis in China
Tennis is a rapidly growing sport that has received much private and public support, and has today become firmly entrenched in the Chinese consciousness as one of the most popular. Tennis is now the third-most popular sport on television in China, behind soccer and basketball. The national governing body is the China Tennis Association. China has 30,000 tennis courts and an estimated 14 million people in China regularly play tennis, up from 1 million when the sport returned to the Olympics in 1988, according to the WTA Tour. Overall there are four fundamental reasons that have contributed to the growth of tennis in China. Firstly, the national economy has improved enormously and the booming middle class sees tennis as a family sport and a way to improve social status. Secondly, there has been the emergence of higher ranked players from other parts of Asia, such as Japan, India, Thailand and Indonesia all of whom spur competition and standard of play. Thirdly, the investment of the International Tennis Federation and the Chinese Tennis Association in the development of the grass-roots game has been crucial. And finally there are the Beijing Olympics, considered as a way to raise the profile of sports in China.







