Indian Wells 2021: Draws, prize money, storylines and everything you need to know

After a two-and-a-half-year hiatus due to the pandemic, the BNP Paribas Open returns this week for the first fall edition in Indian Wells, California. The combined WTA 1000 and ATP Masters 1000 event will feature a 96-player singles field and 32-team doubles draw, played over two weeks in the California desert.
With qualifying still to be determined for the Akron WTA Finals Guadalajara, the stakes will be high. Here's what you need to know about the last WTA 1000 event of the season:
When does the tournament start?
Qualifying is underway this week, with main-draw play to kick off Wednesday, Oct. 6. The bottom half of the draw is scheduled to play Wednesday, with the top half to play on Thursday.
The halves will continue to alternate days into the second week until Tuesday, Oct. 12, when all eight Round of 16 singles matches will be played. The quarterfinals will be played across Wednesday and Thursday, with the singles semifinals scheduled for Friday.
When are the finals?
The doubles final will be played on Saturday, Oct.16. The singles final will be played on Sunday, Oct. 17 at 1:00 p.m. PT.
Who are the top seeds?
Here are the Top 16 seeds:
No.1 Karolina Pliskova
No.2 Iga Swiatek
No.3 Barbora Krejcikova
No.4 Elina Svitolina
No.5 Garbiñe Muguruza
No.6 Maria Sakkari
No.7 Petra Kvitova
No.8 Belinda Bencic
No.9 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
No.10 Angelique Kerber
No.11 Simona Halep
No.12 Ons Jabeur
No.13 Elena Rybakina
No.14 Elise Mertens
No.15 Coco Gauff
No.16 Bianca Andreescu
Also seeded in the draw are US Open champion Emma Raducanu
Who are the defending champions?
Bianca Andreescu
Elise Mertens
What does the draw look like?
Main draw @BNPPARIBASOPEN, where Karolina Pliskova
— WTA Insider (@WTA_insider) October 5, 2021View Profile , Iga SwiatekView Profile , Barbora KrejcikovaView Profile , and Elina SvitolinaView Profile are the top seeds.
Main draw play begins Wednesday. #BNPPO21 pic.twitter.com/iFdmMBYV13
For a full breakdown of the draw, click here.
World No.1 Ashleigh Barty, No.2 Aryna Sabalenka
Wildcards were granted to two-time champion and former No.1 Kim Clijsters. US Open champion Raducanu, whose ranking was well outside the main draw cutoff at the entry deadline four weeks ago, was also given a wildcard. The final main-draw wildcards went to Americans Caty McNally, Claire Liu, Katie Volynets
What is the prize money and ranking points on offer?
Champion: $1,209,730/1,000 points
Finalist: $640,000/650 points
Semifinalist: $335,000/390 points
Quarterfinalist: $175,000/215 points
Fourth Round: $92,000/120 points
Third Round: $51,895/ 65 points
Second Round: $29,045/ 35 points
First Round: $18,155/ 1 point
With regard to ranking points, the World No.1 ranking is not in play in Indian Wells. Barty will remain No.1 after the tournament.
Key storylines
Indian Wells will play a major role in WTA Finals qualifying: With Barty, Sabalenka, Krejcikova and Pliskova having already qualified, four automatic qualifying spots and two alternate positions remain open for the Akron WTA Finals Guadalajara with just three tournament weeks remaining in the regular season. With 1,000 points on offer in Indian Wells, a title run by any player in the Top 25 of the Porsche Race to the WTA Finals Leaderboard could vault them into qualifying contention.
With the top four spots claimed, here where the Porsche Race Leaderboard Top 20 stands at the start of Indian Wells:
No.5 Maria Sakkari
No.6 Garbiñe Muguruza: 3,141 points
No.7 Iga Swiatek
* Note: 46 points separate the No.5 to No.7 spots
No.8 Naomi Osaka
No.9 Ons Jabeur
No.10 Elise Mertens
No.11 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
No.12 Elina Svitolina
No.13 Coco Gauff
No.14 Jessica Pegula
No.15 Emma Raducanu
No.16 Anett Kontaveit: 2,227 points
No.17 Belinda Bencic
No.18 Angelique Kerber: 2,172 points
No.19 Paula Badosa
No.20 Daria Kasatkina
* Note: 710 points separate the No.8 to No.20 spots
Kim Clijsters returns to California after a decade away: A champion in 2003 and 2005, the former No.1 continues her comeback. The 38-year-old fan favorite is set to play her first Indian Wells since a Round of 16 run in 2011 and will open against Siniakova in the first round. Still looking for her first win since coming back in 2020, Clijsters played her first match of 2021 last week at the Chicago Fall Tennis Classic, where she went three sets against Hsieh Su-Wei in the first round.
hey from the desert!🌵😆 pic.twitter.com/qZIOtOl7Iw
— Emma Raducanu (@EmmaRaducanu) October 3, 2021
Emma Raducanu
Fernandez will open against either Alizé Cornet or a qualifier.
Garbiñe Muguruza, Maria Sakkari
Year-end No.1 ranking: Indian Wells will also play a significant role in the year-end No.1 ranking. Roland Garros champion Krejcikova and Wimbledon finalist Pliskova can keep their bids for the top spot if they make it to Championship Sunday, with Pliskova needing the title if she's to stay in the hunt.