McLeod won several more professional tournaments: the 1909 & 1920 North and South Open at Pinehurst, the 1912 Shawnee Open, the 1924 St. Petersburg Open and the 1927 Maryland Open.
Saint Petersburg | Australian Open | French Open | Open University | open source | U.S. Open | Saint Petersburg State University | St. Petersburg, Florida | Wacken Open Air | Petersburg, Virginia | The Open Championship | U.S. Open (tennis) | Saint Petersburg Conservatory | Petersburg | All England Open Badminton Championships | U.S. Open (golf) | Open Source | Open-pit mining | 2006 Australian Open | Open Software Foundation | Indira Gandhi National Open University | Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup | Siege of Petersburg | FC Zenit Saint Petersburg | 2005 Australian Open – Men's Singles | U.S. Women's Open | Petersburg, Kentucky | open access | Moscow – Saint Petersburg Railway | Gerry Weber Open |
Also competing were Cincinnati Masters quarterfinalist Mikhail Youzhny, Moscow runner-up Nicolas Kiefer, Jarkko Nieminen, Greg Rusedski and Fernando Verdasco.
Other seeded players were 2007 St. Petersburg finalist Fernando Verdasco, Doha and Sydney quarterfinalist Agustín Calleri, Óscar Hernández, José Acasuso and Nicolás Massú.
The men's singles field was led by ATP No. 4, US Open semifinalist and Moscow champion Nikolay Davydenko, Metz titlist Tommy Robredo, and St. Petersburg winner and 2007 Doha runner-up Andy Murray.
It was the 16th edition of the St. Petersburg Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2010 ATP World Tour.
It was the 17th edition of the St. Petersburg Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2011 ATP World Tour.
It was the 17th edition of the St. Petersburg Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2012 ATP World Tour.
It is the 19th edition of the St. Petersburg Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 Series of the 2013 ATP World Tour.