US Open | ||
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Official web | ||
Location | Flushing, New York City United States |
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Venue | USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center | |
Surface | DecoTurf / Outdoors | |
Men's draw | 128S / 128Q / 64D | |
Women's draw | 128S / 96Q / 64D | |
Prize money | US$19,600,000 | |
Grand Slam | ||
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2008 US Open (tennis) |
The US Open tennis tournament is one of the oldest tennis championships in the world, first contested in 1881. It was the final event of the Grand Slam Tournament.
The tournament is chronologically the fourth and final event of the Grand Slam tennis tournaments. It is held annually in August and September over a two-week period (the weeks before and after Labor Day weekend). The main tournament consists of five championships: men's and women's singles, men's and women's doubles, and mixed doubles, with additional tournaments for senior, junior, and wheelchair players. Since 1978, the tournament has been played on acrylic hard court at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens, New York City.
The US Open differs from the other three Grand Slam tournaments in that there are final-set tiebreaks. In the other three majors, the fifth set for the men and the third set for the women continue until someone wins by two games.
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The US Open has grown from an exclusive entertainment event for high society to, as of 2008 championship for more than 600 male and female professional players who compete for a total of over US$19 million in prize money, with $1.5 million for each winner of the singles tournaments.
The US Open for men originally was a separate tournament from the US Open for women. The U.S. National Singles Championship (men only) was first held in August 1881 at the Newport Casino, Newport, Rhode Island. Only clubs that were members of the United States National Lawn Tennis Association were permitted to enter. From 1884 through 1911, the tournament used a challenge system whereby the defending champion automatically qualified for the next year's final. In 1915, the tournament moved to the West Side Tennis Club at Forest Hills, New York. From 1921 through 1923, it was played at the Germantown Cricket Club in Philadelphia and returned to Forest Hills in 1924.
Six years after the men's nationals were first held, the first official U.S. Women's National Singles Championship was held at the Philadelphia Cricket Club in 1887, followed by the U.S. Women's National Doubles Championship in 1889. The first U.S. Mixed Doubles Championship was held alongside the women's singles and doubles. The first U.S. National Men's Doubles Championship was held in 1900. Tournaments were held in the east and the west of the country to determine the best two teams, which competed in a play-off to see who would play the defending champions in the challenge round.
The open era began in 1968 when all five events were merged into the US Open, held at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, New York. The 1968 combined tournament was open to professionals for the first time. That year, 96 men and 63 women entered the event, and prize money totaled $100,000.
In 1970, the US Open became the first of the Grand Slam tournaments to use a tiebreak at the end of a set.
The US Open was originally played on grass until Forest Hills switched to Har-Tru clay courts in 1975. In 1978, the event moved from Forest Hills to its current home at Flushing Meadows, and the surface changed again, to the current DecoTurf. (Jimmy Connors is the only man to have won the US Open on more than one surface. He won it on all three surfaces. Female player Chris Evert won it on two surfaces.)
In 2006, the US Open became the first Grand Slam tournament to implement instant replay reviews of calls, using Hawk-Eye. Available only on the stadium courts (Ashe and Armstrong), each player was allowed two challenges per set plus one additional challenge during a tiebreak but was not penalized with the loss of a challenge if it was upheld. The USTA announced that starting in 2008, each player will be given three challenges per set with an extra challenge if the set goes to a tiebreak.
Once a challenge is made, the official review (a 3-D computer simulation based on multiple high-speed video cameras) is shown to the players, umpires, and audience on the stadium video boards and to the television audience at the same time. The system is said to be accurate to within five millimeters.
During the 2006 US Open, 30.5% of men's challenges and 35.85% of women's challenges were overturned.[1] During the 2007 US Open, 95 out of 320 challenges were overturned - or 30.6%.
The DecoTurf surface at the US Open is a fast surface, having slightly less friction and producing a lower bounce compared to other hard courts (most notably the Rebound Ace surface formerly used at the Australian Open). For this reason, many serve-and-volley players have found success at the US Open.
The main court is located at the 24,000-seat Arthur Ashe Stadium, named after Arthur Ashe, the African American tennis player who won the inaugural men's final of the US Open in 1968. (In that same year, British player Virginia Wade won the first woman's US Open final, five months after she turned professional.) Court Number 2 is Louis Armstrong Stadium, which stood as the main stadium until the completion of Ashe stadium. Court Number 3 is the Grandstand Stadium, which is attached to the Louis Armstrong Stadium. Sidecourts 4, 7 and 11 each have a seating capacity of over 1,000.
All the courts used by the US Open are lit, meaning that TV coverage of the tournament can extend into prime time to attract more ratings. This has recently been used to the advantage of the USA Network on cable and especially for CBS, the American broadcast TV outlet for the Open for many years, which used its influence to move the women's singles final to Saturday night to draw better television ratings.
In 2005, all US Open and US Open Series tennis courts were given blue inner courts and green outer courts to make it easier to see the ball.
The USTA National Tennis Center was renamed in honor of four-time tournament champion and tennis pioneer Billie Jean King during the 2006 US Open.
The total prize money for the 2008 US Open is divided as follows:
Winners | $1,500,000 |
Runners-Up | $750,000 |
Semifinalists | $320,000 |
Quarterfinalists | $160,000 |
Round of 16 | $80,000 |
Third Round | $46,000 |
Second Round | $30,000 |
First Round | $18,500 |
Total | $7,050,000 |
Winners | $420,000 |
Runners-Up | $210,000 |
Semifinalists | $105,000 |
Quarterfinalists | $50,000 |
Round of 16 | $25,000 |
Second Round | $15,000 |
First Round | $10,000 |
Total | $1,800,000 ($3,600,000) |
Winners | $150,000 |
Runners-Up | $70,000 |
Semifinalists | $30,000 |
Quarterfinalists | $15,000 |
Second Round | $10,000 |
First Round | $5,000 |
Total | $500,000 |
Third Round Losers (16) | $8,000 |
Second Round Losers (32) | $5,625 |
First Round Losers (64) | $3,000 |
Total | $500,000 ($1,000,000) |
Total Championship Events | $19,200,000 |
Total for Champions Invitational | $385,000 |
Player per diem | $1,072,000 |
Total Player Compensation | $20,657,000 |
Record | Era | Player(s) | Count | Winning Years |
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Men since 1881 | ||||
Winner of most Men's Singles titles | Before 1968: | Richard Sears Bill Larned Bill Tilden |
7 | 1881-1887 1901, 1902, 1907-1911 1920-1925, 1929 |
1968-current: | Jimmy Connors Pete Sampras Roger Federer |
5 | 1974, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1983 1990, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2002 2004-2008 |
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Winner of most consecutive Men's Singles titles | Before 1968: | Richard Sears | 7 | 1881-1887 |
1968-current: | Roger Federer | 5 | 2004-2008 | |
Winner of most Men's Doubles titles | Before 1968: | Richard Sears & James Dwight |
6 | 1882-1887 |
1968-current: | Bob Lutz Stan Smith John McEnroe |
4 | 1968, 1974, 1978, 1980 1968, 1974, 1978, 1980 1979, 1981, 1983, 1989 |
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Winner of most consecutive Men's Doubles titles | Before 1968: | Richard Sears & James Dwight |
6 | 1882-1887 |
1968-current: | Todd Woodbridge & Mark Woodforde |
2 | 1995-96 | |
Winner of most Mixed Doubles titles - Men | Before 1968: | Bill Tilden Bill Talbert |
4 | 1913-14 with Mary K. Browne, 1922-23 Molla Bjurstedt Mallory 1943-46 with Margaret Osborne duPont |
1968-current: | Owen Davidson | 4 | 1966 with Donna Floyd Fales, 1967, 1971, 1973 with Billie Jean King | |
Todd Woodbridge Bob Bryan |
3 | 1990 with Elizabeth Sayers Smylie, 1993 with Helena Sukova, 2001 with Rennae Stubbs 2003 with Katarina Srebotnik, 2004 with Vera Zvonareva, 2006 with Martina Navratilova |
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Winner of most Championships (total: singles, doubles, mixed) - Men | Before 1968: | Bill Tilden | 16 | 7 singles, 5 doubles, 4 mixed doubles |
1968-current: | John McEnroe | 8 | 4 singles, 4 doubles | |
Women since 1887 | ||||
Winner of most Women's Singles titles | Before 1968: | / Molla Bjurstedt Mallory | 8 | 1915-18, 1920-22, 1926 |
1968-current: | Chris Evert | 6 | 1975-78, 1980, 1982 | |
Winner of most consecutive Women's Singles titles | Before 1968: | Molla Bjurstedt Mallory Helen Jacobs |
4 | 1915-18 1932-35 |
1968-current: | Chris Evert | 4 | 1975-78 | |
Winner of most Women's Doubles titles | Before 1968: | Margaret Osborne duPont | 13 | 1941 with Sarah Palfrey Cooke, 1942-1950, 1955-57 with Louise Brough Clapp |
1968-current: | / Martina Navrátilová | 9 | 1977 with Betty Stove, 1978, 1980 with Billie Jean King, 1983-84, 1986-87 with Pam Shriver, 1989 with Hana Mandlíková, 1990 with Gigi Fernandez | |
Winner of most consecutive Women's Doubles titles | Before 1968: | Margaret Osborne duPont | 9 | 1941 with Sarah Palfrey Cooke, 1942-1950 with Louise Brough Clapp |
1968-current: | Virginia Ruano Pascual & Paola Suárez |
3 | 2002-04 | |
Winner of most Mixed Doubles titles - Women | Before 1968: | Margaret Osborne duPont | 8 | 1943-46 with Bill Talbert, 1950 Ken McGregor 1958-60 with Neale Fraser |
1968-current: | Margaret Court Billie Jean King / Martina Navrátilová |
3 | 1969-70, 1972 with Marty Riessen 1971, 1973 with Owen Davidson, 1976 with Phil Dent 1985 with Heinz Günthardt, 1987 with Emilio Sanchez, 2006 with Bob Bryan |
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Winner of most Championships (total: singles, doubles, mixed) - women | Before 1968: | Margaret Osborne duPont | 25 | 3 singles, 13 doubles, 9 mixed doubles |
1968-current: | Margaret Court / Martina Navrátilová |
18 16 |
5 singles, 5 doubles, 8 mixed doubles (between 1961-1975) 4 singles, 9 doubles, 3 mixed doubles |
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Miscellaneous | ||||
Youngest winner(single) | Men: | [[]] | ||
Women: | Tracy Austin | 16 years and 8 months |
Since the U.S. Championships began in 1881, there have been only five years when an American reached neither the men's nor women's singles final: 1959, 1973, 1988, 2004, and 2007.
The 2008 Open is being broadcast in the United States on CBS and USA Network. Beginning in 2009, the tournament will be broadcast on CBS, ESPN2, and Tennis Channel.
The tournament is being broadcast in Canada on TSN, TSN HD and TSN2. The tournament is being broadcast in the United Kingdom on Sky Sports 2, Sky Sports Xtra, and Eurosport. In Spain, the tournament is being broadcast on Digital plus and Antena 3. In India and Pakistan, the US Open is being broadcast on the channel Ten Sports. In Germany, it is being broadcast by Eurosport.
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Preceded by Wimbledon |
Grand Slam Tournament August-September |
Succeeded by Australian Open |
Preceded by New Haven |
US Open Series July-September |
Succeeded by None |