Archive: September 2017
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Click here to check out the final draws from the 2017 U.S. Open.
Rafael Nadal stole the show on the court throughout the recent U.S. Open, and he also made an unusual amount of noise in his interviews with more than a few comical quips. So, too, did Roger Federer and many others.
Nadal triumphed in New York for the third time on Sunday afternoon, lifting the trophy once again following a 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 rout of Kevin Anderson. The world No. 1 did not face a single break point while coasting to victory in two hours and 27 minutes. Nadal used unusually strong and well-placed returns to break Anderson four times and he almost kept up with the 6'8'' South African in the winners department (32 to 30 in Anderson's favor). The Spaniard also committed a mere 11 unforced errors, whereas 40 mistakes came off the underdog's racket.
Make it two titles at this year's U.S. Open for Martina Hingis. Just about 24 hours after winning in mixed doubles with Jamie Murray, Hingis teamed up with Yung-Jan Chan to triumph in women's doubles on Sunday afternoon with a 6-3, 6-2 rout of Lucie Hradecka and Katerina Siniakova.
Many US Open men’s singles finals have been storied. (After all, in some form or other, the Open has been the penultimate destination for tennis champions since 1881 when it was known as the US National Championships.)
Sloane Stephens was ranked No. 957 in the world less than two months ago. She is now the U.S. Open champion. Let that sink in. In fact, let me say it again because it sounds so hard to believe.
Martina Hingis is 36 years old. She will be 37 at the end of this month. But like Venus Williams, the legend keeps growing.
Rafael Nadal and Kevin Anderson will be facing each other for the fifth time in their careers when they collide in the U.S. Open final on Sunday afternoon.
Rafael Nadal is one win away from a 16th Grand Slam title and third at the U.S. Open. The world No. 1 took another step--and a big one--toward that destination when he defeated Juan Martin Del Potro 4-6, 6-0, 6-3, 6-2 during semifinal action on Friday night.
It was an all-American semifinal lineup on Thursday night. For the first time at a Grand Slam since Wimbledon in 1985 and for the first time at the U.S. Open since 1981, all four semifinalists were Americans.
For the first time in U.S. Open history, wheelchair tennis was played in Arthur Ashe Stadium on Thursday afternoon. In men's doubles, No. 2 seeds Alfie Hewitt and Gordon Reid of Great Britain Alfie Hewett defeated Japan's Shingo Kunedia and Argentina's Gustavo Fernandez 6-3, 6-2...
One of Friday's U.S. Open men's semifinals will be... wait for it... Pablo Carreno Busta vs. Kevin Anderson.
There will be a blockbuster U.S. Open semifinal on Friday. It just won't be the one people expected.
Sloane Stephens and Venus Williams started it. Coco Vandeweghe and Madison Keys finished it off.
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