Archive: ao18
Lovey Jergen's here with a postcard and a newsflash. We are sharing some nice photos. Sven is thanking Nike court. The Nike team is amazing.
Click here to check out the men's and women's singles draw from the Australian Open 2018.
Novak Djokovic and Stan Wawrinka are accustomed to being the top-seeded players in their respective sections of slam draws, but that is not the case heading into the 2018 Australian Open--and likely the French Open and Wimbledon, too.
Melbourne’s Yarra River flows slow and brown. At its bottom, one sees rusting bicycles from which drunken Aussies have leapt or fallen, a smattering of beer cans which were the former phrase’s root cause, and a slew of slain tennis balls likely batted from the frame of a mid-practice Nick Kyrgios.
The 2018 Australian Open draw ceremony was held on Thursday night at Melbourne's Rod Laver Arena. It was less chaotic than it might if been Andy Murray and Kei Nishikori had not withdrawn from the men's field, but there was still plenty of intrigue with several players seeded lower than usual due to injury-plagued inactivity.
Welcome to Oz, the opportunity Slam. The absences of 23-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams and two-time champion Victoria Azarenka—combined with the lack of a dominant player—makes this Australian Open the most-wide open women’s Grand Slam in more than a decade, Hall of Famer Chrissie Evert asserts.
Triple Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka and former world No.1 Lleyton Hewitt are set to join Novak Djokovic and Nick Kyrgios at the Australian debut of Tie Break Tens.
Seventeen-year-old Destanee Aiava (Narre Warren, Vic) and 18-year-old Alex De Minaur (Sydney, NSW) have been awarded Australian Open 2018 wildcards after winning the AO Play-off finals in Melbourne today.
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