A Monday men's final is becoming a U.S. Open tradition.
A Monday men's final is becoming a U.S. Open tradition.
When No. 3 seed Venus Williams and No. 6 seed Francesca Schiavone meet up in the U.S. Open quarterfinals, someone will be losing their first set of the tournament.
John McEnroe wants a hand in reviving American tennis. He wants to do it his way.
Petra Kvitova knocked the No. 1 seed out in the third round at last year's U.S. Open, but upsetting No. 2 seed Kim Clijsters in 2010 will be more of a challenge.
Five-time champion Roger Federer breezed into the third round at the U.S. Open, serving 15 aces in beating 104th-ranked Andreas Beck of Germany 6-3, 6-4, 6-3 on Thursday.
Andy Roddick found it infuriating that a lineswoman who called him for a foot fault was wrong about which of his shoes touched the line.
Victoria Azarenka collapsed and fell to the ground while chasing down a ball on the baseline and had to be taken off the court in a wheelchair Wednesday, 31 minutes into her match on another steamy day at the U.S. Open.
Kim Clijsters said she saw Serena Williams' foot lacerations and "it's not something that she's making up or that it's a small cut or anything."
Just a few months ago very few people would have brought up Mardy Fish, David Nalbandian or Marcos Baghdatis as being any real threat to surprise the field with deep U.S. Open runs. But their summer performances have made them U.S. Open sleepers to watch.
Past U.S. Open champions Roger Federer and Andy Roddick won on Day 1. Federer hit a back-to-the-net, between-the-legs winner and smacked 18 aces while eliminating Argentina's Brian Dabul 6-1, 6-4, 6-2 at night.
Tennis returns to New York with a number of interesting Day 1 storylines: America's sweetheart Melanie Oudin is back in action, Kim Clijsters is starting her title defense, Roger Federer is looking to make a run to reclaim his title and more. Take a look at five matches to watch.
John McEnroe knows his feelings about women's tennis won't make him any friends. He also doesn't care.
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