Here Are The Top Five Men And Women To Watch At The 2019 US Open
24th August 2019
The 38-year-old Swiss world number three lost to Djokovic in an epic five-set Wimbledon final last month, the longest championship match in tournament history at four hours and 57 minutes

- World number one Djokovic will try to become the first back-to-back US Open men's singles champion since Roger Federer won five in a row from 2004-2008
- Top-ranked defending champion Osaka, a 21-year-old from Japan, defeated Serena Williams in last year's US Open final but dubbed the experience "bittersweet" after Williams received a game penalty
- The 23-time Grand Slam singles champion makes another bid to match Australian Margaret Court's all-time record
NEW YORK, United
States- Five men to watch at the US Open tennis tournament that begins
Monday at Flushing Meadows:
- Novak Djokovic -
World number one Djokovic will try to become the first
back-to-back US Open men's singles champion since Roger Federer won five in a
row from 2004-2008. The 32-year-old Serbian has won four of the past five Grand
Slam singles crowns, missing out only at the French Open after a semi-final
loss to Dominic Thiem, and captured 16 career Slam singles titles, four shy of
matching Federer's all-time men's record. He won US Open titles in 2011 and
2015 as well as last year.
- Rafael Nadal -
The 33-year-old Spanish left-hander seized his 12th French
Open title in June and comes to New York ranked second in the world and seeking
his fourth title in 10 years on the Flushing Meadows hardcourts after 2010,
2013 and 2017. His 18 Grand Slam titles are two shy of Roger Federer's career
men's record of 20. Nadal lost to Federer in the Wimbledon semi-finals
last month but won his only US Open hardcourt tuneup event at Montreal.
- Roger Federer -
The 38-year-old Swiss world number three lost to Djokovic in
an epic five-set Wimbledon final last month, the longest championship match in
tournament history at four hours and 57 minutes. He lost in the third round at
Cincinnati to Andrey Rublev in 62 minutes, his quickest loss in 16 years, in
his only US Open hardcourt tuneup event. Federer owns a record 20 Grand Slam
singles titles but he hasn't won a major trophy since lifting the 2018
Australian Open hardware. He hasn't won a US Open title since taking five
in a row from 2004-2008, his longest current title drought at any Slam.
- Daniil Medvedev -
The 23-year-old Russian had the finest hardcourt run of any
ATP player ahead of the US Open, reaching the final at Washington and Montreal
and winning his fifth career tour title at Cincinnati. He lost to Australian
Nick Kyrgios in the Washington final and Nadal in the Montreal final then
defeated David Goffin in the Cincinnati final, jumping three spots to fifth in
the world rankings. His only prior ATP titles came last year in Sydney,
Winston-Salem and Japan and this year in Sofia. His best Grand Slam run came in
January with a spot in the fourth round at the Australian Open. His top US Open
showing was a berth in last year's third round.
- Roberto Bautista Agut -
The 31-year-old Spaniard is enjoying a breakthrough year and
hoping to reach his first Grand Slam final in the season's final major
tournament. Bautista Agut cracked the ATP world top 10 for the first time on
Monday by reaching 10th in the rankings. He reached his first Grand Slam
quarter-final at this year's Australian Open, losing to Stefanos Tsitsipas, and
his first Grand Slam semi-final at Wimbledon, losing to eventual champion
Djokovic. In his US Open tuneups, he lost quarter-final matches at Montreal and
Cincinnati.
Five women to watch at the US Open tennis tournament that begins Monday
at Flushing Meadows:
- Naomi Osaka -
Top-ranked defending champion Osaka, a 21-year-old from
Japan, defeated Serena Williams in last year's US Open final but dubbed the
experience "bittersweet" after Williams received a game penalty in a
dispute with the umpire and Osaka was booed during the match and award
ceremony. Osaka went on the win this year's Australian Open title, becoming the
first player since Williams in 2015 to win back-to-back Slam singles crowns.
- Ashleigh Barty -
Second-ranked Barty, a 23-year-old Australian, captured her
first Grand Slam title at this year's French Open. She became the first
Australian to lift the trophy at Roland Garros since Margaret Court in 1973.
Barty won two other titles this year, taking the Miami hardcourt crown and
Birmingham trophy on grass. She made a fourth-round exit at Wimbledon last
month after having become only the second Aussie world number one after Evonne
Goolagong Cawley.
- Simona Halep -
The 27-year-old Romanian defeated Serena Williams in last
month's Wimbledon final, dominating the 23-time Grand Slam singles champion
after having dropped nine of their 10 prior meetings. It was the second Grand
Slam title for Halep, who won the 2018 French Open. Her best US Open result
came in a 2015 semi-final run. She arrives in New York ranked fourth in the
world.
- Serena Williams -
The 23-time Grand Slam singles champion makes another bid to
match Australian Margaret Court's all-time record. The 37-year-old American is
ranked eighth in the world. Williams shares the Open Era-record of six US Open
singles crowns with Chris Evert. She has also won seven Australian Opens, seven
Wimbledon crowns and three French Open titles. Williams has not won any Grand
Slam singles crown since the 2017 Australian Open and since becoming a mother
during the 2017 US Open. Her longest singles title drought at any Slam is at
the US Open, which she last won in 2014. She was upset by Italy's Roberta
Vinci in the 2015 US Open semi-finals and by Karolina Pliskova in the 2016 US
Open semis. She missed the 2017 US Open giving birth to baby daughter Alexis but
returned in 2018 and reached the final, only to fall to Osaka after being
penalized a game by umpire Carlos Ramos.
- Madison Keys -
The 24-year-old American won last week's WTA Cincinnati
title, jumping eight spots to 10th in the world rankings, three shy of her
career high and back in the top 10 for the first time since June 2018. Keys
defeated Slam winners Garbine Muguruza, Venus Williams, Svetlana Kuznetsova and
Halep on the way to the Cincy crown. She reached her only Grand Slam singles
final at the 2017 US Open, losing to Sloane Stephens, and last year lost a US
Open semi-final to eventual champion Osaka.