
Tennis-U.S. Open's reimagined mixed doubles puts singles stars in spotlight
NEW YORK (Reuters) -The U.S. Open's experiment to bring a bigger spotlight to the mixed doubles kicks off on Tuesday, as the competition gets its own place on the calendar and organisers lure in fans with partnerships made up of top singles players.
Beloved by diehard fans but often lost in a schedule which is dominated by singles action, this year's mixed doubles begins five days before the main draw with a sellout crowd expected at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Past U.S. Open singles champions Emma Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz will play together while six-times Grand Slam winner Iga Swiatek joins forces with 2022 finalist Casper Ruud, in a star-studded lineup that fans scarcely could have imagined before.
The format was overhauled to feature 16 teams - half as many as competed a year ago - with eight entries based on combined singles rankings of players and eight wildcards.
The fan response has been positive, and prices for a pair of courtside seats at Wednesday's semis and final were listed for upwards of $500 on the secondary ticket platform StubHub as of Monday.
"While not everyone loves change, I think we've mostly seen that fans are really excited to see these top singles' players compete together," Eric Butorac, the tournament's senior director for player relations and business development, told Reuters.
Organisers were inspired to pursue the new format after watching retired greats Serena Williams and Andy Murray play together in the mixed doubles at Wimbledon in 2019, a dream pairing that got the attention of fans and the media.
Other sports have gotten the message, too: Golf, athletics and swimming added mixed events to their Olympic agenda while the addition of WNBA sharpshooter Sabrina Ionescu to the NBA 3-Point Challenge last year led to a surge of TV viewership.
"'How do we make this happen at the U.S. Open?' It was that question that sort of started us all thinking of... the reasons why the top players don't play, but how can we make it happen," said Butorac.
A massive increase in prize money for the winners, up to $1,000,000 from $200,000 a year ago, sweetened the deal, while the standalone place on the calendar in the week before the main draw meant players could more easily participate.
"When the singles players are playing mixed doubles, it's a great thing for fans," Swiatek told the Tennis Channel.
MIXED DOUBLES, MIXED REACTION
The plan has also attracted plenty of critics, including veteran doubles players and Italian reigning champions Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori, who earned wildcard entry and had called the format a "profound injustice."
Doubles Olympic champion Katerina Siniakova questioned why top doubles players would need a wildcard entry.
"A lot of (the critics) are people that I played with on tour so they all have my phone number and were not afraid to call," said Butorac, a retired doubles specialist.
Organisers took the total $680,000 in prize money offered in the mixed doubles a year ago and added it to the men's and women's doubles, on top of already scheduled increases in prize money, to keep doubles' players' earning potential up.
"When we had those conversations with the doubles players, I don't think any of them necessarily liked the decision, but I think a lot of them understood that from a broader fan perspective, this is something that we really want to try," said Butorac.
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Sun
36 minutes ago
- The Sun
Sinner withdrawn from US Open mixed doubles draw
WORLD number one Jannik Sinner, who was forced to retire during the final of the Cincinnati Open, and playing partner Katerina Siniakova were removed from the US Open mixed doubles draw on Tuesday. The withdrawal comes a day after illness forced Sinner to concede defeat to great rival Carlos Alcaraz after going 5-0 down in the first set of the Cincinnati final on Monday. The 24-year-old did not speak to journalists after the loss, issuing a statement saying only that he would definitely play at the US Open in New York, where the singles main draw starts on Sunday. 'I love Grand Slams a lot, they are the main tournaments for, for my season and my career,' reigning US Open champion Sinner said. 'The US Open is going to be a tough tournament, but in the same time, I'm looking forward to it if I'm ready, physically and mentally.' The statement did not address his participation in the mixed doubles -- organised on Tuesday and Wednesday in a new shortened format that brings together the world's best singles players -- raising doubts about whether he would be able to compete. The pair replacing Sinner and Siniakova will face Switzerland's Belinda Bencic and Germany's Alexander Zverev in the first round. - AFP

New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Defending champions trump singles stars in early US Open mixed doubles
NEW YORK: Veteran doubles experience overcame singles stardom as defending champions Andrea Vavassori and Sara Errani reached the semi-finals at the U.S. Open's reimagined mixed doubles on Tuesday, as the event kicked off with a new format and new fans. Vavassori and Errani downed 2022 Wimbledon singles winner Elena Rybakina and 2024 U.S. Open singles finalist Taylor Fritz 4-2 4-2, before outlasting Karolina Muchova and Andrey Rublev 4-1 5-4(4) in the quarter-finals. The Italians had earned wild card entries. The pair had added motivation to retain their crown as the year's final major took a new approach to the event beloved by fans but often lost in a schedule that is dominated by singles action, moving the competition to five days before the main draw. This year's format saw eight pairings based on the combined singles rankings and eight wild cards, a move that left some doubles competitors fuming - including Vavassori and Errani - but brought a sellout crowd to Arthur Ashe Stadium. "The positives are for sure that the stadium was packed in the second match," said Vavassori, after downing Fritz and Rybakina. "It's a great thing for doubles to be seen by more people. I have to give them credit," he said. "We're also playing for all the doubles players that could not be here, so we tried to do our best." The Italians will face Danielle Collins and Christian Harrison after the last-minute tournament additions advanced to the semis with a stunning 4-1 5-4(2) win over fellow Americans Ben Shelton and Taylor Townsend. The 2022 singles champion Iga Swiatek showed little sign of fatigue a day after clinching the title in Cincinnati, as she and teammate Casper Ruud downed American duo Madison Keys and Frances Tiafoe 4-1 4-2 in their opener. They made easy work of Grand Slam doubles finalist Caty McNally and partner Lorenzo Musetti 4-1 4-2 later in the day, to claim another of the semi-final spots. The semis and final are set for Wednesday. "Last two days felt like one long day but I'm super happy to be here and playing with Casper," said Swiatek. "Didn't have time to play many doubles to practise but I think I can improvise pretty well." Swiatek and Ruud will face the top-seeded team of American Jessica Pegula and Briton Jack Draper in the semi-finals after they crushed the all-Russian duo of Mirra Andreeva and Daniil Medvedev 4-1 4-1. Draper and Pegula had earlier dispatched five-times Grand Slam singles champion Carlos Alcaraz and former women's U.S. Open champion Emma Raducanu in the last 16. 'HOLLYWOOD OF MIXED DOUBLES' A logjam of cars waited long into the first round to enter the Flushing Meadows grounds as spectators abandoned their taxis, walking up the Grand Central Parkway to get inside the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. It was the earliest sign of business not-as-usual for the U.S. Open's "fan week" as ticketholders shelled out to catch the early action just a day after the Cincinnati Open concluded. "We're really excited. We heard it was like the Hollywood of mixed doubles," said Boston native Krystyna Zaluski, who brought her 13-year-old son to the tournament for the first time. "This event made it so simple for us to come out here." That star power was dented slightly by the last-minute withdrawal of Italian Jannik Sinner, a day after illness forced the world number one to retire five games into his Cincinnati Open final. Semi-finalists Collins and Harrison replaced Sinner and partner Katerina Siniakova in the draw.

The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Swiatek, Ruud romp into US Open mixed doubles semis
IGA SWIATEK shrugged off lingering weariness to partner Casper Ruud to back-to-back victories in the revamped mixed doubles competition at the US Open on Tuesday. Swiatek -- who on Monday had battled through a two-hour tussle with Jasmine Paolini to win the Cincinnati Open -- looked full of energy as she and Ruud powered into Wednesday's semi-finals. Swiatek and Ruud needed just 39 minutes to dispatch the US pairing of Madison Keys and Frances Tiafoe 4-1, 4-2 in their opening game at Arthur Ashe Stadium, and then reappeared roughly 20 minutes later to defeat Caty McNally and Lorenzo Musetti 5-3, 4-2 in their quarter-final clash. The victories capped a gruelling 24 hours for Polish star Swiatek, who hot-footed it to the airport after Monday's win in Cincinnati and only arrived at her hotel in New York in the early hours of Tuesday. 'Honestly the last two days have felt like one day, but I'm super happy to be here,' Swiatek said, adding that her tight turnaround had helped her unwind after her exertions in Cincinnati. 'Honestly I think actually it's kind of nice for the recovery,' Swiatek said. 'To have another task and to not let yourself be lazy but also focused on the next exciting thing.' Ruud and Swiatek had just enough time to fit in a quick practice before taking to the court in their first match as a doubles pairing. 'I was happy to team up with Iga,' Ruud said afterwards. 'She's on the winning train these days so I'm just jumping on the train and let's see if we can win some more before the mixed doubles is over. 'I think everyone should show some appreciation to Iga today. She only got to her hotel 12 hours ago at 2.30am, and she's here playing.' Alcaraz, Djokovic out Swiatek and Ruud will meet top seeds Jessica Pegula of the United States and Britain's Jack Draper in Wednesday's semi-finals. Pegula and Draper clicked smoothly to eliminate the glamour pairing of Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu 4-2, 4-2 in the first round before easing past Russia's Daniil Medvedev and Mirra Andreeva 4-1, 4-1 in the quarter-finals. Medvedev and Andreeva had earlier romped past Novak Djokovic and Olga Danilovic in straight sets in the first round, winning 4-2, 5-3. In other results on Tuesday, US tennis icon Venus Williams and partner Reilly Opelka exited against Karolina Muchova and Andrey Rublev, losing 4-2, 5-4. Italy's reigning champions Andrea Vavassori and Sara Errani ousted second seeds Elena Rybakina and Taylor Fritz 4-2, 4-2. Earlier Tuesday, world number one Jannik Sinner's withdrawal from the mixed doubles was confirmed as expected. Sinner, who retired due to illness in the first set of his Cincinnati Open final with Alcaraz on Monday, was due to partner Katerina Siniakova in the doubles. Sinner and Siniakova were replaced in the draw by the American duo of Danielle Collins and Christian Harrison. This year's US Open mixed doubles competition is being held over Tuesday and Wednesday in the week before the main singles draws get under way. The tournament is using a modified scoring system, with short sets to four games, no-advantage scoring, tiebreakers at four-all and a 10-point match tiebreak in lieu of a third set. The final will be a best-of-three set match to six games, featuring no-advantage scoring, with tiebreakers at six-all and a 10-point match tiebreaker instead of a third set, with the winning pairing pocketing $1 million. - AFP



