Winston Salem Journal

Pro Sports

Print This Print AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Rain washes out entire day's play, puts Open on hold

Two women's semis, men's quarterfinal moved to today, with showers expected

ADVERTISEMENT

Published: September 12, 2009

NEW YORK

Rain threw the U.S. Open schedule into disarray for the second consecutive year, meaning both singles finals will be pushed back, and the tournament will end on Monday at the earliest.

All of yesterday's matches were postponed because of steady showers. That includes the two women's semifinals -- Serena Williams vs. Kim Clijsters, and Yanina Wickmayer vs. Caroline Wozniacki -- and the men's quarterfinal between Rafael Nadal and Fernando Gonzalez, which was suspended in the second set Thursday night by showers.

Those three matches were all rescheduled for today, when the forecast again calls for rain.

Assuming the women's semifinals can be completed today, that final will be moved to Sunday, possibly at 9 p.m., although organizers were still trying to iron out the details -- including determining which matches will be aired on TV.

"There are some unknowns here," tournament spokesman Chris Widmaier said.

The last men's quarterfinal will resume with Nadal leading Gonzalez by a set and 3-2 in the second-set tiebreaker.

If that finishes today, the men's semifinals will be Sunday, with the Nadal-Gonzalez winner meeting Juan Martin del Potro, and five-time defending champion Roger Federer facing Novak Djokovic.

The men's final then would be moved from Sunday to Monday.

Last year, the U.S. Open men's final was played on a Monday for the first time since 1987.

There is no roof on any court at Flushing Meadows, although studies have been done to check on the feasibility of adding one to Arthur Ashe Stadium.

There is a new $60 million indoor complex on the grounds, but that is used only for practice during the tournament.

Wimbledon put a retractable roof over Centre Court for this year's tournament, while the Australian Open has retractable roofs over its two main courts and plans to cover a third. The French Open intends to have a roof over its center court in the next several years.

Loading Comments...
Loading
Print This Print AddThis Social Bookmark Button
 

ADVERTISEMENT

id="companion_ad"

Advertisement

Oops! Your email could not be sent because of the following errors: