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2017 Australian Open

Tennis tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2017 Australian Open was a tennis tournament that took place at Melbourne Park between 16 and 29 January 2017. It was the 105th edition of the Australian Open, and the first Grand Slam tournament of the year. The tournament consisted of events for professional players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles play. Junior and wheelchair players competed in singles and doubles tournaments. As in previous years, the tournament's title sponsor was Kia.

Novak Djokovic and Angelique Kerber were the defending champions and both were unsuccessful in their title defence; they lost to Denis Istomin and CoCo Vandeweghe in the second and fourth rounds, respectively. For the first time since the 2004 French Open, both No. 1 seeds lost before the quarterfinals, with both Andy Murray and Kerber defeated in the fourth round.

Roger Federer won his eighteenth men's singles Grand Slam title by defeating Rafael Nadal in a five-set final. It was his first major title since 2012 Wimbledon and a rematch of the 2009 Australian Open final, which Nadal won in five sets. Serena Williams overcame her sister Venus in the women's singles final, surpassing Steffi Graf to become the player with the most major wins in the women's game in the Open Era.

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Tournament

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Rod Laver Arena where the Finals of the Australian Open took place

The 2017 Australian Open was the 105th edition of the tournament and was held at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia.

The tournament was run by the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and is part of the 2017 ATP World Tour and the 2017 WTA Tour calendars under the Grand Slam category. The tournament consisted of both men's and women's singles and doubles draw as well as a mixed doubles event. There were singles and doubles events for both boys and girls (players under 18), which are part of the Grade A category of tournaments, and also singles, doubles, and quad events for men's and women's wheelchair tennis players as part of the NEC tour under the Grand Slam category.

The tournament was played on hard courts and took place over a series of 25 courts, including the three main show courts: Rod Laver Arena, Hisense Arena and Margaret Court Arena.[1]

Broadcast

In Australia, selected key matches were broadcast live by the Seven Network. The majority of matches was shown on the network's primary channel Channel Seven; however, during news programming nationwide and most night matches in Perth, coverage shifted to either 7Two or 7mate. Additionally, every match was also available to be streamed live through a free 7Tennis mobile app.[2]

Internationally, Eurosport held the rights for Europe, broadcasting matches on Eurosport 1, Eurosport 2 and the Eurosport Player.

Singles players

Men's singles
More information Champion, Runner-up ...
Women's singles
More information Champion, Runner-up ...
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Events

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Men's singles

This was a rematch of the 2009 Australian Open final, which Rafael Nadal won to become the first (and to date, only) Spaniard to win the Australian Open title. The final saw the two holding service for six games of the first set, whilst during the seventh game was the pivotal break of serve giving Federer the opening set. Nadal quickly broke Federer's serve in the second set racing out to a lead that Federer could not overcome, giving him the second set and leveling the match at one set apiece. The third set was a rather lopsided affair seeing Nadal secure his service game only in the fourth game of the set. The fourth set started off competitively with the two holdings serve until Nadal broke in the fourth game of the set, a lead he would never surrender, evening the match at two sets apiece. The decisive fifth set commenced with a break of Federer's serve by Nadal, giving him a lead in the early going; however, Nadal's serve got broken during the sixth game of the set, leveling the match at two sets and three games apiece. Federer won the next three games breaking Nadal's service in the eighth game of the set to allow him to successfully serve out the match in the final ninth game. This was Roger Federer's 18th Grand Slam singles title, the most ever by a man in the history of tennis, and it was his fifth Australian Open title, just one shy of the record co-held by Novak Djokovic and Roy Emerson.[3] Federer would go on to equal this record by defending his title successfully the next year.

Women's singles

This was a rematch of the 2003 Australian Open final, where Serena Williams completed the first "Serena Slam" and her career Grand Slam, whilst Serena won five more Australian Open titles in the interim and her sister Venus had no other final appearances at the event. They each broke the others' serve twice to start the match with Venus finally holding serve in the fifth service game and her sister Serena holding her own serve in the subsequent game. The seventh game was the pivotal break of service that Serena Williams got on her sister Venus' serve, costing her the set just a mere three games later. During the second set, the two traded held service games for the first six games to start the set, whilst Venus started serving first. She would get broken again during the seventh game of the set, which eventually surrendered the match to sister Serena. This was Serena Williams' 23 Grand Slam singles title and seventh Australian Open title for her career, both being Open era records, whilst being one shy of Margaret Court's record of 24 in the history of tennis.[4]

Men's doubles

Women's doubles

Mixed doubles

Wheelchair men's singles

Wheelchair women's singles

Wheelchair quad singles

Wheelchair men's doubles

Wheelchair women's doubles

Wheelchair quad doubles

Boys' singles

Girls' singles

Boys' doubles

Girls' doubles

Doubles seeds

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More information Team, Rank1 ...

Men's doubles

Team Rank1 Seed
France Pierre-Hugues Herbert France Nicolas Mahut 3 1
United Kingdom Jamie Murray Brazil Bruno Soares 7 2
United States Bob Bryan United States Mike Bryan 10 3
Finland Henri Kontinen Australia John Peers 16 4
Spain Feliciano López Spain Marc López 23 5
South Africa Raven Klaasen United States Rajeev Ram 23 6
Poland Łukasz Kubot Brazil Marcelo Melo 31 7
Canada Daniel Nestor France Édouard Roger-Vasselin 32 8
Croatia Ivan Dodig Spain Marcel Granollers 34 9
Philippines Treat Huey Belarus Max Mirnyi 43 10
Netherlands Jean-Julien Rojer Romania Horia Tecău 46 11
Canada Vasek Pospisil Czech Republic Radek Štěpánek 54 12
Croatia Mate Pavić Austria Alexander Peya 55 13
Colombia Juan Sebastián Cabal Colombia Robert Farah 60 14
India Rohan Bopanna Uruguay Pablo Cuevas 61 15
United Kingdom Dominic Inglot Romania Florin Mergea 68 16
  • 1 Rankings are as of 9 January 2017.

Women's doubles

Team Rank1 Seed
France Caroline Garcia France Kristina Mladenovic 6 1
United States Bethanie Mattek-Sands Czech Republic Lucie Šafářová 9 2
Russia Ekaterina Makarova Russia Elena Vesnina 13 3
India Sania Mirza Czech Republic Barbora Strýcová 19 4
Switzerland Martina Hingis United States CoCo Vandeweghe 23 5
Chinese Taipei Chan Hao-ching Chinese Taipei Chan Yung-jan 24 6
Germany Julia Görges Czech Republic Karolína Plíšková 27 7
United States Vania King Kazakhstan Yaroslava Shvedova 39 8
Romania Monica Niculescu United States Abigail Spears 39 9
Czech Republic Lucie Hradecká Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková 43 10
United States Raquel Atawo China Xu Yifan 43 11
Czech Republic Andrea Hlaváčková China Peng Shuai 50 12
Slovenia Katarina Srebotnik China Zheng Saisai 50 13
Netherlands Kiki Bertens Sweden Johanna Larsson 52 14
United States Serena Williams (withdrew) United States Venus Williams (withdrew) 60 15
Croatia Darija Jurak Australia Anastasia Rodionova 72 16
  • 1 Rankings are as of 9 January 2017.

Mixed doubles

  • 1 Rankings are as of 9 January 2017.

Main draw wildcard entries

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Point and prize money distribution

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Point distribution

Below is a series of tables for each of the competitions showing the ranking points offered for each event.

Senior points

More information Men's singles, Men's doubles ...
More information Event, W ...