[go: up one dir, main page]

The 2012 US Open was a tennis tournament played on the outdoor hard courts at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows Park, of Queens, New York City, United States. It was played from August 27 to September 10.[1] As a result of adverse weather conditions on September 8, which included a full evacuation of the National Tennis Center because of an upcoming tornado, another day was added to the schedule for the fifth straight year,[2] with the women's final postponed to the afternoon of Sunday, September 9 rather than the previous evening, the men's semi-final between Novak Djokovic and David Ferrer suspended on September 8 and completed on September 9, and the men's final postponed to the afternoon of Monday, September 10.

2012 US Open
DateAugust 27 – September 10
Edition132nd
CategoryGrand Slam (ITF)
SurfaceHardcourt
LocationNew York City, U.S.
VenueUSTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center
Champions
Men's singles
United Kingdom Andy Murray
Women's singles
United States Serena Williams
Men's doubles
United States Bob Bryan / United States Mike Bryan
Women's doubles
Italy Sara Errani / Italy Roberta Vinci
Mixed doubles
Russia Ekaterina Makarova / Brazil Bruno Soares
Boys' singles
Canada Filip Peliwo
Girls' singles
United States Samantha Crawford
Boys' doubles
United Kingdom Kyle Edmund / Portugal Frederico Ferreira Silva
Girls' doubles
United States Gabrielle Andrews / United States Taylor Townsend
← 2011 · US Open · 2013 →

Djokovic and Samantha Stosur were the defending men's and women's singles champions, respectively. Both were unsuccessful in their title defenses; Stosur being narrowly defeated by World No. 1 Victoria Azarenka in the quarter-finals, and Djokovic defeated in the final by Andy Murray. Murray became the first British man since Fred Perry in 1936 to win a Grand Slam singles title, and the first man to win both the US Open and the Olympic men's singles gold medal in the same year.[3] In the women's draw, Serena Williams won her fourth US Open title, and first since 2008, by defeating Victoria Azarenka in the final.

Notable events

edit
 
Sara Errani – Winner of Women's Doubles and Semifinalist of Women's Singles
  • 2010 champion and 2011 finalist Rafael Nadal withdrew from the tournament because of a knee injury.[4][5]
  • 2010 finalist Vera Zvonareva also withdrew from the tournament due to illness.
  • Two former World No. 1s and US Open champions ended their careers after this year's US Open. Three-time women's champion Kim Clijsters suffered her first defeat at Flushing Meadows since losing the 2003 final to her compatriot and rival Justine Henin, when she was defeated in the second round by Laura Robson. This loss marked the end of Clijsters' singles career. American Andy Roddick, who won in 2003, retired from professional tennis with his loss against 2009 champion Juan Martín del Potro in the fourth round.
  • Robson followed up her upset of Clijsters with a third round victory against Li Na, making the fourth round of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time, and this was also the first British woman to reach the fourth round in any Grand Slam since Samantha Smith did so in 1998 Wimbledon.
  • On September 3, John Isner and Philipp Kohlschreiber finished play at 2:26 am, tying the 1993 Mats Wilander/Mikael Pernfors record for the latest-ever finish to a matchday at the tournament.[6]
  • Serena Williams won 23 consecutive games from 4–4 in the first set against Ekaterina Makarova in the third round through to 3–0 in the first set against Ana Ivanovic in the quarter-finals.
  • After 17 consecutive Grand Slam tournaments without a quarter-final appearance, Ivanovic reached that stage for the first time since winning the 2008 French Open.[7]
  • Ivanovic, Marion Bartoli and Roberta Vinci all advanced to the US Open quarter-finals for the first time. For Vinci, this was her first Grand Slam quarter-final, eleven years and 31 Grand Slam tournaments after debuting at the 2001 US Open.[8]
  • Maria Sharapova returned to the semi-finals for the first time since 2006, and Sara Errani advanced to her first ever US Open semi-final.
  • Serena Williams advanced to her second straight US Open final, and her sixth overall. She defeated Victoria Azarenka in the first three-set final to be decided since 1995.[citation needed]
  • In the men's draw, Tomáš Berdych advanced to his first US Open quarter-final by virtue of his three-set win against Nicolás Almagro in the fourth round. He then advanced to the semi-finals after upsetting five-time US Open champion Roger Federer in the quarter-finals.
    • With Federer's defeat, this meant that for the first time since the 2004 French Open, neither Federer nor Nadal featured in a Grand Slam semi-final.[9]
  • With their victory in the men's doubles final, Bob and Mike Bryan took sole possession of the Open-era record for most Grand Slam men's doubles titles. Their 12th Grand Slam title took them past The Woodies (Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde). The win was also their fourth at the US Open, tying the Open-era record of Bob Lutz and Stan Smith.[10]
  • The women's final between Victoria Azarenka and Serena Williams was postponed to Sunday, due to inclement weather, for the fourth time in five years.[citation needed]
  • The second men's semi-final between David Ferrer and Novak Djokovic was also postponed to Sunday, also due to inclement weather, with the men's final to be played on Monday for the fifth year in a row.[citation needed]
  • Andy Murray became the first British winner of a Grand Slam singles title since 1977, and the first British man to do so since 1936, by defeating the defending champion Djokovic in the final. Lasting 4:54, it was the equal-longest US Open final by duration in history, and the equal-second longest Grand Slam final in the Open Era, only behind the 2012 Australian Open final.[11]
  • For the first time since 2003, the four Grand Slam Men's Singles titles were won by different players.[citation needed]

Points and prize money

edit

Point distribution

edit

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

Seniors points

edit
Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q Q3 Q2 Q1
Men's singles 2000 1200 720 360 180 90 45 10 25 16 8 0
Men's doubles 0
Women's singles 1400 900 500 280 160 100 5 60 50 40 2
Women's doubles 5

Junior points

edit
Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Q Q3
Boys' singles 250 180 120 80 50 30 25 20
Girls' singles
Boys' doubles 180 120 80 50 30
Girls' doubles

Prize money

edit
Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q3 Q2 Q1
Singles $1,900,000 $950,000 $475,000 $237,500 $120,000 $65,000 $37,000 $23,000 $8,638 $5,775 $3,000
Doubles * $420,000 $210,000 $105,000 $50,000 $26,000 $16,000 $11,000
Mixed doubles * $150,000 $70,000 $30,000 $15,000 $10,000 $5,000

* per team

Bonus prize money

edit
2012 Olympus US Open Series Finish[12]
2012 US Open Finish W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Awardees
1st place $1,000,000 $500,000 $250,000 $125,000 $70,000 $40,000 $25,000 $15,000 Serbia  Novak Djokovic $500,000
Czech Republic  Petra Kvitová $70,000
2nd place $500,000 $250,000 $125,000 $62,500 $35,000 $20,000 $12,500 $7,500 United States  John Isner $20,000
China  Li Na $20,000
3rd place $250,000 $125,000 $62,500 $31,250 $17,500 $10,000 $6,250 $3,750 United States  Sam Querrey $10,000
Slovakia  Dominika Cibulková $10,000

Singles players

edit

Men's singles

Women's singles

Day-by-day summaries

edit

Events

edit

Seniors

edit

Men's singles

edit

United Kingdom  Andy Murray defeated Serbia  Novak Djokovic, 7–6(12–10), 7–5, 2–6, 3–6, 6–2

• It was Murray's 1st career Grand Slam singles title.

Women's singles

edit

United States  Serena Williams defeated Belarus  Victoria Azarenka, 6–2, 2–6, 7–5

• It was Williams' 15th career Grand Slam singles title and her 4th at the US Open.

Men's doubles

edit

United States  Bob Bryan / United States  Mike Bryan defeated India  Leander Paes / Czech Republic  Radek Štěpánek, 6–3, 6–4

• It was Bob and Mike's 12th career Grand Slam doubles title and their 4th at the US Open.

Women's doubles

edit

Italy  Sara Errani / Italy  Roberta Vinci defeated Czech Republic  Andrea Hlaváčková / Czech Republic  Lucie Hradecká, 6–4, 6–2

• It was Errani's 2nd career Grand Slam doubles title and her 1st at the US Open.
• It was Vinci's 2nd career Grand Slam doubles title and her 1st at the US Open.

Mixed doubles

edit

Russia  Ekaterina Makarova / Brazil  Bruno Soares defeated Czech Republic  Květa Peschke / Poland  Marcin Matkowski, 6–7(8–10), 6–1, [12–10]

• It was Makarova's 1st career Grand Slam mixed doubles title.
• It was Soares' 1st career Grand Slam mixed doubles title.

Juniors

edit

Boys' singles

edit

Canada  Filip Peliwo defeated United Kingdom  Liam Broady, 6–2, 2–6, 7–5

Girls' singles

edit

United States  Samantha Crawford defeated Estonia  Anett Kontaveit, 7–5, 6–3

Boys' doubles

edit

United Kingdom  Kyle Edmund / Portugal  Frederico Ferreira Silva defeated Australia  Nick Kyrgios / Australia  Jordan Thompson, 5–7, 6–4, [10–6]

Girls' doubles

edit

United States  Gabrielle Andrews / United States  Taylor Townsend defeated Switzerland  Belinda Bencic / Slovakia  Petra Uberalová, 6–3, 6–4

Wheelchair events

edit

This year there was no wheelchair competition due to a calendar conflict with the Paralympic Games in London. Wheelchair competition returned in 2013.[13]

Singles seeds

edit

The following are the seeded players and notable players who withdrew from the event. Seedings based on ATP and WTA rankings are as of August 20, 2012. Rankings and points as before August 27, 2012.

[14]

Seed Rank Player Points before Points defending Points won Points after Status
1 1 Switzerland  Roger Federer 12,165 720 360 11,805 Quarterfinals lost to Czech Republic  Tomáš Berdych [6]
2 2 Serbia  Novak Djokovic 11,270 2,000 1,200 10,470 Runner-up, lost to United Kingdom  Andy Murray [3]
3 4 United Kingdom  Andy Murray 7,290 720 2,000 8,570 Champion, defeated Serbia  Novak Djokovic [2]
4 5 Spain  David Ferrer 5,375 180 720 5,915 Semifinals lost to Serbia  Novak Djokovic [2]
5 6 France  Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 4,835 360 45 4,530 Second round lost to Slovakia  Martin Kližan
6 7 Czech Republic  Tomáš Berdych 4,200 90 720 4,830 Semifinals lost to United Kingdom  Andy Murray [3]
7 8 Argentina  Juan Martín del Potro 3,620 90 360 3,890 Quarterfinals lost to Serbia  Novak Djokovic [2]
8 9 Serbia  Janko Tipsarević 3,285 360 360 3,285 Quarterfinals lost to Spain  David Ferrer [4]
9 10 United States  John Isner 2,880 360 90 2,610 Third round lost to Germany  Philipp Kohlschreiber [19]
10 11 Argentina  Juan Mónaco 2,735 180 10 2,565 First round lost to Spain  Guillermo García López
11 12 Spain  Nicolás Almagro 2,305 10 180 2,475 Fourth round lost to Czech Republic  Tomáš Berdych [6]
12 13 Croatia  Marin Čilić 2,185 90 360 2,455 Quarterfinals lost to United Kingdom  Andy Murray [3]
13 14 France  Richard Gasquet 2,030 45 180 2,165 Fourth round lost to Spain  David Ferrer [4]
14 15 Ukraine  Alexandr Dolgopolov 1,905 180 90 1,815 Third round lost Switzerland  Stan Wawrinka [18]
15 16 Canada  Milos Raonic 1,900 0 180 2,080 Fourth round lost to United Kingdom  Andy Murray [3]
16 17 France  Gilles Simon 1,890 180 90 1,800 Third round lost to United States  Mardy Fish [23]
17 18 Japan  Kei Nishikori 1,790 10 90 1,870 Third round lost to Croatia  Marin Čilić [12]
18 19 Switzerland  Stan Wawrinka 1,730 45 180 1,865 Fourth round lost to Serbia  Novak Djokovic [2]
19 20 Germany  Philipp Kohlschreiber 1,685 10 180 1,855 Fourth round lost to Serbia  Janko Tipsarević [8]
20 22 United States  Andy Roddick 1,600 360 180 1,420 Fourth round lost to Argentina  Juan Martín del Potro [7]
21 21 Germany  Tommy Haas 1,633 90 10 1,553 First round lost to Latvia  Ernests Gulbis
22 23 Germany  Florian Mayer 1,580 90 10 1,500 First round retired against United States  Jack Sock [WC]
23 25 United States  Mardy Fish 1,535 180 180 1,535 Fourth round withdrew for health reasons
24 24 Spain  Marcel Granollers 1,555 90 45 1,510 Second round lost to United States  James Blake [WC]
25 26 Spain  Fernando Verdasco 1,525 90 90 1,525 Third round lost to Switzerland  Roger Federer [1]
26 27 Italy  Andreas Seppi 1,390 10 10 1,390 First round lost to Spain  Tommy Robredo [PR]
27 28 United States  Sam Querrey 1,350 0 90 1,440 Third round lost to Czech Republic  Tomáš Berdych [6]
28 29 Russia  Mikhail Youzhny 1,290 10 10 1,290 First round lost to Luxembourg  Gilles Müller
29 30 Serbia  Viktor Troicki 1,255 10 10 1,255 First round lost to Germany  Cedrik-Marcel Stebe
30 31 Spain  Feliciano López 1,220 90 90 1,220 Third round lost to United Kingdom  Andy Murray [3]
31 35 France  Julien Benneteau 1,075 90 90 1,075 Third round lost to Serbia  Novak Djokovic [2]
32 32 France  Jérémy Chardy 1,168 0 90 1,258 Third round lost to Slovakia  Martin Kližan

The following player would have been seeded, but he withdrew from the event.

Rank Player Points before Points defending Points after Reason
3 Spain  Rafael Nadal 8,715 1,200 7,515 Knee tendinitis[15]

[16]

Seed Rank Player Points before Points defending Points won Points after Status
1 1 Belarus  Victoria Azarenka 9,025 160 1,400 10,265 Runner-up, lost to United States  Serena Williams [4]
2 2 Poland  Agnieszka Radwańska 8,115 100 280 8,295 Fourth round lost to Italy  Roberta Vinci [20]
3 3 Russia  Maria Sharapova 7,695 160 900 8,435 Semifinals lost to Belarus  Victoria Azarenka [1]
4 4 United States  Serena Williams 7,300 1,400 2,000 7,900 Champion, defeated Belarus  Victoria Azarenka [1]
5 5 Czech Republic  Petra Kvitová 6,415 5 280 6,690 Fourth round lost to France  Marion Bartoli [11]
6 6 Germany  Angelique Kerber 5,705 900 280 5,085 Fourth round lost to Italy  Sara Errani [10]
7 7 Australia  Samantha Stosur 5,700 2,000 500 4,200 Quarterfinals lost to Belarus  Victoria Azarenka [1]
8 9 Denmark  Caroline Wozniacki 4,335 900 5 3,440 First round lost to Romania  Irina-Camelia Begu
9 8 China  Li Na 4,371 5 160 4,526 Third round lost to United Kingdom  Laura Robson
10 10 Italy  Sara Errani 3,860 5 900 4,755 Semifinals lost to United States  Serena Williams [4]
11 11 France  Marion Bartoli 3,400 100 500 3,800 Quarterfinals lost to Russia  Maria Sharapova [3]
12 13 Serbia  Ana Ivanovic 2,980 280 500 3,200 Quarterfinals lost to United States  Serena Williams [4]
13 14 Slovakia  Dominika Cibulková 2,945 100 160 3,005 Third round lost to Italy  Roberta Vinci [20]
14 12 Russia  Maria Kirilenko 3,055 280 160 2,935 Third round lost to Czech Republic  Andrea Hlaváčková
15 17 Czech Republic  Lucie Šafářová 2,210 160 160 2,210 Third round lost to Russia  Nadia Petrova [19]
16 23 Germany  Sabine Lisicki 1,863 280 5 1,588 First round lost to Romania  Sorana Cîrstea
17 20 Russia  Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 2,075 500 100 1,675 Second round lost to France  Kristina Mladenovic [WC]
18 21 Germany  Julia Görges 1,970 160 5 1,815 First round lost to Czech Republic  Kristýna Plíšková [Q]
19 22 Russia  Nadia Petrova 1,885 160 280 2,005 Fourth round lost to Russia  Maria Sharapova [3]
20 19 Italy  Roberta Vinci 2,085 160 500 2,425 Quarterfinals lost to Italy  Sara Errani [10]
21 24 United States  Christina McHale 1,780 160 5 1,625 First round lost to Netherlands  Kiki Bertens
22 26 Italy  Francesca Schiavone 1,716 280 5 1,441 First round lost to United States  Sloane Stephens
23 25 Belgium  Kim Clijsters 1,765 0 100 1,865 Second round lost to United Kingdom  Laura Robson
24 30 Czech Republic  Klára Zakopalová 1,670 5 5 1,670 First round lost to Czech Republic  Andrea Hlaváčková
25 29 Belgium  Yanina Wickmayer 1,675 100 100 1,675 Second round lost to France  Pauline Parmentier
26 33 Romania  Monica Niculescu 1,581 280 5 1,306 First round lost to Japan  Ayumi Morita
27 36 Spain  Anabel Medina Garrigues 1,540 160 5 1,385 First round lost to Czech Republic  Lucie Hradecká
28 28 China  Zheng Jie 1,676 100 160 1,736 Third round lost to Belarus  Victoria Azarenka [1]
29 31 Austria  Tamira Paszek 1,603 5 5 1,603 First round lost to Belarus  Olga Govortsova
30 27 Serbia  Jelena Janković 1,681 160 160 1,681 Third round lost to Poland  Agnieszka Radwańska [2]
31 32 United States  Varvara Lepchenko 1,600 5 160 1,755 Third round lost to Australia  Samantha Stosur [7]
32 34 China  Peng Shuai 1,580 280 5 1,305 First round lost to Russia  Elena Vesnina

The following players would have been seeded, but they withdrew from the event.

Rank Player Points before Points defending Points after Reason
15 Estonia  Kaia Kanepi 2,514 100 2,414 Achilles tendon injury[15]
16 Russia  Vera Zvonareva 2,375 500 1,875 Viral illness[15]
18 Italy  Flavia Pennetta 2,190 500 1,690 Right wrist injury[15]
49 Czech Republic  Petra Cetkovská 1,315 100 1,215 Right ankle injury

Wild card entries

edit

Below are the lists of the wild card awardees entering in the main draws.

Mixed doubles wild card entries

edit
  1. United States  Samantha Crawford / United States  Mitchell Krueger
  2. United States  Irina Falconi / United States  Steve Johnson
  3. United States  Varvara Lepchenko / United States  Donald Young
  4. United States  Nicole Melichar / United States  Brian Battistone
  5. United States  Grace Min / United States  Bradley Klahn
  6. United States  Melanie Oudin / United States  Jack Sock
  7. United States  Sloane Stephens / United States  Rajeev Ram

Qualifiers entries

edit

Protected ranking

edit

The following players were accepted directly into the main draw using a protected ranking:

Withdrawals

edit

The following players were accepted directly into the main tournament, but withdrew with injuries or personal reasons.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Federer, Djokovic, Nadal headline men's field". www.usopen.org. August 8, 2012. Archived from the original on August 15, 2012. Retrieved August 14, 2012.
  2. ^ "U.S. Open: For Fifth Straight Year, Men's Final Pushed to Monday". Sports Media Watch. September 8, 2012. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
  3. ^ Fisher, Stewart (September 11, 2012). "Andy Murray wins first Grand Slam title with US Open triumph". The Herald. Retrieved September 12, 2012.
  4. ^ Rothenberg, Ben (August 15, 2012). "Nadal, Still Recovering From Knee Problems, Will Miss United States Open". The New York Times.
  5. ^ "Rafael Nadal out of US Open after failing to recover from knee injury". Guardian UK. London. August 15, 2012. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  6. ^ "US Open 2012: Philipp Kohlschreiber and John Isner equal record finish". The Guardian. London. September 3, 2012.
  7. ^ WTA | News | Latest News | Stats Corner: Majors Between Titles & QFs
  8. ^ 2012 U.S. Open – No. 2 Agnieszka Radwanska labors, loses to Roberta Vinci – espnW
  9. ^ Ferrer reaches US Open semi-final - ABC Grandstand Sport - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  10. ^ "Bryan brothers set Slam record". ESPN. Associated Press. September 7, 2012. Retrieved September 11, 2012.
  11. ^ Murray downs Djokovic to win US Open - ABC Grandstand Sport - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  12. ^ "2012 Olympus US Open Series Bonus Challenge Standings". usopenseries.com. August 30, 2011.
  13. ^ "Wheelchair Competition". US Open. 2012. Archived from the original on August 14, 2012. Retrieved August 31, 2012.
  14. ^ "ATP Singles Rankings as of the 22nd of August 2012". Association of Tennis Professionals. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  15. ^ a b c d "2012 US Open player field updates". USOpen.org. Archived from the original on August 24, 2012. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
  16. ^ "WTA rankings as of August 22, 2012". WTA. Archived from the original on July 22, 2012. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h "Hewitt, Blake earn US Open wild cards". USOpen.com. August 14, 2012. Archived from the original on August 19, 2012.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g "Oudin, Mattek-Sands earn US Open wild cards". USOpen.com. August 6, 2012. Archived from the original on July 25, 2020.
  19. ^ "ROGOWSKA GRANTED US OPEN WILDCARD". Tennis Australia. August 22, 2012. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
edit
Preceded by Grand Slams Succeeded by