If the men’s draw is a two-player race, the women’s draw at the U.S. Open is all about the No. 1 seed, Serena Williams. As long as she’s in the event, the story of the tournament will be her quest to win the first calendar-year Grand Slam in 25 years. Let’s see how her chances look, and whether anyone might be in a position to upset her.
Grand Ambition
By Aug 28, 2015Madrid, Spain
Joao Fonseca wins Masters 1000 debut in Madrid over fellow teen Alex Michelsen
By Apr 25, 2024Style Points
Adrian Mannarino has a clothing sponsor! Lefty to debut with Celio at Mutua Madrid Open
By Apr 25, 2024Roland Garros
FFT to reveal second retractable roof court at Roland Garros ahead of Paris Olympics
By Apr 25, 2024Madrid, Spain
Rafael Nadal wins in Madrid homecoming, defeats 16-year-old American Darwin Blanch
By Apr 25, 2024Madrid, Spain
Dominant Coco Gauff double bagels Arantxa Rus in Madrid opener
By Apr 25, 2024Madrid, Spain
Maria Sakkari shakes off BJK Cup fatigue, brings clear mind to Madrid clay
By Apr 25, 2024Madrid, Spain
Naomi Osaka loses in Madrid, bows out to Liudmila Samsonova on clay
By Apr 25, 2024Your Game
Geared Up: Rafael Nadal plays out his illustrious career with Babolat and Nike
By Apr 25, 2024Madrid, Spain
China's Wang Xinyu saves 10 match points in first-round Madrid win over Viktoriya Tomova
By Apr 24, 2024Grand Ambition
Will Serena make history? Breaking down the U.S. Open women's dra
Published Aug 28, 2015