Tennis doubles champs furious, humiliated as overhaul brings in singles players and prize jumps to $1 million from $200,000
Tennis doubles champs furious, humiliated as overhaul brings in singles players and prize jumps to $1 million from $200,000
Who is playing in the 2025 U.S. Open mixed doubles tournament?
What is different about mixed doubles at the U.S. Open?
Why are some players upset about the U.S. Open mixed doubles changes?
Grand Slam singles champions such as Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Iga Swiatek and Madison Keys will be playing for a little extra money â OK, a lot of extra money,
The best of the best at doubles, meanwhile, are not so excited about what one of last yearâs mixed champions in New York, Sara Errani, labeled âsadâ and ânonsenseâ in an interview with The
A year ago, only two highly ranked singles players participated.
âIt would be like if, at the Olympics, they didnât let the actual high jumpers participate, and instead had basketball players compete in the high jump because itâs more âinteresting.â If you want to do that, I guess you can, but you canât award them medals,â Errani said. âYou canât have a Grand Slam doubles (trophy) and not let doubles players take part. ⊠Youâre excluding them from their sport. Itâs dishonest.â
The top seeds, based on their combined singles rankings, are Jessica Pegula, the 2024 U.S. Open runner-up, and Jack Draper, a semifinalist a year ago. Heâs onto his third partner after Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen and former No. 2 Paula Badosa withdrew with injuries. Their initial opponents might be the most-anticipated pairing: five-time Slam champ Alcaraz and 2021 U.S. Open winner Emma Raducanu.
Other teams include Sinner and 10-time major doubles champion Katerina Siniakova, Swiatek and Casper Ruud, Keys and Frances Tiafoe, Venus Williams and Reilly Opelka, Taylor Fritz and Elena Rybakina, Naomi Osaka and Gael Monfils, Novak Djokovic and Olga Danilovic, and Daniil Medvedev and Mirra Andreeva.
âItâs going to count as a real Grand Slam. The prize money is great,â said Fritz, the runner-up to Sinner in singles at Flushing Meadows a year ago. âWe are 100% there to try to win it.â
Said Tiafoe: âSeeing the prize money, everyone was like, âWeâre going, no matter what.ââ
Whatâs different? Put plainly: everything. That includes the top prize of $1 million a year after Errani and Vavassori split $200,000.
Even the rules are changing, with sets played to four games instead of six until Wednesdayâs final, no-Ad scoring, and match tiebreakers instead of a third set. There are 16 teams instead of 32. The matches were shifted from the latter stages of the U.S. Open, overlapping with singles, to before next Sundayâs start of the main singles brackets. Half the field is based on singles rankings, and the other half was simply chosen
Thatâs how the singles stars got involved. Itâs also why some say the whole thing is a bit silly.
Gaby Dabrowski, a Canadian who owns two major championships in mixed doubles and earned the womenâs doubles trophy at the 2023 U.S. Open, tried to get into the field with Felix Auger-Aliassime, but they were not among the USTAâs wild-card selections.
âDo I think itâs a true mixed doubles championship? No. Do I think it could help the sport of doubles in the end? It could,â Dabrowski said, âbut not if you canât have any doubles players play in it.â
Like Errani or Dabrowski, doubles players arenât thrilled about being excluded and losing out on a payday.
They also think itâs generally demeaning to doubles specialists â even if the USTA thinks this can help boost the popularity of doubles.
âWhen you get the biggest names playing doubles, it does bring a bit more attention to it,â said Joe Salisbury, a British player whoâs won two Grand Slam titles in mixed doubles and four in menâs doubles, âbut Iâm not sure itâs good for the doubles event, because itâs not really a proper event. Itâs just a two-day exhibition.â
Tournament director Stacey Allaster objects to that sort of characterization.
âLetâs be absolutely crystal clear: This is a Grand Slam championship. It is not an exhibition,â Allaster said. âWeâre sympathetic to the doubles specialists who donât like this change. ⊠(But) we know that when fans see top players competing ⊠this is going to inspire more fans to not only attend but to play tennis, and itâs ultimately going to grow the sport.â
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Claire Dubois
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