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Australian Open
| The Australian Open is now managed by Tennis Australia, formerly the Lawn Tennis Association of Australia (LTAA), and was first played at the Warehouseman's Cricket Ground in St Kilda Road, Melbourne. 2006 was the 94th staging of the event (over a 101 year period due to interruption of the War years), with the tournament celebrating its Centenary in 2005. |
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The tournament was first played in 1905 as The Australasian Championships, became the Australian Championships in 1927 and the Australian Open in 1969. Since 1905, the Championships have been staged in five different cities as follows: Melbourne (50 times), Sydney (17 times), Adelaide (14 times), Brisbane (eight times), Perth (three times), as well as in New Zealand, (twice) in 1906 and 1912.
In 1972, it was decided to stage the Tournament in one city each year, as opposed to visiting various states across the nation, and the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club was selected due to Melbourne attracting the biggest patronage.
Melbourne Park (formerly Flinders Park) was constructed in time for the 1988 Open to meet the demands of the evolving tournament that had outgrown Kooyong's capacity. The move to Melbourne Park was an immediate success, with a 90 percent increase in attendance in 1988 (266,436) on the previous year at Kooyong (140,000).
The Australian Open is held each January at Melbourne Park. It is the first of the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments to be held each year. The tournament was held for the first time in 1905. Like the other three Grand Slam events, it was contested by top-ranked amateur players and known as the Australian Championships until the advent of open tennis in 1968.
Originally based at the grass courts at Kooyong in the city of Melbourne's inner south-east, the tournament was in danger of fading into irrelevance before being revived in 1988 with a shift to Melbourne Park (then called Flinders Park), a new (Rebound Ace) hardcourt venue next to the Melbourne Cricket Ground on the southern fringe of the central business district. Mats Wilander was the only player to win the tournament both on grass and on Rebound Ace.
Like all the Grand Slam tournaments, there are men's and women's singles competitions, men's, women's, and mixed doubles, as well as junior and master's competitions.
The Australian Open was held in December from 1977 through 1985, returning to its original January date in 1987. In 1986, because of the return to January, no tournament was held.
The two main courts, Rod Laver Arena and Vodafone Arena, are unusual in that they feature retractable roofs which can be shut in case of rain or extreme heat. It is the only Grand Slam tournament that can feature indoor play. However, work has already commenced on a retractable roof for Wimbledon's Centre Court, which is expected to be completed by 2009.
Held in the middle of the Australian summer, the Australian Open is famous for its notoriously hot days. An extreme-heat policy is often put into play when temperatures (and humidity) reach dangerous levels.
In 2008, the Rebound Ace surface which has been in place for the past 20 years at Melbourne Park, will be replaced by a cushioned acrylic surface known as Plexicushion. The main benefit of the new surface is a better consistency and it will also retain less heat due to the thinner top layer. This change will be accompanied by changes in the surfaces of all lead-up tournaments to the Australian Open. Work began on the removal of the old surface on June 4, 2007. The decision has been met with much controversy, primarily due to the new surface's similarity to DecoTurf, the surface already being utilized by the U.S. Open.
Records
| Record |
Open Era |
Player(s) |
Count |
Years |
| Gentlemen's Singles since 1905 |
| Winner of most Gentlemen's Singles titles |
Before 1968: |
Roy Emerson |
6 |
1961, 1963-67 |
Jack Crawford
Ken Rosewall |
4 |
1931-33, 1935
1953, 1955, 1971-72 |
| After 1968: |
Andre Agassi |
4 |
1995, 2000-01, 2003 |
Mats Wilander
Roger Federer |
3 |
1983-84, 1988
2004, 2006-07 |
| Winner of most consecutive Gentlemen's Singles titles |
Before 1968: |
Roy Emerson |
5 |
1963-67 |
| After 1968: |
Ken Rosewall
Guillermo Vilas
Johan Kriek
Mats Wilander
Stefan Edberg
Ivan Lendl
Jim Courier
Andre Agassi
Roger Federer |
2 |
1971-72
1978-79
1981-82
1983-84
1985-87[2]
1989-90
1992-93
2000-01
2006-07 |
| Winner of most Gentlemen's Doubles titles |
Before 1968: |
Adrian Quist & John Bromwich |
8 |
1938-40, 1946-50 |
| John Newcombe & Tony Roche |
5 |
1965, 1967, 1971, 1976 - 1973 John Newcombe with Mal Anderson, 1976 (December) Tony Roche with Arthur Ashe |
| After 1968: |
Mark Edmondson |
4 |
1980-81 (with Kim Warwick), 1983 (with Paul McNamee) 1984 (with Sherwood Stewart) |
John Newcombe & Tony Roche
Kim Warwick
Todd Woodbridge
Jonas Björkman |
3 |
see above
1978 (with Wojtek Fibak), 1980-81
1992, 1996 (with Mark Woodforde, 2001 (with Jonas Björkman)
1998 (with Jacco Eltingh), 1999 (with Patrick Rafter), 2001 |
| Winner of most consecutive Gentlemen's Doubles titles |
Before 1968: |
Adrian Quist & John Bromwich |
8 |
1938-40, 1946-50[3] |
| After 1968: |
Mark Edmondson & Kim Warwick
Mark Edmondson
Rick Leach & Jim Pugh
Fabrice Santoro & Michael Llodra
Bob Bryan & Mike Bryan |
2 |
1980-81
1983 (with Paul McNamee), 1984 (with Sherwood Stewart),
1988-89
2003-04
2006-07 |
| Winner of most Mixed Doubles titles - Gentlemen |
Before 1968: |
Colin Long |
4 |
1963, 1965-66, 1968 (with Nancye Wynne Bolton) |
| After 1968: |
Owen Davidson |
4 |
1940, 1946-1948 (with Billie Jean King) |
| Winner of most Championships (total: singles, doubles, mixed) - Gentlemen |
Before 1968: |
Jack Crawford |
11 |
1929-1935 (4 singles, 4 doubles, 3 mixed) |
| After 1968: |
Jim Pugh |
5 |
1988-90 (2 doubles, 3 mixed) |
| Ladies's Singles since 1922 |
| Winner of most Ladies' Singles titles |
Before 1968: |
Margaret Smith Court |
11 |
1960-66, 1969-71, 1973 |
| Nancye Wynne Bolton |
6 |
1937, 1940, 1946-48, 1951 |
| After 1968: |
Margaret Smith Court
Evonne Goolagong-Cawley
Steffi Graf |
4 |
1969-71, 1973
1974-76, 1977
1988-90, 1994 |
| Winner of most consecutive Ladies' Singles titles |
Before 1968: |
Margaret Smith Court |
7 |
1960-66 |
| After 1968: |
Margaret Smith Court
Evonne Goolagong-Cawley
Steffi Graf
Monica Seles
Martina Hingis
|
3 |
1969-71
1974-76
1988-90
1991-93
1997-99 |
| Winner of most Ladies' Doubles titles |
Before 1968: |
Thelma Coyne Long |
13 |
1936-40, 1947-49, 1951-52 (with Nancye Wynne Bolton), 1954, 1956, 1958 (with Mary Bevis Hawton) |
| Nancye Wynne Bolton |
10 |
1936-40, 1947-49, 1951-52 |
| After 1968: |
Martina Navrátilová |
8 |
1980 (with Betsy Nagelsen), 1982-85, 1987-89 (with Pam Shriver) |
| Winner of most consecutive Ladies' Doubles titles |
Before 1968: |
Thelma Coyne Long
Nancye Wynne Bolton |
5 |
1936-40 |
| After 1968: |
Martina Navrátilová & Pam Shriver |
7 |
1982-85, 1987-89 |
| Winner of most Mixed Doubles titles - ladies |
Before 1968: |
Daphne Akhurst Cozens
Nancye Wynne Bolton
Thelma Coyne Long
Margaret Smith Court |
4 |
1924-25 (with John Willard), 1928 (with Jean Borotra), 1929 (with Gar Moon)
1940, 1946-48 (with Colin Long)
1951-51, 1955 (with George Worthington), 1954 (with Rex Hartwig)
1963-64 (with Ken Fletcher), 1965 (with John Newcombe), 1969 (with Marty Riessen)
|
| After 1968: |
Jana Novotná
Larisa Neiland |
2 |
1988-89 (with Jim Pugh)
1994 (with Andrei Olhovskiy), 1996 (with Mark Woodforde) |
| Winner of most Championships (total: singles, doubles, mixed) - ladies |
Before 1968: |
Margaret Smith Court |
22 |
1960-1973 (11 singles, 7 doubles, 4 mixed) |
| After 1968: |
Martina Navrátilová |
11 |
1981-2003 (3 singles, 8 doubles, 1 mixed) |
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