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2008 Australian Open

The 2008 Australian Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 96th edition of the Australian Open, and the first Grand Slam event of the year. It took place at the Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, from 14 through 27 January 2008.

2008 Australian Open
Date14–27 January 2008
Edition96th
CategoryGrand Slam (ITF)
SurfaceHardcourt (Plexicushion)
LocationMelbourne, Australia
VenueMelbourne Park
Champions
Men's singles
Novak Djokovic
Women's singles
Maria Sharapova
Men's doubles
Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram
Women's doubles
Alona Bondarenko / Kateryna Bondarenko
Mixed doubles
Sun Tiantian / Nenad Zimonjić
Wheelchair men's singles
Shingo Kunieda
Wheelchair women's singles
Esther Vergeer
Wheelchair quad singles
Peter Norfolk
Wheelchair men's doubles
Shingo Kunieda / Satoshi Saida
Wheelchair women's doubles
Jiske Griffioen / Esther Vergeer
Wheelchair quad doubles
Nick Taylor / David Wagner
Boys' singles
Bernard Tomic
Girls' singles
Arantxa Rus
Boys' doubles
Hsieh Cheng-peng / Yang Tsung-hua
Girls' doubles
Ksenia Lykina / Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
← 2007 · Australian Open · 2009 →

After twenty years of playing on Rebound Ace, the courts were changed to Plexicushion, a marginally faster surface. The new surface is thinner, and therefore has lower heat retention. This decision was made in a bid to reduce the "stick" of the court and the frequency of the extreme heat policy being invoked.[1] However, the new surface faced criticism for being too similar to DecoTurf, the surface used at the US Open.[2] Player reaction to the change of surface was generally ambivalent.[3][4]

Both Roger Federer and Serena Williams were unsuccessful in defending their 2007 titles; Federer losing to Novak Djokovic in the semi-finals and Williams losing in the quarter-finals to Jelena Janković. Djokovic won his first Grand Slam singles title, defeating unseeded Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the final; Maria Sharapova, runner-up to Williams in 2007, defeated Ana Ivanovic to win her first Australian Open title and third Grand Slam title.

For the mixed doubles, in every game, the first team to score four points, won the game. In other words, when a deuce happened in a game, the team who won the next point won the game.

Notable stories edit

Surface change edit

On 30 May 2007, Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley announced that as of the 2008 Australian Open, the Rebound Ace surface that had been used since 1988 would be replaced by a newer, faster Plexicushion surface. The Rebound Ace surface had been criticized for several years, from players including Andy Roddick and Mark Philippoussis, who claimed that the "stick" of the court was a contributing factor in many players injuring themselves.[5] This "stick" was a result of the thick rubber mat (10 mm) laid beneath the surface,[2] the high heat retention because of this, and the high temperatures present during the Australian summer, which intermittently resulted in the extreme heat policy being invoked. Conversely, players such as Pete Sampras and Marat Safin put the high number of injuries down to lack of preparation from players; partly due to the fact that the tournament is held so early in the year, but also because there were so few tournaments preceding it. Rebound Ace was also chastised by Lleyton Hewitt for having an inconsistent bounce, in terms of height and pace (shock absorption); and claimed that these factors varied depending on the weather.[6] The heat retention of the surface had also been a point of contention between players.[7]

In announcing the change, Tiley said Plexicushion would have a "lower rubber content than Rebound Ace, was firmer under foot and retained less heat through its thinner top layer."[8] Tiley later said that the change of colour, from green to blue, would also benefit players and officials,[1] although this change was quite arbitrary. The manufacturers of Rebound Ace derided the new surface, with director Paul Bull saying that, "We had an Australian icon event with a unique Australian product and now we are just going to become a clone of the US Open." Bull also said that the inconsistencies in pace were down to the organizers' imperative, who kept asking for the pace to be adjusted to pander for certain players, such as Hewitt. Bull, however, conceded that a change was needed; and said that the suggestion of a Rebound Ace court with a rubber mat thickness of around 5 mm was made.[2]

The Plexicushion surface received a relatively mixed reception from players. Lleyton Hewitt, Justine Henin and Serena Williams were all keen to endorse the new courts; with Hewitt's appraisal focused on the greater consistency of the courts.[1] Henin called it a "good surface" but said she did not find it markedly distinguishable from Rebound Ace, saying the biggest difference was the change of colour. Williams claimed that the court was not as "bouncy" and was causing less physical strain on her feet and ankles.[3] One source of criticism from players was the slower than expected pace, although many of these comments came prior to the event's commencement. Players were exposed to the new courts through other tournaments, played in advance of the Open; and practise on the new surface. Roger Federer described it as slow, with Novak Djokovic, Jelena Janković and James Blake all corroborating this opinion, albeit from experience in preliminary tournaments.[4] Pundit and former World No. 1 Pat Rafter said it was possible that the courts would speed up in time.[9]

Implementation of anti-corruption policing edit

On 21 December 2007, organizers of the event announced that the tournament would be watched under the scrutiny of anti-corruption officials.[10] A partnership was formed with Victoria Police. This announcement came in the wake of a series of scandals to hit the sport, including World No. 4 Nikolay Davydenko coming under suspicion of match fixing; with at least a dozen other players coming forward about having been approached to influence matches in an unethical manner.[11] Tennis Australia chief executive Steve Wood commented that, "Match-fixing and illegal gambling are a threat to the integrity of sport. We're putting our policies, procedures and programme in place to protect it."

This was followed by a statement from the wider community of the International Tennis Federation (ITF), Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP), Women's Tennis Association (WTA) and organizers of all four Grand Slams that they would review their anti-corruption policies in the future. This announcement came six days prior to the start of the Open, on 8 January 2008.[12]

Crowd trouble edit

On 15 January, Day 2 of the tournament, Victoria Police had to intervene when Greek Australian supporters, following Greece's Konstantinos Economidis in his match against Chilean Fernando González, became unruly.[13] The match, in progress at the Margaret Court Arena, was suspended for ten minutes as the police attempted stop the "offensive chanting" and eject certain fans. Approximately forty supporters, heavily outnumbered by Chilean fans,[14] were warned of their disorderly conduct prior to the police deploying pepper spray. The police regiment was heavily outnumbered, with a BBC Radio employee commenting that, "[there were] two guys against maybe 70-80, that's not good."[13] Tournament officials said that 3 people had been sprayed and 5 evicted; a small proportion of the Greek fans left the arena, upset at how events were transpiring and fearing for their safety.

Both players said that the trouble was not something they had witnessed before; and Economidis condemned his supporters, saying that, "It was a really nice atmosphere until this moment. I am really unhappy." Some witnesses have implicated Cypriot and Serbian supporters in the trouble.[15]

Australian Open director, Craig Tiley, had announced in the week preceding the event that police and security forces would "impose a 'zero-tolerance' policy on anti-social behaviour". This statement appeared to be a delayed reaction to the trouble that marred the event in 2007, with Australian youths of Greek, Serbian and Croatian origins involved in mutually abusive sparring. However, the problem was much more pronounced in 2007, with violence breaking out and around 150 fans ejected.[16]

Sexual assault edit

Police were called to investigate a report that a 12-year-old girl was indecently assaulted by a drunk man at the Australian Open.[17]

In a brief statement, Victoria Police said they received a report that the girl was inappropriately touched on the buttocks on Monday.

"The matter was reported to police this morning and the incident is currently being investigated", the statement said. This event mirrors a series of incidents that occurred at last year's event, when several men attending the tournament were arrested for taking upskirt photographs.[18]

Marcos Baghdatis video controversy edit

During the Open, a video posted on YouTube almost a year earlier made headlines in the Australian media. The video shows the 2008 fifteenth seed, Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis, at a barbecue hosted by his Greek Australian fans in Melbourne in early 2007. In it, Baghdatis is holding a flare and taking part in chants against the Turkish invasion of Cyprus. Melbourne's Turkish Cypriot community called for Baghdatis to be expelled from Australia,[19] but in a statement issued through his manager, the Cypriot player said he was "supporting the interest of my country, Cyprus, while protesting against a situation that is not recognized by the United Nations".[20]

Serbian performance edit

 
Novak Djokovic became the first Serbian man to win a Grand Slam title.

This tournament saw strong performances from Serbian players.[21][22] The men's side saw Janko Tipsarević, winner of the boys' tournament in 2001, almost cause an upset when he pushed Roger Federer to five sets in the third round, with the final score being 6–7 (5–7), 7–6 (7–1), 5–7, 6–1, 10–8 in Federer's favour. The match, which overlapped into the night session due to rain earlier in the day, took almost four-and-a-half hours to complete.[23][24] Third-seed Novak Djokovic became Serbia's first Grand Slam singles title winner (Ana Ivanovic would later become that country's first Grand Slam women's singles title winner, at the 2008 French Open), and the youngest ever winner of the Australian Open, at 20 years and 250 days of age, when he defeated surprise finalist Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the final,[25] having defeated the defending champion Federer in the semi-finals,[26] and Australian hopeful Lleyton Hewitt in straight sets in the fourth round.[27] Coincidentally, Djokovic would also defeat Federer in straight sets en route to his second Australian Open title, in 2011.

The women's draw saw Jelena Janković, the 2001 girls' champion, and Ana Ivanovic produce notable performances to reach the semi-finals and the final, respectively. Janković saved three match points against Tamira Paszek in the first round, before defeating rising Australian player Casey Dellacqua in the fourth round.[28] Janković then ended the title defence of Serena Williams in the quarter-finals,[29] before losing her semi-final to Maria Sharapova.[30] Twenty-four hours after Janković's victory over Serena Williams, Ana Ivanovic recorded her first career victory against Venus Williams in her quarter-final,[31] and went on to reach her second Grand Slam final by defeating Daniela Hantuchová in the semi-finals, having to recover from a 0–6, 0–2 deficit to do so.[32] Ivanovic was then defeated in the final by Maria Sharapova, in a match dubbed as the "Glam Slam" final.[33]

Day-by-day summaries edit

Seniors edit

Men's singles edit

 
Tsonga stunned the tennis world by reaching the final.[34][35]

  Novak Djokovic[36] defeated   Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, 4–6, 6–4, 6–3, 7–6(7–2)

  • It was Djokovic's 1st title of the year, and his 8th overall. It was his 1st career Grand Slam title.

Women's singles edit

  Maria Sharapova[37] defeated   Ana Ivanovic, 7–5, 6–3

Men's doubles edit

  Jonathan Erlich /   Andy Ram defeated   Arnaud Clément /   Michaël Llodra, 7–5, 7–6(7–4)

  • The duo's first Grand Slam win after numerous ATP titles
  • The first ever Grand Slam trophy in Men's Doubles for Israeli players.

Women's doubles edit

  Alona Bondarenko /   Kateryna Bondarenko defeated   Victoria Azarenka /   Shahar Pe'er, 2–6, 6–1, 6–4

  • It was Alona and Kateryna's 1st career Grand Slam doubles title.

Mixed doubles edit

  Sun Tiantian /   Nenad Zimonjić defeated   Sania Mirza /   Mahesh Bhupathi, 7–6(7–4), 6–4

  • It was Sun's 1st career Grand Slam mixed doubles title.
  • It was Zimonjić's 3rd career Grand Slam mixed doubles title and his 2nd at the Australian Open.

Juniors edit

Boys' singles edit

  Bernard Tomic def   Yang Tsung-hua, 4–6, 7–6(5), 6–0

Girls' singles edit

  Arantxa Rus defeated   Jessica Moore, 6–3, 6–4

Boys' doubles edit

  Hsieh Cheng-peng /   Yang Tsung-hua defeated   Vasek Pospisil /   César Ramírez, 3–6, 7–5, [10]–[5]

Girls' doubles edit

  Ksenia Lykina /   Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova defeated   Elena Bogdan /   Misaki Doi, 6–0, 6–4

Wheelchair edit

Wheelchair men's singles edit

  Shingo Kunieda defeated   Michaël Jérémiasz, 6–1, 6–4

Wheelchair women's singles edit

  Esther Vergeer defeated   Korie Homan, 6–3, 6–3

Wheelchair men's doubles edit

  Shingo Kunieda /   Satoshi Saida defeated   Robin Ammerlaan /   Ronald Vink, 6–4, 6–3

Wheelchair women's doubles edit

  Jiske Griffioen /   Esther Vergeer defeated   Korie Homan /   Sharon Walraven, 6–3, 6–1

Wheelchair quad singles edit

  Peter Norfolk defeated   David Wagner, 6–2, 6–3

Wheelchair quad doubles edit

  Nicholas Taylor /   David Wagner defeated   Sarah Hunter /   Peter Norfolk, 5–7, 6–0, [10]–[3]

Seeds edit

These were the seeds for the 2008 Australian Open.[38]

On the women's side of the draw, all of the world's top thirty-two players were present; whereas in the men's draw Tommy Haas and Guillermo Cañas were both forced to withdraw due to injury.[39] On the date that the seeds were announced, 11 January 2008, Haas was No. 12 in the world and Cañas No. 17.[40]

Main draw wildcard entries edit

Qualifier entries edit

Withdrawals edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Chris Bevan (11 January 2008). "On-court blues for Aussie tennis?". BBC Sport.
  2. ^ a b c . The Australian. 31 May 2007. Archived from the original on 29 December 2008. Retrieved 27 January 2008.
  3. ^ a b "Federer unimpressed by Plexicushion". Fox Sports Australia. News Corp Australia. 14 January 2008. from the original on 22 May 2011.
  4. ^ a b Cambers, Simon (29 December 2007). "Top players unimpressed by Australian Open surface". The Guardian. London. from the original on 1 January 2008.
  5. ^ "Tournament chief defends court surface". BBC Sport. 24 January 2008.
  6. ^ . Tennis.com. 1 June 2007. Archived from the original on 12 February 2008. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
  7. ^ "Australian Open plans new surface". BBC Sport. 30 May 2007.
  8. ^ Pearce, Linda (31 May 2007). "Open drops Rebound Ace for new surface". Melbourne: The Age.
  9. ^ "Doubts on new Oz Open surface". Brisbane Times. 23 December 2007.
  10. ^ "Aussie Open takes anti-fraud step". BBC Sport. 21 December 2007. Retrieved 22 December 2007.
  11. ^ Alison Caldwell (reporter) (21 December 2007). "Tennis Australia targets match fixing". PM. ABC Australia. Radio National. Transcript.
  12. ^ "Tennis launches corruption review". BBC Sport. 8 January 2008.
  13. ^ a b "Crowd unrest mars Australian Open". BBC Sport. 15 January 2008. Retrieved 16 January 2008.
  14. ^ "Crowd trouble hits Australian Open". Al-Jazeera English. 15 January 2008. Retrieved 16 January 2008.
  15. ^ "Crowd trouble at Australian Open". The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 January 2008. Retrieved 16 January 2008.
  16. ^ Jessica Halloran (15 January 2007). "Serbs, Croats clash at Open". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 16 January 2008.
  17. ^ "12-year-old reportedly molested at Australian Open". Herald Sun. 16 January 2008.
  18. ^ . Philippine Daily Inquirer. 24 January 2007. Archived from the original on 26 January 2007. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
  19. ^ . News.com.au. 18 January 2008. Archived from the original on 21 March 2009.
  20. ^ "Ban Baghdatis, say Turks". Melbourne: The Age, Reko Rennie. 18 January 2008.
  21. ^ Super Serbians taking tennis world by storm - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  22. ^ Serb supremos reach Australian Open semis – Sydney Morning Herald
  23. ^ Federer survives five-set thriller - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  24. ^ King Roger's crown wobbles as Tipsy finds the prince within - Tennis - Sport
  25. ^ Battling Djokovic outlasts Tsonga - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  26. ^ Djokovic upsets Federer in straight sets - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  27. ^ Djokovic halts Hewitt's tilt - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  28. ^ Dellacqua's dream run ends at Open - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  29. ^ Serena sent packing in Melbourne - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  30. ^ Sharapova to face Ivanovic - Tennis - Sport
  31. ^ Ivanovic topples Venus - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  32. ^ Ivanovic wrestles into Open final - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
  33. ^ Expect substance and style in blonde v brunette glam slam - Tennis - Sport
  34. ^ "Tsonga stuns Nadal to reach final". BBC Sport. 24 January 2008.
  35. ^ "Tsonga advances to Australian Open final in stunning fashion". ESPN, Associated Press. 24 January 2008.
  36. ^ Djokovic became the first Serbian player (male or female) to win a Grand Slam singles title.
  37. ^ Sharapova became the first Russian woman to win the Australian Open singles title.
  38. ^ "Australian Open Seeds". International Herald Tribune. Associated Press. 12 January 2008.
  39. ^ "Haas Withdraws From Australian Open". OnTennis.com. 10 January 2008.
  40. ^ ATP website

External links edit

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    2008, australian, open, tennis, tournament, played, outdoor, hard, courts, 96th, edition, australian, open, first, grand, slam, event, year, took, place, melbourne, park, melbourne, australia, from, through, january, 2008, date14, january, 2008edition96thcateg. The 2008 Australian Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts It was the 96th edition of the Australian Open and the first Grand Slam event of the year It took place at the Melbourne Park in Melbourne Australia from 14 through 27 January 2008 2008 Australian OpenDate14 27 January 2008Edition96thCategoryGrand Slam ITF SurfaceHardcourt Plexicushion LocationMelbourne AustraliaVenueMelbourne ParkChampionsMen s singlesNovak DjokovicWomen s singlesMaria SharapovaMen s doublesJonathan Erlich Andy RamWomen s doublesAlona Bondarenko Kateryna BondarenkoMixed doublesSun Tiantian Nenad ZimonjicWheelchair men s singlesShingo KuniedaWheelchair women s singlesEsther VergeerWheelchair quad singlesPeter NorfolkWheelchair men s doublesShingo Kunieda Satoshi SaidaWheelchair women s doublesJiske Griffioen Esther VergeerWheelchair quad doublesNick Taylor David WagnerBoys singlesBernard TomicGirls singlesArantxa RusBoys doublesHsieh Cheng peng Yang Tsung huaGirls doublesKsenia Lykina Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 2007 Australian Open 2009 After twenty years of playing on Rebound Ace the courts were changed to Plexicushion a marginally faster surface The new surface is thinner and therefore has lower heat retention This decision was made in a bid to reduce the stick of the court and the frequency of the extreme heat policy being invoked 1 However the new surface faced criticism for being too similar to DecoTurf the surface used at the US Open 2 Player reaction to the change of surface was generally ambivalent 3 4 Both Roger Federer and Serena Williams were unsuccessful in defending their 2007 titles Federer losing to Novak Djokovic in the semi finals and Williams losing in the quarter finals to Jelena Jankovic Djokovic won his first Grand Slam singles title defeating unseeded Jo Wilfried Tsonga in the final Maria Sharapova runner up to Williams in 2007 defeated Ana Ivanovic to win her first Australian Open title and third Grand Slam title For the mixed doubles in every game the first team to score four points won the game In other words when a deuce happened in a game the team who won the next point won the game Contents 1 Notable stories 1 1 Surface change 1 2 Implementation of anti corruption policing 1 3 Crowd trouble 1 4 Sexual assault 1 5 Marcos Baghdatis video controversy 1 6 Serbian performance 2 Day by day summaries 3 Seniors 3 1 Men s singles 3 2 Women s singles 3 3 Men s doubles 3 4 Women s doubles 3 5 Mixed doubles 4 Juniors 4 1 Boys singles 4 2 Girls singles 4 3 Boys doubles 4 4 Girls doubles 5 Wheelchair 5 1 Wheelchair men s singles 5 2 Wheelchair women s singles 5 3 Wheelchair men s doubles 5 4 Wheelchair women s doubles 5 5 Wheelchair quad singles 5 6 Wheelchair quad doubles 6 Seeds 6 1 Men s singles 6 2 Women s singles 7 Main draw wildcard entries 7 1 Men s singles 7 2 Women s singles 7 3 Men s doubles 7 4 Women s doubles 7 5 Mixed doubles 8 Qualifier entries 8 1 Men s qualifiers entries 8 2 Women s qualifiers entries 9 Withdrawals 10 References 11 External linksNotable stories editSurface change edit On 30 May 2007 Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley announced that as of the 2008 Australian Open the Rebound Ace surface that had been used since 1988 would be replaced by a newer faster Plexicushion surface The Rebound Ace surface had been criticized for several years from players including Andy Roddick and Mark Philippoussis who claimed that the stick of the court was a contributing factor in many players injuring themselves 5 This stick was a result of the thick rubber mat 10 mm laid beneath the surface 2 the high heat retention because of this and the high temperatures present during the Australian summer which intermittently resulted in the extreme heat policy being invoked Conversely players such as Pete Sampras and Marat Safin put the high number of injuries down to lack of preparation from players partly due to the fact that the tournament is held so early in the year but also because there were so few tournaments preceding it Rebound Ace was also chastised by Lleyton Hewitt for having an inconsistent bounce in terms of height and pace shock absorption and claimed that these factors varied depending on the weather 6 The heat retention of the surface had also been a point of contention between players 7 In announcing the change Tiley said Plexicushion would have a lower rubber content than Rebound Ace was firmer under foot and retained less heat through its thinner top layer 8 Tiley later said that the change of colour from green to blue would also benefit players and officials 1 although this change was quite arbitrary The manufacturers of Rebound Ace derided the new surface with director Paul Bull saying that We had an Australian icon event with a unique Australian product and now we are just going to become a clone of the US Open Bull also said that the inconsistencies in pace were down to the organizers imperative who kept asking for the pace to be adjusted to pander for certain players such as Hewitt Bull however conceded that a change was needed and said that the suggestion of a Rebound Ace court with a rubber mat thickness of around 5 mm was made 2 The Plexicushion surface received a relatively mixed reception from players Lleyton Hewitt Justine Henin and Serena Williams were all keen to endorse the new courts with Hewitt s appraisal focused on the greater consistency of the courts 1 Henin called it a good surface but said she did not find it markedly distinguishable from Rebound Ace saying the biggest difference was the change of colour Williams claimed that the court was not as bouncy and was causing less physical strain on her feet and ankles 3 One source of criticism from players was the slower than expected pace although many of these comments came prior to the event s commencement Players were exposed to the new courts through other tournaments played in advance of the Open and practise on the new surface Roger Federer described it as slow with Novak Djokovic Jelena Jankovic and James Blake all corroborating this opinion albeit from experience in preliminary tournaments 4 Pundit and former World No 1 Pat Rafter said it was possible that the courts would speed up in time 9 Implementation of anti corruption policing edit On 21 December 2007 organizers of the event announced that the tournament would be watched under the scrutiny of anti corruption officials 10 A partnership was formed with Victoria Police This announcement came in the wake of a series of scandals to hit the sport including World No 4 Nikolay Davydenko coming under suspicion of match fixing with at least a dozen other players coming forward about having been approached to influence matches in an unethical manner 11 Tennis Australia chief executive Steve Wood commented that Match fixing and illegal gambling are a threat to the integrity of sport We re putting our policies procedures and programme in place to protect it This was followed by a statement from the wider community of the International Tennis Federation ITF Association of Tennis Professionals ATP Women s Tennis Association WTA and organizers of all four Grand Slams that they would review their anti corruption policies in the future This announcement came six days prior to the start of the Open on 8 January 2008 12 Crowd trouble edit On 15 January Day 2 of the tournament Victoria Police had to intervene when Greek Australian supporters following Greece s Konstantinos Economidis in his match against Chilean Fernando Gonzalez became unruly 13 The match in progress at the Margaret Court Arena was suspended for ten minutes as the police attempted stop the offensive chanting and eject certain fans Approximately forty supporters heavily outnumbered by Chilean fans 14 were warned of their disorderly conduct prior to the police deploying pepper spray The police regiment was heavily outnumbered with a BBC Radio employee commenting that there were two guys against maybe 70 80 that s not good 13 Tournament officials said that 3 people had been sprayed and 5 evicted a small proportion of the Greek fans left the arena upset at how events were transpiring and fearing for their safety Both players said that the trouble was not something they had witnessed before and Economidis condemned his supporters saying that It was a really nice atmosphere until this moment I am really unhappy Some witnesses have implicated Cypriot and Serbian supporters in the trouble 15 Australian Open director Craig Tiley had announced in the week preceding the event that police and security forces would impose a zero tolerance policy on anti social behaviour This statement appeared to be a delayed reaction to the trouble that marred the event in 2007 with Australian youths of Greek Serbian and Croatian origins involved in mutually abusive sparring However the problem was much more pronounced in 2007 with violence breaking out and around 150 fans ejected 16 Sexual assault edit Police were called to investigate a report that a 12 year old girl was indecently assaulted by a drunk man at the Australian Open 17 In a brief statement Victoria Police said they received a report that the girl was inappropriately touched on the buttocks on Monday The matter was reported to police this morning and the incident is currently being investigated the statement said This event mirrors a series of incidents that occurred at last year s event when several men attending the tournament were arrested for taking upskirt photographs 18 Marcos Baghdatis video controversy edit During the Open a video posted on YouTube almost a year earlier made headlines in the Australian media The video shows the 2008 fifteenth seed Cypriot Marcos Baghdatis at a barbecue hosted by his Greek Australian fans in Melbourne in early 2007 In it Baghdatis is holding a flare and taking part in chants against the Turkish invasion of Cyprus Melbourne s Turkish Cypriot community called for Baghdatis to be expelled from Australia 19 but in a statement issued through his manager the Cypriot player said he was supporting the interest of my country Cyprus while protesting against a situation that is not recognized by the United Nations 20 Serbian performance edit nbsp Novak Djokovic became the first Serbian man to win a Grand Slam title This tournament saw strong performances from Serbian players 21 22 The men s side saw Janko Tipsarevic winner of the boys tournament in 2001 almost cause an upset when he pushed Roger Federer to five sets in the third round with the final score being 6 7 5 7 7 6 7 1 5 7 6 1 10 8 in Federer s favour The match which overlapped into the night session due to rain earlier in the day took almost four and a half hours to complete 23 24 Third seed Novak Djokovic became Serbia s first Grand Slam singles title winner Ana Ivanovic would later become that country s first Grand Slam women s singles title winner at the 2008 French Open and the youngest ever winner of the Australian Open at 20 years and 250 days of age when he defeated surprise finalist Jo Wilfried Tsonga in the final 25 having defeated the defending champion Federer in the semi finals 26 and Australian hopeful Lleyton Hewitt in straight sets in the fourth round 27 Coincidentally Djokovic would also defeat Federer in straight sets en route to his second Australian Open title in 2011 The women s draw saw Jelena Jankovic the 2001 girls champion and Ana Ivanovic produce notable performances to reach the semi finals and the final respectively Jankovic saved three match points against Tamira Paszek in the first round before defeating rising Australian player Casey Dellacqua in the fourth round 28 Jankovic then ended the title defence of Serena Williams in the quarter finals 29 before losing her semi final to Maria Sharapova 30 Twenty four hours after Jankovic s victory over Serena Williams Ana Ivanovic recorded her first career victory against Venus Williams in her quarter final 31 and went on to reach her second Grand Slam final by defeating Daniela Hantuchova in the semi finals having to recover from a 0 6 0 2 deficit to do so 32 Ivanovic was then defeated in the final by Maria Sharapova in a match dubbed as the Glam Slam final 33 Day by day summaries editMain article 2008 Australian Open Day by day summariesSeniors editMen s singles edit nbsp Tsonga stunned the tennis world by reaching the final 34 35 Main article 2008 Australian Open Men s singles nbsp Novak Djokovic 36 defeated nbsp Jo Wilfried Tsonga 4 6 6 4 6 3 7 6 7 2 It was Djokovic s 1st title of the year and his 8th overall It was his 1st career Grand Slam title Women s singles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Women s singles nbsp Maria Sharapova 37 defeated nbsp Ana Ivanovic 7 5 6 3 Men s doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Men s doubles nbsp Jonathan Erlich nbsp Andy Ram defeated nbsp Arnaud Clement nbsp Michael Llodra 7 5 7 6 7 4 The duo s first Grand Slam win after numerous ATP titles The first ever Grand Slam trophy in Men s Doubles for Israeli players Women s doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Women s doubles nbsp Alona Bondarenko nbsp Kateryna Bondarenko defeated nbsp Victoria Azarenka nbsp Shahar Pe er 2 6 6 1 6 4 It was Alona and Kateryna s 1st career Grand Slam doubles title Mixed doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Mixed doubles nbsp Sun Tiantian nbsp Nenad Zimonjic defeated nbsp Sania Mirza nbsp Mahesh Bhupathi 7 6 7 4 6 4 It was Sun s 1st career Grand Slam mixed doubles title It was Zimonjic s 3rd career Grand Slam mixed doubles title and his 2nd at the Australian Open Juniors editBoys singles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Boys singles nbsp Bernard Tomic def nbsp Yang Tsung hua 4 6 7 6 5 6 0 Girls singles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Girls singles nbsp Arantxa Rus defeated nbsp Jessica Moore 6 3 6 4 Boys doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Boys doubles nbsp Hsieh Cheng peng nbsp Yang Tsung hua defeated nbsp Vasek Pospisil nbsp Cesar Ramirez 3 6 7 5 10 5 Girls doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Girls doubles nbsp Ksenia Lykina nbsp Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova defeated nbsp Elena Bogdan nbsp Misaki Doi 6 0 6 4Wheelchair editWheelchair men s singles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Wheelchair men s singles nbsp Shingo Kunieda defeated nbsp Michael Jeremiasz 6 1 6 4 Wheelchair women s singles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Wheelchair women s singles nbsp Esther Vergeer defeated nbsp Korie Homan 6 3 6 3 Wheelchair men s doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Wheelchair men s doubles nbsp Shingo Kunieda nbsp Satoshi Saida defeated nbsp Robin Ammerlaan nbsp Ronald Vink 6 4 6 3 Wheelchair women s doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Wheelchair women s doubles nbsp Jiske Griffioen nbsp Esther Vergeer defeated nbsp Korie Homan nbsp Sharon Walraven 6 3 6 1 Wheelchair quad singles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Wheelchair quad singles nbsp Peter Norfolk defeated nbsp David Wagner 6 2 6 3 Wheelchair quad doubles edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Wheelchair quad doubles nbsp Nicholas Taylor nbsp David Wagner defeated nbsp Sarah Hunter nbsp Peter Norfolk 5 7 6 0 10 3 Seeds editThese were the seeds for the 2008 Australian Open 38 On the women s side of the draw all of the world s top thirty two players were present whereas in the men s draw Tommy Haas and Guillermo Canas were both forced to withdraw due to injury 39 On the date that the seeds were announced 11 January 2008 Haas was No 12 in the world and Canas No 17 40 Men s singles edit nbsp Roger Federer semifinals lost to Novak Djokovic nbsp Rafael Nadal semifinals lost to Jo Wilfried Tsonga nbsp Novak Djokovic champion nbsp Nikolay Davydenko 4th Round lost to Mikhail Youzhny nbsp David Ferrer quarterfinals lost to Novak Djokovic nbsp Andy Roddick 3rd Round lost to Philipp Kohlschreiber nbsp Fernando Gonzalez 3rd Round lost to Marin Cilic nbsp Richard Gasquet 4th Round lost to Jo Wilfried Tsonga nbsp Andy Murray 1st Round lost to Jo Wilfried Tsonga nbsp David Nalbandian 3rd Round lost to Juan Carlos Ferrero nbsp Tommy Robredo 2nd Round lost to Mardy Fish nbsp James Blake quarterfinals lost to Roger Federer nbsp Tomas Berdych 4th Round lost to Roger Federer nbsp Mikhail Youzhny quarterfinals lost to Jo Wilfried Tsonga nbsp Marcos Baghdatis 3rd Round lost to Lleyton Hewitt nbsp Carlos Moya 1st Round lost to Stefan Koubek nbsp Ivan Ljubicic 1st Round lost to Robin Haase nbsp Juan Ignacio Chela 1st Round lost to Guillermo Garcia Lopez nbsp Lleyton Hewitt 4th Round lost to Novak Djokovic nbsp Ivo Karlovic 3rd Round lost to Mikhail Youzhny nbsp Juan Monaco 3rd Round lost to Tomas Berdych nbsp Juan Carlos Ferrero 4th Round lost to David Ferrer nbsp Paul Henri Mathieu 4th Round lost to Rafael Nadal nbsp Jarkko Nieminen quarterfinals lost to Rafael Nadal nbsp Fernando Verdasco 2nd Round lost to Janko Tipsarevic nbsp Stanislas Wawrinka 2nd Round lost to Marc Gicquel nbsp Nicolas Almagro 1st Round lost to Marin Cilic nbsp Gilles Simon 3rd Round lost to Rafael Nadal nbsp Philipp Kohlschreiber 4th Round lost to Jarkko Nieminen nbsp Radek Stepanek 1st Round lost to Vincent Spadea nbsp Igor Andreev 3rd Round lost to Richard Gasquet nbsp Dmitry Tursunov 2nd Round lost to Sam Querrey Women s singles edit nbsp Justine Henin quarterfinals lost to Maria Sharapova nbsp Svetlana Kuznetsova 3rd Round lost to Agnieszka Radwanska nbsp Jelena Jankovic semifinals lost to Maria Sharapova nbsp Ana Ivanovic final lost to Maria Sharapova nbsp Maria Sharapova champion nbsp Anna Chakvetadze 3rd Round lost to Maria Kirilenko nbsp Serena Williams quarterfinals lost to Jelena Jankovic nbsp Venus Williams quarterfinals lost to Ana Ivanovic nbsp Daniela Hantuchova semifinals lost to Ana Ivanovic nbsp Marion Bartoli 1st Round lost to Sofia Arvidsson nbsp Elena Dementieva 4th Round lost to Maria Sharapova nbsp Nicole Vaidisova 4th Round lost to Serena Williams nbsp Tatiana Golovin 2nd Round lost to Aravane Rezai nbsp Nadia Petrova 4th Round lost to Agnieszka Radwanska nbsp Patty Schnyder 2nd Round lost to Casey Dellacqua nbsp Dinara Safina 1st Round lost to Sabine Lisicki nbsp Shahar Pe er 3rd Round lost to Elena Dementieva nbsp Amelie Mauresmo 3rd Round lost to Casey Dellacqua nbsp Sybille Bammer 2nd Round lost to Hsieh Su wei nbsp Agnes Szavay 1st Round lost to Ekaterina Makarova nbsp Alona Bondarenko 2nd Round lost to Caroline Wozniacki nbsp Lucie Safarova 1st Round lost to Catalina Castano nbsp Vera Zvonareva 1st Round retired due to injury nbsp Li Na 3rd Round lost to Marta Domachowska nbsp Francesca Schiavone 3rd Round lost to Justine Henin nbsp Victoria Azarenka 3rd Round lost to Serena Williams nbsp Maria Kirilenko 4th Round lost to Daniela Hantuchova nbsp Katarina Srebotnik 3rd Round lost to Ana Ivanovic nbsp Agnieszka Radwanska quarterfinals lost to Daniela Hantuchova nbsp Virginie Razzano 3rd Round lost to Jelena Jankovic nbsp Sania Mirza 3rd Round lost to Venus Williams nbsp Julia Vakulenko 1st Round lost to Elena Vesnina Main draw wildcard entries editMen s singles edit nbsp Denis Istomin nbsp Alun Jones nbsp Brydan Klein nbsp Jesse Levine nbsp Nick Lindahl nbsp Mathieu Montcourt nbsp Joseph Sirianni nbsp Robert Smeets Women s singles edit nbsp Monique Adamczak nbsp Madison Brengle nbsp Sophie Ferguson nbsp Jarmila Gajdosova nbsp Mathilde Johansson nbsp Jessica Moore nbsp Iroda Tulyaganova nbsp Christina Wheeler Men s doubles edit nbsp Carsten Ball nbsp Adam Feeney nbsp Andrew Coelho nbsp Brydan Klein nbsp Colin Ebelthite nbsp Nick Lindahl nbsp Samuel Groth nbsp Joseph Sirianni nbsp Chris Guccione nbsp Peter Luczak nbsp Nathan Healey nbsp Robert Smeets nbsp Alun Jones nbsp Greg Jones Women s doubles edit nbsp Monique Adamczak nbsp Christina Wheeler nbsp Alison Bai nbsp Nicole Kriz nbsp Tyra Calderwood nbsp Alenka Hubacek nbsp Casey Dellacqua nbsp Jessica Moore nbsp Daniella Dominikovic nbsp Emily Hewson nbsp Sophie Ferguson nbsp Trudi Musgrave nbsp Marija Mirkovic nbsp Karolina Wlodarczak Mixed doubles edit nbsp Monique Adamczak nbsp Stephen Huss nbsp Sophie Ferguson nbsp Adam Feeney nbsp Jarmila Gajdosova nbsp Samuel Groth nbsp Isabella Holland nbsp Brydan Klein nbsp Alicia Molik nbsp Nathan Healey nbsp Jessica Moore nbsp Greg JonesQualifier entries editMen s qualifiers entries edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Men s singles qualifying nbsp Robin Haase nbsp Lukas Dlouhy nbsp Roko Karanusic nbsp Kevin Anderson nbsp Amer Delic nbsp Sam Warburg nbsp Denis Gremelmayr nbsp Lukas Lacko nbsp Jamie Baker nbsp Harel Levy nbsp Wayne Odesnik nbsp Martin Slanar nbsp Viktor Troicki nbsp Marcel Granollers nbsp Rajeev Ram nbsp Konstantinos Economidis Women s qualifiers entries edit Main article 2008 Australian Open Women s singles qualifying nbsp Monica Niculescu nbsp Angelika Bachmann nbsp Ekaterina Ivanova nbsp Julia Schruff nbsp Alisa Kleybanova nbsp Tamarine Tanasugarn nbsp Hsieh Su wei nbsp Marta Domachowska nbsp Timea Bacsinszky nbsp Sandra Klosel nbsp Yuan Meng nbsp Sabine LisickiWithdrawals editMen s Singles nbsp Mario Ancic replaced by nbsp Bobby Reynolds nbsp Jonas Bjorkman replaced by nbsp Olivier Patience nbsp Guillermo Canas replaced by nbsp Mariano Zabaleta nbsp Tommy Haas replaced by nbsp Lu Yen hsun nbsp Gael Monfils replaced by nbsp Juan Pablo Brzezicki nbsp Robin Soderling replaced by nbsp John Isner nbsp Potito Starace replaced by nbsp Robert Kendrick Women s Singles nbsp Vera Dushevina replaced by nbsp Sorana Cirstea nbsp Elena Likhovtseva replaced by nbsp Catalina Castano nbsp Mara Santangelo replaced by nbsp Ekaterina Makarova nbsp Milagros Sequera replaced by nbsp Clarisa Fernandez nbsp Meghann Shaughnessy replaced by nbsp Stephanie Cohen Aloro nbsp Samantha Stosur replaced by nbsp Vania KingReferences edit a b c Chris Bevan 11 January 2008 On court blues for Aussie tennis BBC Sport a b c Fears of second rate US Open The Australian 31 May 2007 Archived from the original on 29 December 2008 Retrieved 27 January 2008 a b Federer unimpressed by Plexicushion Fox Sports Australia News Corp Australia 14 January 2008 Archived from the original on 22 May 2011 a b Cambers Simon 29 December 2007 Top players unimpressed by Australian Open surface The Guardian London Archived from the original on 1 January 2008 Tournament chief defends court surface BBC Sport 24 January 2008 Hewitt supports new court surface Tennis com 1 June 2007 Archived from the original on 12 February 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2008 Australian Open plans new surface BBC Sport 30 May 2007 Pearce Linda 31 May 2007 Open drops Rebound Ace for new surface Melbourne The Age Doubts on new Oz Open surface Brisbane Times 23 December 2007 Aussie Open takes anti fraud step BBC Sport 21 December 2007 Retrieved 22 December 2007 Alison Caldwell reporter 21 December 2007 Tennis Australia targets match fixing PM ABC Australia Radio National Transcript Tennis launches corruption review BBC Sport 8 January 2008 a b Crowd unrest mars Australian Open BBC Sport 15 January 2008 Retrieved 16 January 2008 Crowd trouble hits Australian Open Al Jazeera English 15 January 2008 Retrieved 16 January 2008 Crowd trouble at Australian Open The Sydney Morning Herald 15 January 2008 Retrieved 16 January 2008 Jessica Halloran 15 January 2007 Serbs Croats clash at Open The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 16 January 2008 12 year old reportedly molested at Australian Open Herald Sun 16 January 2008 Third up skirt incident mars Australian Open Philippine Daily Inquirer 24 January 2007 Archived from the original on 26 January 2007 Retrieved 29 January 2008 Kick out Baghdatis say Turkish Cypriots News com au 18 January 2008 Archived from the original on 21 March 2009 Ban Baghdatis say Turks Melbourne The Age Reko Rennie 18 January 2008 Super Serbians taking tennis world by storm ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Serb supremos reach Australian Open semis Sydney Morning Herald Federer survives five set thriller ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation King Roger s crown wobbles as Tipsy finds the prince within Tennis Sport Battling Djokovic outlasts Tsonga ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Djokovic upsets Federer in straight sets ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Djokovic halts Hewitt s tilt ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Dellacqua s dream run ends at Open ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Serena sent packing in Melbourne ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Sharapova to face Ivanovic Tennis Sport Ivanovic topples Venus ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Ivanovic wrestles into Open final ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Expect substance and style in blonde v brunette glam slam Tennis Sport Tsonga stuns Nadal to reach final BBC Sport 24 January 2008 Tsonga advances to Australian Open final in stunning fashion ESPN Associated Press 24 January 2008 Djokovic became the first Serbian player male or female to win a Grand Slam singles title Sharapova became the first Russian woman to win the Australian Open singles title Australian Open Seeds International Herald Tribune Associated Press 12 January 2008 Haas Withdraws From Australian Open OnTennis com 10 January 2008 ATP rankings for 7 January 2008 ATP websiteExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2008 Australian Open Australian Open official website Preceded by2007 US Open Grand Slams Succeeded by2008 French Open Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 Australian Open amp oldid 1121273221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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