Chez les femmes :
La fédération américaine a dévoilé les invitations pour l'US Open. Dans le cadre des accords entre la FFT et l'USTA, Virginie Razzano bénéficie de la wild-card française. Du côté australien, elle est attribuée à Sophie Ferguson. Les Américaines Chelsey Gullickson, Jamie Hampton, Christina McHale, Shelby Rogers et Coco Vandeweghe complètent le tableau.
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Gullickson, who turns 20 on August 29 and hails from Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., won the NCAA Division I singles title this year representing the University of Georgia, becoming the school’s first NCAA women’s singles champion since 1994. Gullickson won her first USTA Pro Circuit singles title in 2008 and, that same year, teamed with sister (and 2009 US Open mixed doubles champion) Carly to reach the doubles final at the USTA Pro Circuit event in Hammond, La. Gullickson’s father, Bill, was a professional pitcher who played for the New York Yankees in 1987 and led the American League with 20 wins for the 1991 Detroit Tigers.
Hampton, 20, of Auburn, Ala., is ranked No. 160 and has risen more than 550 spots in the rankings in 2010 by reaching six USTA Pro Circuit singles finals and winning three titles. She also qualified for the Olympus US Open Series event in San Diego this year and received a main-draw wild card into Cincinnati a week later. As a junior, Hampton twice won the USTA Girls’ 18s doubles title (2007-08) to earn wild cards into the US Open women’s doubles draw.
McHale, 18, of Englewood Cliffs, N.J., is ranked a career-high No. 115 and is one of the rising stars in American tennis. Last year she won the USTA Girls’ 18s National Championship to earn a wild card into the US Open main draw, where she defeated then-world No. 81 Polona Hercog to become just the second USTA Girls’ 18s champion since 1998 to win her first round match at the US Open. This year McHale won a USTA playoff to earn a French Open main-draw wild card, and reached the round of 16 at both the Family Circle Cup in Charleston, S.C., and the Olympus US Open Series event in Cincinnati. She won the 2009 Easter Bowl to crack the Top 10 in the world junior rankings.
Rogers, 17, of Daniel Island, S.C., earned a wild card into the main draw by winning the USTA Girls’ 18s National Championships. She burst onto the tennis scene earlier this year, winning a pre-qualifying event to earn a qualifying wild card into the Family Circle Cup in Charleston, S.C., and reaching the final of the $50,000 USTA Pro Circuit event in Indian Harbour Beach, Fla., as a qualifier. More recently, she reached the quarterfinals of the $75,000 event in Vancouver. This is Rogers’ first appearance at the US Open, in either the main draws or the juniors.
Vandeweghe, 18, of Rancho Mirage, Calif., is ranked a career-high No. 168. In what has been the strongest year of her career thus far, she won a USTA playoff to earn a 2010 Australian Open main-draw wild card and also claimed her first pro title at the $50,000 USTA Pro Circuit event in Carson, Calif. She recently reached the quarterfinals of the 2010 Olympus US Open Series event in San Diego as a qualifier, defeating world No. 9 Vera Zvonareva en route. Vandeweghe captured the 2008 US Open girls’ singles championship. Her mom, Tauna, was an Olympic medalist in both swimming and volleyball, and her uncle is a former NBA star and previous general manager and head coach of the New Jersey Nets, Kiki Vandeweghe.
Ferguson, 24, of Australia, is ranked No. 113. This year she qualified and advanced to the second round of the French Open. She also reached the final of the $25,000 USTA Pro Circuit event in Fort Walton Beach, Fla.
Razzano, 27, of France, is ranked No. 114 and cracked the Top 20 last year after advancing to the fourth round of the French Open and Wimbledon. She holds two Sony Ericsson WTA Tour titles and has played for the French Fed Cup team. Razzano has competed in the US Open main draw nine times, advancing to the fourth round in 2006, which included an upset of world No. 9 Martina Hingis in the second round.
In addition to the eight US Open women’s singles main-draw wild cards, the USTA also announced the nine women who have been awarded wild-card entries into the US Open Qualifying Tournament, which will be held August 24-27 at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.