How to Watch the U.S. Open Final: Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka Play for the Championship
Gauff, 19, is the first American teenager to reach the singles final in New York since Serena Williams in 2001. Source link
Gauff, 19, is the first American teenager to reach the singles final in New York since Serena Williams in 2001. Source link
Daniil Medvedev upset the reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz in their semifinal, while Novak Djokovic predictably beat Ben Shelton. Source link
Rajeev Ram of the United States and Joe Salisbury of Britain are the first pair to win three straight doubles titles in New York in the Open era. Source link
Djokovic ended the 20-year-old American’s sensational U.S. Open run with a straight-set victory in their semifinal match. Source link
“I watched like four or five episodes of ‘My Hero Academia’ before I played,” she said after advancing to the U.S. Open final. Source link
The Americans, perennial favorites but without many top N.B.A. stars, was stopped short of the gold medal game. The team will look much different at the Paris Olympics. Source link
Davis seemed unstoppable at the Little League World Series nine years ago. As she begins graduate school at Columbia, she is still charging ahead. Source link
The U.S. Open begins with 128 players in each singles draw, and every day some will lose. Gradually, then suddenly, there’s a lot of space in the locker rooms. Source link
Matthew Futterman, a Sports journalist, reflects on his many years attending, and later, covering, the Grand Slam tournament in Flushing, Queens. Source link
After a lengthy delay caused by protesters, Gauff and Sabalenka emerged as winners. Both will play the first U.S. Open final and second major final of their career. Source link