Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2018 Australian Open

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Further information on draws:Men's singles draw andWomen's singles draw

Tennis tournament
2018 Australian Open
Date15–28 January 2018
Edition106th
Open Era (50th)
CategoryGrand Slam
Draw128S / 64D /
Prize moneyA$55,000,000
SurfaceHard (Plexicushion)
LocationMelbourne,Victoria, Australia
VenueMelbourne Park
Attendance743,667[1]
Champions
Men's singles
SwitzerlandRoger Federer
Women's singles
DenmarkCaroline Wozniacki
Men's doubles
AustriaOliver Marach /CroatiaMate Pavić
Women's doubles
HungaryTímea Babos /FranceKristina Mladenovic
Mixed doubles
CroatiaMate Pavić /CanadaGabriela Dabrowski
Wheelchair men's singles
JapanShingo Kunieda
Wheelchair women's singles
NetherlandsDiede de Groot
Wheelchair quad singles
AustraliaDylan Alcott
Wheelchair men's doubles
FranceStéphane Houdet /FranceNicolas Peifer
Wheelchair women's doubles
NetherlandsMarjolein Buis /JapanYui Kamiji
Wheelchair quad doubles
AustraliaDylan Alcott /AustraliaHeath Davidson
Boys' singles
United StatesSebastian Korda
Girls' singles
Chinese TaipeiLiang En-shuo
Boys' doubles
FranceHugo Gaston /FranceClément Tabur
Girls' doubles
Chinese TaipeiLiang En-shuo /ChinaWang Xinyu
← 2017 ·Australian Open· 2019 →

The2018 Australian Open was a tennis tournament played atMelbourne Park between 15 and 28 January 2018, and was the firstGrand Slam tournament of the 2018 season. The tournament consisted of events for professional players in singles, doubles and mixed doubles. Junior and wheelchair players compete in singles and doubles tournaments.Roger Federer was the defending champion in the men's singles event and successfully retained his title (his sixth), his record twentieth Grand Slam major overall, defeatingMarin Čilić in the final, whileCaroline Wozniacki won the women's title, defeatingSimona Halep in the final to win her first Grand Slam.

The tournament was the 106th edition of the event (the 50th edition of theOpen Era). Additionally, it was the 200th Major tournament of the Open Era. It also marked the 30th anniversary of the Australian Open moving from theKooyong Tennis Club to Melbourne Park. The tournament had a record attendance of 743,667 spectators.

Tournament

[edit]
Rod Laver Arena where the Finals of the Australian Open took place

The 2018 Australian Open was the 106th edition of the tournament and was held atMelbourne Park inMelbourne,Victoria, Australia.

The tournament was run by theInternational Tennis Federation (ITF) and was part of the2018 ATP World Tour and the2018 WTA Tour calendars under the Grand Slam category. The tournament consisted of both men's and women's singles and doubles draws as well as a mixed doubles event. There were singles and doubles events for both boys and girls (players under 18), which were part of the Grade A category of tournaments, and also singles, doubles and quad events for men's and women'swheelchair tennis players as part of the NEC tour under the Grand Slam category.

The tournament was played on hard courts over a series of 25 courts, including the three main show courts:Rod Laver Arena,Hisense Arena andMargaret Court Arena.[2]

Point and prize money distribution

[edit]

Point distribution

[edit]

Below is a series of tables for each of the competitions showing the ranking points offered for each event.

Senior points

[edit]
EventWFSFQFRound of 16Round of 32Round of 64Round of 128QQ3Q2Q1
Men's singles20001200720360180904510251680
Men's doubles0
Women's singles130078043024013070104030202
Women's doubles10

Junior points

[edit]
EventWFSFQFRound of 16Round of 32QQ3
Boys' singles1000600370200100453020
Girls' singles
Boys' doubles75045027515075
Girls' doubles

Prize money

[edit]

The Australian Open total prize money for 2018 was increased by 10% to a tournament recordA$55,000,000.

EventWFSFQFRound of 16Round of 32Round of 64Round of 1281Q3Q2Q1
SinglesA$4,000,000A$2,000,000A$880,000A$440,000A$240,000A$142,500A$90,000A$60,000A$30,000A$15,000A$7,500
Doubles *A$750,000A$375,000A$185,000A$90,000A$45,000A$22,500A$14,000
Mixed doubles *A$160,000A$80,000A$40,000A$20,000A$10,000A$5,000

1Qualifiers prize money was also the Round of 128 prize money.
*per team

Singles players

[edit]
2018 Australian Open – Men's singles
ChampionRunner-up
SwitzerlandRoger Federer [2]CroatiaMarin Čilić [6]
Semifinals out
United KingdomKyle EdmundSouth KoreaChung Hyeon
Quarterfinals out
SpainRafael Nadal [1]BulgariaGrigor Dimitrov [3]United StatesTennys SandgrenCzech RepublicTomáš Berdych [19]
4th round out
ArgentinaDiego Schwartzman [24]SpainPablo Carreño Busta [10]AustraliaNick Kyrgios [17]ItalyAndreas Seppi
AustriaDominic Thiem [5]SerbiaNovak Djokovic [14]ItalyFabio Fognini [25]HungaryMárton Fucsovics
3rd round out
Bosnia and HerzegovinaDamir Džumhur [28]UkraineAlexandr DolgopolovLuxembourgGilles Müller [23]United StatesRyan Harrison
RussiaAndrey Rublev [30]FranceJo-Wilfried Tsonga [15]Georgia (country)Nikoloz BasilashviliCroatiaIvo Karlović
FranceAdrian Mannarino [26]GermanyMaximilian MartererSpainAlbert Ramos Viñolas [21]GermanyAlexander Zverev [4]
FranceJulien BenneteauArgentinaJuan Martín del Potro [12]ArgentinaNicolás KickerFranceRichard Gasquet [29]
2nd round out
ArgentinaLeonardo MayerAustraliaJohn Millman (PR)NorwayCasper Ruud (Q)AustraliaMatthew Ebden
FranceGilles SimonTunisiaMalek JaziriUruguayPablo Cuevas [31]PortugalJoão Sousa
United StatesMackenzie McDonald (Q)CyprusMarcos BaghdatisSerbiaViktor TroickiCanadaDenis Shapovalov
UzbekistanDenis IstominBelgiumRuben Bemelmans (Q)JapanYoshihito Nishioka (PR)JapanYūichi Sugita
United StatesDenis Kudla (Q)Czech RepublicJiří VeselýSpainFernando VerdascoSwitzerlandStan Wawrinka [9]
FranceGaël MonfilsUnited StatesTim Smyczek (WC)RussiaDaniil MedvedevGermanyPeter Gojowczyk
BelgiumDavid Goffin [7]RussiaEvgeny DonskoySpainGuillermo García LópezRussiaKaren Khachanov
United StatesSam Querrey [13]SlovakiaLukáš LackoItalyLorenzo Sonego (Q)GermanyJan-Lennard Struff
1st round out
Dominican RepublicVíctor Estrella BurgosChileNicolás JarryCroatiaBorna ĆorićItalyPaolo Lorenzi
SerbiaDušan LajovićFranceQuentin Halys (Q)AustriaAndreas Haider-Maurer (PR)United StatesJohn Isner [16]
AustraliaJason Kubler (WC)RomaniaMarius CopilItalySalvatore Caruso (Q)ArgentinaFederico Delbonis
RussiaMikhail YouzhnyIsraelDudi SelaGermanyDustin Brown (Q)CanadaVasek Pospisil (Q)
AustriaDennis Novak (Q)SwedenElias Ymer (Q)IndiaYuki Bhambri (Q)SpainDavid Ferrer
BrazilRogério Dutra SilvaAustraliaAlex Bolt (WC)GreeceStefanos TsitsipasUnited StatesKevin King (Q)
South AfricaKevin Anderson [11]FrancePierre-Hugues HerbertAustriaGerald MelzerFranceLucas Pouille [18]
GermanyPhilipp Kohlschreiber [27]FranceCorentin Moutet (WC)SerbiaLaslo ĐereUnited StatesJack Sock [8]
ArgentinaGuido PellaUnited StatesSteve JohnsonCzech RepublicVáclav Šafránek (Q)ItalyMatteo Berrettini (LL)
SpainRoberto Bautista Agut [20]GermanyCedrik-Marcel StebeFranceJérémy ChardyLithuaniaRičardas Berankis (PR)
United StatesDonald YoungSpainJaume Munar (Q)AustraliaAlexei Popyrin (WC)United StatesJared Donaldson
GermanyMischa Zverev [32]AustraliaThanasi Kokkinakis (WC)KazakhstanMikhail KukushkinItalyThomas Fabbiano
GermanyMatthias Bachinger (Q)JapanTaro DanielGermanyFlorian MayerArgentinaHoracio Zeballos
AustraliaAlex de Minaur (WC)FranceBenoît PaireCanadaPeter Polansky (LL)United StatesFrancis Tiafoe
SpainFeliciano LópezMoldovaRadu AlbotAustraliaJordan ThompsonCanadaMilos Raonic [22]
SloveniaBlaž KavčičNetherlandsRobin HaaseSouth KoreaKwon Soon-woo (WC)SloveniaAljaž Bedene
2018 Australian Open – Women's singles
ChampionRunner-up
DenmarkCaroline Wozniacki [2]RomaniaSimona Halep [1]
Semifinals out
GermanyAngelique Kerber [21]BelgiumElise Mertens
Quarterfinals out
Czech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [6]United StatesMadison Keys [17]UkraineElina Svitolina [4]SpainCarla Suárez Navarro
4th round out
JapanNaomi OsakaCzech RepublicBarbora Strýcová [20]Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-weiFranceCaroline Garcia [8]
CroatiaPetra MartićCzech RepublicDenisa Allertová (Q)EstoniaAnett Kontaveit [32]SlovakiaMagdaléna Rybáriková [19]
3rd round out
United StatesLauren DavisAustraliaAshleigh Barty [18]United StatesBernarda Pera (LL)Czech RepublicLucie Šafářová [29]
PolandAgnieszka Radwańska [26]RussiaMaria SharapovaRomaniaAna BogdanBelarusAliaksandra Sasnovich
ThailandLuksika Kumkhum (Q)FranceAlizé CornetPolandMagda LinetteUkraineMarta Kostyuk (Q)
LatviaJeļena Ostapenko [7]EstoniaKaia KanepiUkraineKateryna BondarenkoNetherlandsKiki Bertens [30]
2nd round out
CanadaEugenie BouchardGermanyAndrea PetkovicItalyCamila GiorgiRussiaElena Vesnina [16]
United KingdomJohanna Konta [9]SpainLara ArruabarrenaRomaniaSorana CîrsteaBrazilBeatriz Haddad Maia
SpainGarbiñe Muguruza [3]UkraineLesia TsurenkoCroatiaDonna VekićLatviaAnastasija Sevastova [14]
KazakhstanYulia PutintsevaRussiaEkaterina AlexandrovaCroatiaMirjana Lučić-Baroni [28]Czech RepublicMarkéta Vondroušová
SwitzerlandBelinda BencicRomaniaIrina-Camelia BeguAustraliaDaria Gavrilova [23]GermanyJulia Görges [12]
ChinaZhang ShuaiRussiaDaria Kasatkina [22]AustraliaOlivia Rogowska (WC)Czech RepublicKateřina Siniaková
ChinaDuan YingyingGermanyMona BarthelPuerto RicoMonica PuigHungaryTímea Babos
RussiaAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova [15]BelgiumKirsten FlipkensUnited StatesNicole GibbsCroatiaJana Fett
1st round out
AustraliaDestanee Aiava (WC)FranceOcéane DodinSlovakiaJana ČepelováCzech RepublicPetra Kvitová [27]
BelarusAryna SabalenkaRussiaAnna Kalinskaya (Q)SlovakiaKristína Kučová (PR)TunisiaOns Jabeur
United StatesMadison BrengleRussiaAnna Blinkova (Q)NetherlandsRichèl HogenkampUnited StatesKristie Ahn (WC)
AustraliaAjla Tomljanović (WC)KazakhstanZarina DiyasAustraliaLizette Cabrera (WC)ParaguayVerónica Cepede Royg
FranceJessika Ponchet (WC)ChinaZhu Lin (Q)RussiaNatalia VikhlyantsevaCzech RepublicKristýna Plíšková
GermanyAnna-Lena Friedsam (PR)JapanNao HibinoGermanyTatjana MariaUnited StatesVarvara Lepchenko
FranceKristina Mladenovic [11]United KingdomHeather WatsonSloveniaPolona HercogChinaWang Qiang
United StatesShelby RogersUnited StatesChristina McHaleJapanKurumi NaraGermanyCarina Witthöft
United StatesVenus Williams [5]SwedenJohanna LarssonBelgiumAlison Van UytvanckRussiaEkaterina Makarova [31]
United StatesIrina Falconi (Q)SlovakiaViktória Kužmová (Q)ChinaWang Xinyu (WC)United StatesSofia Kenin
United StatesSloane Stephens [13]FrancePauline ParmentierUnited StatesJennifer BradySlovakiaAnna Karolína Schmiedlová (Q)
ChinaPeng Shuai [25]AustraliaJaimee Fourlis (WC)GreeceMaria SakkariSerbiaIvana Jorović (Q)
ItalyFrancesca SchiavoneColombiaMariana Duque MariñoRomaniaMonica NiculescuSerbiaAleksandra Krunić
SlovakiaDominika Cibulková [24]AustraliaSamantha StosurPolandMagdalena Fręch (Q)United StatesCoCo Vandeweghe [10]
UkraineKateryna KozlovaSwitzerlandViktorija Golubic (Q)United StatesAlison RiskeUnited StatesTaylor Townsend
United StatesCatherine BellisBulgariaViktoriya Tomova (LL)JapanMisa Eguchi (PR)RomaniaMihaela Buzărnescu

Day-by-day summaries

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Day-by-day summaries

Champions

[edit]

Seniors

[edit]

Men's singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Men's singles

Women's singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Women's singles

Men's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Men's doubles

Women's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Women's doubles

Mixed doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Mixed doubles

Juniors

[edit]

Boys' singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Boys' singles

Girls' singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Girls' singles

Boys' doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Boys' doubles

Girls' doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Girls' doubles

Wheelchair events

[edit]

Wheelchair men's singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Wheelchair men's singles

Wheelchair women's singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Wheelchair women's singles

Wheelchair quad singles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Wheelchair quad singles

Wheelchair men's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Wheelchair men's doubles

Wheelchair women's doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Wheelchair women's doubles

Wheelchair quad doubles

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Wheelchair quad doubles

Singles seeds

[edit]

The following are the seeded players and notable players who have withdrawn from the event. Seedings are arranged according to ATP and WTA rankings on 8 January 2018, while ranking andpoints before are as of 15 January 2018.Points after are as of 29 January 2018.

Men's singles

[edit]
SeedRankPlayerPoints beforePoints defendingPoints wonPoints afterStatus
11SpainRafael Nadal10,6001,2003609,760Quarterfinals retired againstCroatiaMarin Čilić [6]
22SwitzerlandRoger Federer9,6052,0002,0009,605Champion, defeatedCroatiaMarin Čilić [6]
33BulgariaGrigor Dimitrov4,9907203604,630Quarterfinals lost toUnited KingdomKyle Edmund
44GermanyAlexander Zverev4,61090904,610Third round lost toSouth KoreaChung Hyeon
55AustriaDominic Thiem4,0601801804,060Fourth round lost toUnited StatesTennys Sandgren
66CroatiaMarin Čilić3,805451,2004,960Runner-up, lost toSwitzerlandRoger Federer [2]
77BelgiumDavid Goffin3,775360453,460Second round lost toFranceJulien Benneteau
89United StatesJack Sock2,96090102,880First round lost toJapanYūichi Sugita
98SwitzerlandStan Wawrinka3,060720452,385Second round lost toUnited StatesTennys Sandgren
1011SpainPablo Carreño Busta2,615901802,705Fourth round lost toCroatiaMarin Čilić [6]
1112South AfricaKevin Anderson2,6100102,620First round lost toUnited KingdomKyle Edmund
1210ArgentinaJuan Martín del Potro2,7250902,815Third round lost toCzech RepublicTomáš Berdych [19]
1313United StatesSam Querrey2,53590452,490Second round lost toHungaryMárton Fucsovics
1414SerbiaNovak Djokovic2,335451802,470Fourth round lost toSouth KoreaChung Hyeon
1515FranceJo-Wilfried Tsonga2,320360902,050Third round lost toAustraliaNick Kyrgios [17]
1616United StatesJohn Isner2,26545102,230First round lost toAustraliaMatthew Ebden
1717AustraliaNick Kyrgios2,260451802,395Fourth round lost toBulgariaGrigor Dimitrov [3]
1818FranceLucas Pouille2,23510102,235First round lost toBelgiumRuben Bemelmans [Q]
1920Czech RepublicTomáš Berdych2,050903602,320Quarterfinals lost toSwitzerlandRoger Federer [2]
2021SpainRoberto Bautista Agut2,015180101,845First round lost toSpainFernando Verdasco
2122SpainAlbert Ramos Viñolas1,84510901,925Third round lost toSerbiaNovak Djokovic [14]
2223CanadaMilos Raonic1,750360101,400First round lost toSlovakiaLukáš Lacko
2328LuxembourgGilles Müller1,49045901,535Third round lost toSpainPablo Carreño Busta [10]
2426ArgentinaDiego Schwartzman1,675451801,810Fourth round lost toSpainRafael Nadal [1]
2525ItalyFabio Fognini1,715451801,850Fourth round lost toCzech RepublicTomáš Berdych [19]
2627FranceAdrian Mannarino1,62510901,705Third round lost toAustriaDominic Thiem [5]
2729GermanyPhilipp Kohlschreiber1,41590101,335First round lost toJapanYoshihito Nishioka [PR]
2830Bosnia and HerzegovinaDamir Džumhur1,39110901,471Third round lost toSpainRafael Nadal [1]
2931FranceRichard Gasquet1,37590901,375Third round lost toSwitzerlandRoger Federer [2]
3032RussiaAndrey Rublev1,37370+6090+61,339Third round lost toBulgariaGrigor Dimitrov [3]
3134UruguayPablo Cuevas1,34510451,380Second round lost toUnited StatesRyan Harrison
3235GermanyMischa Zverev1,30236010952First round retired againstSouth KoreaChung Hyeon

The following players would have been seeded, but they withdrew from the event.

RankPlayerPoints beforePoints defendingPoints afterWithdrawal reason
19United KingdomAndy Murray2,1401801,960Hip injury
24JapanKei Nishikori1,7351801,555Wrist injury

Women's singles

[edit]
SeedRankPlayerPoints beforePoints defendingPoints wonPoints afterStatus
11RomaniaSimona Halep6,425101,3007,715Runner-up, lost toDenmarkCaroline Wozniacki [2]
22DenmarkCaroline Wozniacki6,0951302,0007,965Champion, defeatedRomaniaSimona Halep [1]
33SpainGarbiñe Muguruza6,050430705,690Second round lost toChinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei
44UkraineElina Svitolina5,7851304306,085Quarterfinals lost toBelgiumElise Mertens
55United StatesVenus Williams5,5681,300104,278First round lost toSwitzerlandBelinda Bencic
66Czech RepublicKarolína Plíšková5,4454304305,445Quarterfinals lost toRomaniaSimona Halep [1]
77LatviaJeļena Ostapenko4,9011301304,901Third round lost toEstoniaAnett Kontaveit [32]
88FranceCaroline Garcia4,3851302404,495Fourth round lost toUnited StatesMadison Keys [17]
910United KingdomJohanna Konta3,185430702,825Second round lost toUnited StatesBernarda Pera [LL]
109United StatesCoCo Vandeweghe3,204780102,434First round lost toHungaryTímea Babos
1111FranceKristina Mladenovic2,93510102,935First round lost toRomaniaAna Bogdan
1212GermanyJulia Görges2,82570702,825Second round lost toFranceAlizé Cornet
1313United StatesSloane Stephens2,8030102,813First round lost toChinaZhang Shuai
1415LatviaAnastasija Sevastova2,600130702,540Second round lost toRussiaMaria Sharapova
1518RussiaAnastasia Pavlyuchenkova2,485430702,125Second round lost toUkraineKateryna Bondarenko
1619RussiaElena Vesnina2,220130702,160Second round lost toJapanNaomi Osaka
1720United StatesMadison Keys2,21404302,644Quarterfinals lost toGermanyAngelique Kerber [21]
1817AustraliaAshleigh Barty2,4861301302,486Third round lost toJapanNaomi Osaka
1921SlovakiaMagdaléna Rybáriková2,141(18)[a]2402,363Fourth round lost toDenmarkCaroline Wozniacki [2]
2024Czech RepublicBarbora Strýcová1,9402402401,940Fourth round lost toCzech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [6]
2116GermanyAngelique Kerber2,4912407803,031Semifinals lost toRomaniaSimona Halep [1]
2225RussiaDaria Kasatkina1,90510701,965Second round lost toPolandMagda Linette
2323AustraliaDaria Gavrilova1,990240701,820Second round lost toBelgiumElise Mertens
2426SlovakiaDominika Cibulková1,860130101,740First round lost toEstoniaKaia Kanepi
2527ChinaPeng Shuai1,76570101,705First round lost toUkraineMarta Kostyuk [Q]
2635PolandAgnieszka Radwańska1,510701301,570Third round lost toChinese TaipeiHsieh Su-wei
2728Czech RepublicPetra Kvitová1,7080101,718First round lost toGermanyAndrea Petkovic
2830CroatiaMirjana Lučić-Baroni1,61878070908Second round lost toBelarusAliaksandra Sasnovich
2929Czech RepublicLucie Šafářová1,650701301,710Third round lost toCzech RepublicKarolína Plíšková [6]
3032NetherlandsKiki Bertens1,605101301,725Third round lost toDenmarkCaroline Wozniacki [2]
3131RussiaEkaterina Makarova1,605240101,375First round lost toRomaniaIrina-Camelia Begu
3233EstoniaAnett Kontaveit1,56010+80240+301,740Fourth round lost toSpainCarla Suárez Navarro
  1. ^Rybáriková did not participate in the 2017 Australian Open. Accordingly, her 16th best result from the past 12 months will be subtracted from her ranking points instead.

The following players would have been seeded, but they withdrew or not entered from the event.

RankPlayerPoints beforePoints defendingPoints afterWithdrawal reason
14RussiaSvetlana Kuznetsova2,7022402,462Left wrist injury
22United StatesSerena Williams2,0002,0000Maternity

Doubles seeds

[edit]
TeamRank1Seed
PolandŁukasz KubotBrazilMarcelo Melo21
FinlandHenri KontinenAustraliaJohn Peers72
NetherlandsJean-Julien RojerRomaniaHoria Tecău153
FrancePierre-Hugues HerbertFranceNicolas Mahut174
United KingdomJamie MurrayBrazilBruno Soares195
United StatesBob BryanUnited StatesMike Bryan246
AustriaOliver MarachCroatiaMate Pavić347
South AfricaRaven KlaasenNew ZealandMichael Venus408
SpainFeliciano LópezSpainMarc López449
IndiaRohan BopannaFranceÉdouard Roger-Vasselin4510
ColombiaJuan Sebastián CabalColombiaRobert Farah5011
UruguayPablo CuevasArgentinaHoracio Zeballos5512
MexicoSantiago GonzálezChileJulio Peralta5713
CroatiaIvan DodigSpainFernando Verdasco7114
PolandMarcin MatkowskiPakistanAisam-ul-Haq Qureshi7115
United StatesRajeev RamIndiaDivij Sharan7216
  • 1 Rankings are as of 8 January 2018.


TeamRank1Seed
Chinese TaipeiLatisha ChanCzech RepublicAndrea Sestini Hlaváčková61
RussiaEkaterina MakarovaRussiaElena Vesnina62
AustraliaAshleigh BartyAustraliaCasey Dellacqua203
Czech RepublicLucie ŠafářováCzech RepublicBarbora Strýcová214
HungaryTímea BabosFranceKristina Mladenovic335
CanadaGabriela DabrowskiChinaXu Yifan346
NetherlandsKiki BertensSwedenJohanna Larsson417
Chinese TaipeiHsieh Su-weiChinaPeng Shuai468
SloveniaAndreja KlepačSpainMaría José Martínez Sánchez489
RomaniaIrina-Camelia BeguRomaniaMonica Niculescu5510
JapanShuko AoyamaChinaYang Zhaoxuan5511
United StatesRaquel AtawoGermanyAnna-Lena Grönefeld5712
United StatesNicole MelicharCzech RepublicKvěta Peschke5813
Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-chingSloveniaKatarina Srebotnik5914
PolandAlicja RosolskaUnited StatesAbigail Spears5915
Czech RepublicBarbora KrejčíkováCzech RepublicKateřina Siniaková6116
  • 1 Rankings are as of 8 January 2018.

Mixed doubles

[edit]
TeamRank1Seed
Chinese TaipeiLatisha ChanUnited KingdomJamie Murray101
AustraliaCasey DellacquaAustraliaJohn Peers132
RussiaEkaterina MakarovaBrazilBruno Soares133
Czech RepublicKvěta PeschkeFinlandHenri Kontinen234
HungaryTímea BabosIndiaRohan Bopanna265
Czech RepublicAndrea Sestini HlaváčkováFranceÉdouard Roger-Vasselin316
Chinese TaipeiChan Hao-chingNew ZealandMichael Venus327
CanadaGabriela DabrowskiCroatiaMate Pavić348
  • 1 Rankings are as of 8 January 2018.

Main draw wildcard entries

[edit]
Main article:2018 Australian Open – Main draw wildcard entries

Men's singles

[edit]

Women's singles

[edit]

Men's doubles

[edit]

Women's doubles

[edit]

Mixed doubles

[edit]

Main draw qualifier entries

[edit]

The qualifying competition took place in Melbourne Park on 10 to 14 January 2018 (was originally to end on 13 January, but got rescheduled due to heavy rain). However, matches were extended to 5 days due to bad weather on the third day of qualifying.

Men's singles

[edit]

Qualifiers

[edit]
  1. ItalySalvatore Caruso
  2. AustriaDennis Novak
  3. SpainJaume Munar
  4. FranceQuentin Halys
  5. CanadaVasek Pospisil
  6. United StatesKevin King
  7. United StatesDenis Kudla
  8. United StatesMackenzie McDonald
  9. SwedenElias Ymer
  10. GermanyDustin Brown
  11. NorwayCasper Ruud
  12. ItalyLorenzo Sonego
  13. BelgiumRuben Bemelmans
  14. Czech RepublicVáclav Šafránek
  15. IndiaYuki Bhambri
  16. GermanyMatthias Bachinger

Lucky losers

[edit]
  1. CanadaPeter Polansky
  2. ItalyMatteo Berrettini

Women's singles

[edit]

Qualifiers

[edit]
  1. RussiaAnna Kalinskaya
  2. RussiaAnna Blinkova
  3. ChinaZhu Lin
  4. SwitzerlandViktorija Golubic
  5. United StatesIrina Falconi
  6. Czech RepublicDenisa Allertová
  7. SerbiaIvana Jorović
  8. SlovakiaViktória Kužmová
  9. UkraineMarta Kostyuk
  10. SlovakiaAnna Karolína Schmiedlová
  11. ThailandLuksika Kumkhum
  12. PolandMagdalena Fręch

Lucky losers

[edit]
  1. BulgariaViktoriya Tomova
  2. United StatesBernarda Pera

Protected ranking

[edit]

The following players were accepted directly into the main draw using a protected ranking:

Men's singles


Women's singles

Withdrawals

[edit]

The following players were accepted directly into the main tournament, but withdrew with injuries or other reasons.

Before the tournament
Men's singles
Women's singles

† – not included on entry list
‡ – withdrew from entry list before qualifying began
@ – withdrew from entry list after qualifying began
§ – withdrew from main draw

Retirements

[edit]
Men's singles

References

[edit]
  1. ^Suzi Petkovski."The big numbers from AO2019". Tennis Australia.
  2. ^"First Glimpse of new-look Margaret Court Arena". Tennis.com.au. Retrieved6 January 2014.
  3. ^"Alex Bolts into Australian Open". sbs.com.au. Retrieved21 December 2017.
  4. ^"Alexei Popyrin and Jason Kubler secure Australian Open wildcards". Herald Sun. 6 January 2018. Retrieved7 January 2018.
  5. ^"Lizette Cabrera one of four to earn wildcards into Australian Open". Herald Sun. 4 January 2018. Retrieved4 January 2018.
  6. ^"Australian Olivia Rogowska earns wildcard into 2018 Australian Open". heraldsun.com.au. Retrieved18 November 2017.
  7. ^"Doubles title paves way for Hives' Australian Open debut". thecourier.com.au. Retrieved18 November 2017.
  8. ^"Andy Murray heading home after pulling out of Australian Open".The Guardian. Retrieved4 January 2018.
  9. ^"Open d'Australie : Svetlana Kuznetsova forfait". lequipe.fr. Retrieved8 December 2017.

External links

[edit]
Preceded byGrand SlamsSucceeded by
Pre Open Era
Open Era
Grand Slam events
ATP World Tour Masters 1000
ATP World Tour 500 series
ATP World Tour 250 series
Team events
Grand Slam events
WTA Premier Mandatory tournaments
WTA Premier 5 tournaments
WTA Premier tournaments
WTA International tournaments
Team events
Grand Slam
Men
Women
Team events
Other events
Politics and elections
People and culture
Sports competitions
Establishments
and developments
Disasters
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2018_Australian_Open&oldid=1307171909"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp