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Tennis stars look forward to start of Australian Open
Spoiler:
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Two days before the Australian Open begins, a stream of top players fronted news conferences Saturday to talk about their chances in the first Grand Slam tournament of the year. Here are excerpts of what they said:
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— Novak Djokovic handed out dairy free, gluten free healthy sweets at the end of his opening news conference, something of a tradition of his at the Australian Open. Here's Djokovic on his confidence at the Australian Open, where he's won six of his 12 major titles:
"Nobody is invincible. I never thought of myself as a superior player on the court, even though, of course, at times, I was very confident. I was winning a lot of matches. But knowing how it feels on the court if you get overconfident, that's why I don't want to get into that kind of state of mind. I still want to put myself in a position where I'm quite even to other players, fight for this trophy as anybody else, even though I'm defending champion."
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— Serena Williams on her first-round match against Belinda Bencic, a former top-10 player:
"I didn't come here to lose in the first round, or the second round, or at all. If I can play the way I've been practicing, it will be fine. I know she's been playing well, so it will be good for both of us."
— Serena Williams on her recent engagement to Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian:
"It's almost a little unreal right now because I haven't taken it in. I'm being rather selfish and focused on my career."
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— Belinda Bencic on how she first discovered she'd be opening against Williams, against whom she has a 1-1 record:
"My Twitter was blowing up. I was like, 'What's going on?' That's when I saw it. My first reaction was actually really happy. I think I'm super pumped, excited I get to play on the big court."
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— Roger Federer on his physical readiness to play 5-set matches at a slam again after his lengthy injury layoff:
"I guess it's slightly the unknown. I trained as hard as I possibly could, so I will be ready for it. I did numerous sessions where I trained over 2 ½, three hours. I feel I'm ready."
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— Andy Murray on how hard he'll have to work to retain the No. 1 ranking he took from Djokovic at the end of 2016:
"I do think it is a mindset thing, because I think it could be quite easy that once you get to No. 1 that you think, 'Well, actually, I just need to keep doing what I'm doing.' The reality is, in sport, that things obviously keep moving on, the game will get better. I'll obviously get older, the young guys will continue to improve, and also Novak (Djokovic) and Roger (Federer) and Stan (Wawrinka) and Rafa (Nadal) and all the guys at the top are still going to be wanting to get there. ... I need to continue to improve. I for sure need to keep working hard."
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— Kei Nishikori on whether he can break through and win his first Grand Slam title:
"I hope I can get a Grand Slam title sometime. But I haven't got a big title yet, even the Masters tournaments. That's something I need for my confidence and experience. Yeah, my goal this year is to win a big tournament."
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— Milos Raonic on hiring former Wimbledon champion Richard Krajicek as his coach in the off-season:
"It's really to help me be more efficient going forward. I believe you have these two guys (Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic) that are phenomenal right now at the top of the game covering the baseline. It's really hard to get by them, especially with the way they move. I can't expect to move like they do. I've got to be at least 20, 25 pounds heavier than them. It's going to be about moving forward."
Australian Open 2017 prize money: How much will players earn in Melbourne?
Spoiler:
Organisers at this year's Australian Open have increased prize money at the season opening grand slam by 14 per cent on last year's pot in a measure to tackle corruption.
After being hit by allegations of match-fixing on the eve of the tournament last year, the Australian Open is offering much larger financial reward to those at the lower rungs of the sport.
The opening grand slam of 2017 gets under way on 16 January with Novak Djokovic and Angelique Kerber defending the singles titles.
Although the men's and women's singles champions can look forward to taking home £2.24 million for scooping either the Norman Brookes Challenge Cup or Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup, first-round losers can pick up a cheque for £30,000 - an increase of 30 per cent on last year's pot.
Sir Andy Murray, a perennial best man in Melbourne, would walk away £1.15m richer this year if he falls short in the final for the sixth time in his career.
Australia's enfant terrible Nick Kyrgios, meanwhile, stands to earn £266,000 if he matches his best ever achievement at his home slam by reaching the quarter-finals again as he did two years ago.
Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley said: "It was especially important for us to increase the compensation for players in the early rounds and qualifying and this year we have made some real gains.
"Our aim is to shift the break-even point for professional players, to ensure that tennis is a viable career option for the best male and female athletes in the world."
The total prize fund is up 14 per cent at the Australian Open this year (£29.4m) and now has the second-highest prize purse in tennis behind the US Open, which paid out £38.1m in 2016.
Murray and Serena Williams both won £2m for winning their respective Wimbledon titles last summer.
Djokovic and Garbiñe Muguruza took home £1.6m in Paris for their triumphs at Roland Garros last June.
The game around the game – pushing the boundaries on AO channels
A host of Australian Open 2017 digital and social initiatives are set to provide fans with more ways than ever to engage and have fun with the first Grand Slam tournament of the year.
Spoiler:
A host of Australian Open 2017 digital and social initiatives are set to provide fans with more ways than ever to engage and have fun with the first Grand Slam tournament of the year.
Whether onsite at Melbourne Park or viewing the action on the road, fans will be treated to a rich, insightful view of tennis action and their favourite players as the tournament continues to build on its reputation as the innovative Slam.
The official website – ausopen.com – is first with scores, draws, results and live streaming of matches, with 14 million unique visitors in 2016 and 30.27 million views of video content. This will again be the destination for telling the story of the AO along with:
A centralised hub for match coverage in the AO Match Centre
Analysis of matches using innovative data streams and an interactive story-telling tool
AO Live – a weekly up-close look at the all things tennis streamed live on Facebook, and all day during the tournament
A new YouTube channel just for kids
Expert analysis from former pros
A daily quiz on all things AO
An official partnership with Sina Sports – China’s biggest sports network
Chinese language videos created to enhance our presence in the market
Syndication of AO Radio
“Dubbed the “social slam” for its amazing fan engagement and access, the @AustralianOpen stepped things up again in 2016 by delivering what might be one of the best tournaments yet, both on the court and on Twitter,” reported Twitter in Adnews in February.
Having last week ticked over one million fans on Twitter – the first Australian sporting account to achieve this milestone – the Australian Open now boasts a social media audience of 3.6 million across YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and its Chinese accounts, Wechat and Weibo.
In 2017 on social, fans will be treated to:
A Social Park which will extend across the Australian Open precinct
A social megawall and life-sized LED columns of favourite players
New bobblehead studio
Centralised destination for celebrity and player interviews driven by fan questions on Periscope
Live streaming of tennis in 360 degrees and unique viewing experiences via a new Virtual Reality station
Live stories on Snapchat with customised geo-filters
Fan upgrades to the AO Social Suite at Hisense Arena
A popular upside down photo booth at Birrarung Marr allowing fans to ‘play tennis on water’
Exclusive coverage on our Chinese channels, WeChat and Weibo, with Chinese editors working out of Beijing and Guangzhou
Snappy TV broadcasts of viral moments from each day of the Open
Behind-the-scenes coverage from the courts and player areas of Melbourne Park
Return of the popular ‘Smash the Secret’ competition on Instagram
Scavenger hunts, spot prizes and the big ticket #AusOpen selfie competition
Profile pic takeovers enabling fans to support their favourite players on Facebook
Custom Twitter emojis to help fans add a little colour to their tweets.
“The entire Melbourne Park is a social zone,” Australian Open Digital Manager Kim Trengove said.
“We are embracing the precinct as a Social Park, inviting fans to have fun with us whether they are at the tennis, or liking, sharing and commenting from afar.”
The Australian Open is active on the following social channels:
Barty, smutna wiadomość. Oficjalna strona AO nie odlicza (jeszcze?) dnia do startu turnieju.
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 16:09
autor: Lleyton
Jak to zleciało od zeszłego AO. W ekspresowym tempie.
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 16:16
autor: matek20
To nowe logo to na serio ?
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 16:20
autor: DUN I LOVE
Co masz na myśli?
Logo jest bez zmian:
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 16:51
autor: matek20
Wejdź na oficjalną stronę.
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 17:13
autor: DUN I LOVE
Mam nadzieję, że to jakiś żart.
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 17:14
autor: Lucas
Chryste, ale brzydkie
Zabierz "belkę" z litery "A", a otrzymasz nowoczesne, designerskie logo
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 17:15
autor: DUN I LOVE
Znak czasów, wszystko coraz bardziej przeciętne. Co za dno - najfajniejsze logo spośród wszystkich turniejów tenisowych...
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 18:55
autor: Emu
DUN I LOVE pisze:Znak czasów, wszystko coraz bardziej przeciętne. Co za dno - najfajniejsze logo spośród wszystkich turniejów tenisowych...
Mam nadzieje, że nie wrzucisz tego czegoś na banerek.
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 19:09
autor: DUN I LOVE
Z tym może być problem. Aż mnie boli, że muszę zmienić posty otwarcia. Dajcie spokój, co za prymitywny logotyp.
Re: Australian Open 2017
: 01 lis 2016, 20:14
autor: Lucas
Niestety się przyzwyczaimy, pamiętacie jak pomstowaliśmy na oficjalkę ATP? Teraz już nikogo nie bulwersuje . Samo logo ATP też pewnie niedługo "poprawią", za dużo w nim detali .
Jakby dziecko w przedszkolu tak narysowało, to by sprawdzali czy się na pewno dobrze rozwija, ale projektant zapewne pobrał niezłą kasę za to wiekopomne dzieło .