Las Vegas Review-Journal

Australian Open glance

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Schedule: The 14-day tournament begins Sunday (U.S. time). The women’s singles final is Jan. 26, and the men’s singles final is Jan. 27. Like the U.S. Open, there are separate day and night sessions.

2018 men’s singles champion:

2018 women’s singles champion: Caroline Wozniacki, Denmark

Last year: Federer beat 2014 U.S.

Open champion Marin Cilic 6-2, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 for a second consecutiv­e title in Melbourne and sixth overall. The victory also lifted Federer’s men’s-record Grand Slam trophy haul to 20. Wozniacki edged Simona Halep 7-6 (2), 3-6, 6-4 to finally grab her first major championsh­ip. Wozniacki had lost in two previous Grand Slam finals, as well as exiting in the semifinals four other times.

She’s back: Serena Williams returns after missing the Australian Open a year ago; she gave birth to her daughter, Olympia, on Sept. 1, 2017, then dealt with health complicati­ons from childbirth and did not return to Grand Slam play until the French Open last May. Also back in Melbourne: Twotime champion and former No. 1 Victoria Azarenka, who last entered the Australian Open three years ago.

What’s new: For the first time, the Australian Open will have final-set tiebreaker­s for men’s matches that reach a fifth set and women’s matches that go to a third set. The tournament joins Wimbledon in eliminatin­g the possibilit­y of never-ending final sets; previously the U.S. Open was the only major with a last-set tiebreaker. The tiebreaker in Australia will come at 6-all and will be won by whichever player is the first to 10 points, ahead by at least two; at Wimbledon later in the year, the tiebreaker will be the standard first-to-seven, win-bytwo format, but it will be used only when the final set reaches 12-all. Also changing in Melbourne in 2019: A “heat stress scale” will take into account temperatur­e, radiant heat, humidity and wind speed and could lead to 10-minute suspension­s of men’s matches before a fourth set, following the lead of last year’s U.S. Open. Women’s matches will continue to have the possibilit­y of a 10-minute break before a third set.

Key statistic: 24. Margaret Court’s all-time mark for most Grand Slam singles titles, one more than Williams’ haul, which stands as the record for the profession­al era.

Prize money: A tournament-record total of 62.5 million Australian dollars (about $45 million), with 4.1 million Australian dollars (about $3 million) each to the men’s and women’s singles champions.

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