1999 Australian Open

1999 Australian Open
Date 18–31 January
Edition 87th
Category Grand Slam (ITF)
Surface Hardcourt (Rebound Ace)
Location Melbourne, Australia
Venue Melbourne Park
Champions
Men's Singles
Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov
Women's Singles
Switzerland Martina Hingis
Men's Doubles
Sweden Jonas Björkman / Australia Patrick Rafter
Women's Doubles
Switzerland Martina Hingis / Russia Anna Kournikova
Mixed Doubles
South Africa Mariaan de Swardt / South Africa David Adams
Boys' Singles
Denmark Kristian Pless
Girls' Singles
France Virginie Razzano
Boys' Doubles
Austria Jürgen Melzer / Denmark Kristian Pless
Girls' Doubles
Greece Eleni Daniilidou / France Virginie Razzano

The 1999 Australian Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia. It was the 87th edition of the Australian Open and was held from 18 through 31 January 1999. This was the first Grand Slam of the calendar year. Total attendance for the event reached 391,504.[1]

In the singles competition, Petr Korda and Martina Hingis were the defending champions. Korda was unseeded at this tournament and was eliminated in the third round by American 15th seed Todd Martin. This loss resulted in him falling down the rankings from 20th to 76th.[2] Later in July, Korda received a suspension from tennis by the ITF after testing positive for nandrolone at Wimbledon last year. Yevgeny Kafelnikov, on the other hand, ended up becoming the men's champion, defeating surprise finalist Swede Thomas Enqvist in four sets. With this win, Kafelnikov became the first Russian, male or female, to win an Australian Open title. In the women's singles, two-time defending champion Martina Hingis successfully defended her title, defeating another surprise finalist in Frenchwoman Amélie Mauresmo. This win allowed Hingis to join Margaret Court, Evonne Goolagong Cawley, Steffi Graf and Monica Seles as the only women to have won three consecutive Australian Open titles. Amélie Mauresmo would later become the World No. 1 in 2004, and despite being one of the top players of the early to mid-2000s, this would be her only Grand Slam final until the 2006 Australian Open, which she won.

In doubles, the defending champions were Jonas Björkman and Jacco Eltingh for the men's, Martina Hingis and Mirjana Lučić for the women's, and Venus Williams and Justin Gimelstob for the mixed. Eltingh did not participate at this year's Australian Open, leaving Björkman to team up with Australia's Patrick Rafter. Rafter and Björkman later won the title, defeating the Indian first seeds Mahesh Bhupathi and Leander Paes in five sets. Hingis and Lučić also separated, with Hingis teaming up with Anna Kournikova and Lučić teaming up with Mary Pierce. Lučić and Pierce fell in the first round, but Hingis and Kournikova went on to win, by defeating first seeds Lindsay Davenport and Natasha Zvereva at the final. The mixed doubles competition saw Williams and Gimelstob not competing, and none of the seeds reaching past the second round. In the end, the South African team of Mariaan de Swardt and David Adams won, defeating Williams' sister Serena and her partner Max Mirnyi in the final.

The Juniors Competition saw the first ever junior double, with Kristian Pless and Virginie Razzano both winning their respective singles and doubles titles. Pless defeated Mikhail Youzhny in the singles before teaming up with Jürgen Melzer to defeat the Czech team of Ladislav Chramosta and Michal Navrátil in the doubles. Razzano defeated Katarína Bašternáková in the singles final and teamed up Eleni Daniilidou to defeat South Africans Natalie Grandin and Nicole Rencken in straight sets. The last time a boy won both the singles and doubles title at a Grand Slam was Roger Federer at the previous year's Wimbledon, while the last girl was Cara Black at the Wimbledon the year before. Julien Jeanpierre and Mirjana Lučić were the last players to win Australian Open Junior singles and doubles titles in the same year; in 1998 and 1997 respectively.

Singles players

Men's Singles
Women's Singles

Events

Seniors

There were five competitions open to professional tennis players. The Association of Tennis Professionals and Women's Tennis Association awarded ranking points in all events apart from the mixed doubles. The singles draws were contested by one hundred and twenty eight players, while sixty four teams partook in the doubles events, and thirty two teams lined up in the mixed doubles competition.

Men's Singles

Yevgeny Kafelnikov won his first Australian Open title in a tournament filled with numerous upsets.

With World No. 1 Pete Sampras absent, along with World No. 2 and last year's finalist Marcelo Ríos, the No. 1 spot was thought to be up for grabs coming into this year's Australian Open.[3] Andre Agassi was considered the favourite, having won the 1995 Australian Open and having what was thought to be an easy path to the semifinals, Carlos Moyà being the only player considered to be a threat to him. Patrick Rafter was also considered a favourite, despite having in-form players Thomas Enqvist and Mark Philippoussis in his path. Àlex Corretja was another possibility to claim the No. 1 spot, being the World No. 3 and only a third round appearance to defend.

With Ríos' withdrawal, Àlex Corretja was the top seed at No. 2, with US Open champion Patrick Rafter, French Open champion Carlos Moyá and Andre Agassi following. Tim Henman, last year's semifinalist Karol Kučera, Greg Rusedski, Richard Krajicek and Yevgeny Kafelnikov made up the rest of the Top 10 seeds. Despite being the defending champion, Petr Korda was not seeded as he was outside the Top 17.[4]

The first round saw the first upset of the tournament,[5] with Moyá falling to World No. 37 Nicolas Kiefer in four sets. 12th seed Albert Costa, 13th seed Cédric Pioline and 16th seed Thomas Johansson also fell in the first round. Corretja, 15th seed Todd Martin and Korda all survived five set encounters. The second round saw the end of Corretja's No. 1 dreams as went down in four sets to World No. 86 Christian Ruud. Rusedski was also the victim of an upset, falling to qualifier Paul Goldstein also in four sets. The third round saw further upsets, as Rafter fell in four sets to Enqvist, Henman went down to Swiss Marc Rosset in three, and Krajicek went down to Wayne Ferreira in five. The third round also saw the end of Korda, falling to Martin in five sets; and Kafelnikov survive an encounter with 1992 and 1993 champion Jim Courier, Courier having retired in the fourth set.

The fourth round saw Martin, Kafelnikov and Kučera being the only seeds to progress to the quarterfinals. 14th seed Mark Philippoussis fell to Enqvist, and Agassi was defeated by World No. 44 Vincent Spadea in four sets. Unseeded players Tommy Haas, Nicolás Lapentti and Marc Rosset also progressed. The quarterfinals saw the end of Martin, being defeated by Kafelnikov in three sets. It also saw Haas defeating Spadea, and Enqvist continuing his good form against Rosset. The quarterfinals also witnessed the end of Kučera, being defeated in a five-set contest against Lapentti. This meant that Sampras would not be forfeiting his No. 1 ranking as previously predicted.

The semifinals saw the final seed in the draw, Kafelnikov, progressing past Haas in three sets to reach his first Grand Slam final since 1996. His opponent was Enqvist, who also passed to the final in three sets, defeating Lapentti. The final saw Enqvist win the first set, before Kafelnikov came back to take the next three. Kafelnikov's ranking rose to No. 3 following this tournament, and he became the first Russian tennis player to win the Australian Open.

Championship match result

Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov defeated Sweden Thomas Enqvist, 4–6, 6–0, 6–3, 7–6(7–1)

Women's Singles

Martina Hingis won her third Australian Open and fifth Grand Slam title.

The seeds of the 1999 Australian Open were led by the previous year's Grand Slam champions. US Open champion Lindsay Davenport was the first seed, Australian Open champion Martina Hingis came second, Wimbledon champion Jana Novotná was third and French Open champion Arantxa Sánchez Vicario was fourth. Following behind came Venus Williams, four-time Australian Open champion Monica Seles, 1995 Australian Open champion Mary Pierce, Patty Schnyder, last year's Australian Open finalist Conchita Martínez, and four-time Australian Open winner Steffi Graf. Dominique Van Roost, Anna Kournikova, Irina Spîrlea, Sandrine Testud, Natasha Zvereva and Amanda Coetzer were also seeded.

The first round of the women's singles saw every seed go through except for 13th seed Irina Spîrlea,[6] who lost to former finalist and last year's semifinalist Anke Huber, 7–5, 6–4. There was a scare, however, for 5th seed Venus Williams, who dropped the first set to World No. 82 Croatian Silvija Talaja, 3–6, and was struggling through the third; at one point being two points away from defeat. However, in the end, she managed to survive, winning, 3–6, 6–3, 9–7.[7] The second round was the setting for the first major upset of the tournament when 4th seed and two-time finalist Arantxa Sánchez Vicario fell easily to the World No. 24 Barbara Schett, 6–2, 6–2. 8th seed Patty Schnyder also fell in the second round to teenage Frenchwoman and World No. 29, Amélie Mauresmo, 6–7(1–7), 6–4, 6–3.

The third round saw 15th seed Natasha Zvereva fall to Chanda Rubin in three sets, last year's finalist and 9th seed Conchita Martínez go down in three sets to Émilie Loit in what was Loit's first Top 10 victory,[8] and another major upset when 3rd seed Jana Novotná lost to Spaniard María Sánchez Lorenzo, 6–3, 6–0. 14th seed Sandrine Testud was almost the victim of another upset, but she saved two match points against her opponent Serena Williams and defeated her, 6–2, 2–6, 9–7.[9] The third round also saw the end of home dreams, when Aussies Nicole Pratt and Jelena Dokić both fell to Amélie Mauresmo and Martina Hingis respectively. The fourth round saw an easy progression for the World No. 1 Lindsay Davenport over the last qualifier remaining, Canadian Maureen Drake. Fellow Americans Venus Williams and Monica Seles also had easy wins; as did Steffi Graf, Mary Pierce and Dominique Van Roost. Defending champion Martina Hingis lost the second set to Amanda Coetzer, but came back to easily take the third, 6–1. The final spot in the quarterfinals was decided by an all-French match between Émilie Loit and Amélie Mauresmo. Mauresmo won the first set without losing a game, and then went on to win the second set, 7–5, despite a valiant effort from Loit.

"She's here with her girlfriend. She's half a man."

Martina Hingis, referring to Amélie Mauresmo on the eve of their final.[10]

The quarterfinals saw Davenport easily defeat Williams, Hingis breeze through Pierce, and Seles coming back from 4–5 down in the first set to defeat Graf, 7–5, 6–1, which would be the last match in their rivalry which Seles won; and her only post-stabbing victory over Graf. Surprise quarterfinalist Mauresmo continued her momentum, causing another upset by defeating Van Roost in two sets. In the semifinals, Mauresmo went on to cause the biggest upset of the tournament, by defeating the World No. 1 Davenport in three sets, 4–6, 7–5, 7–5, despite Davenport leading 4–2 in the third set.[11] On the other side, Martina Hingis reached her third consecutive Australian Open final, having defeating Monica Seles, 6–2, 6–4, and restricting Seles' Open Era record for an Australian Open winning streak made by a woman to 33. In the final, Hingis defeated Mauresmo in straight sets, 6–2, 6–3. With this win, Hingis joined Margaret Court, Evonne Goolagong Cawley, Steffi Graf and Monica Seles as the only women to have won three consecutive Australian Open titles. [10]

Championship match result

Switzerland Martina Hingis defeated France Amélie Mauresmo, 6–2, 6–3

Men's Doubles

Jonas Björkman successfully defended his Australian Open doubles title.
Patrick Rafter became one of the few men to hold a singles and doubles Grand Slam title simultaneously.

Last year's double star and defending champion Jacco Eltingh retired at the end of the previous year, so his former partner Jonas Björkman teamed up with countryman Patrick Rafter as the fifth seed.

The other top seeds were "Indian Express" (Mahesh Bhupathi and Leander Paes) at No. 1, the "Woodies" (Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde) at No. 2, Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor at No. 3, and Ellis Ferreira and Rick Leach at No. 4. Former Eltingh partner Paul Haarhuis teamed up with Patrick Galbraith to make the sixth seeded team. Frenchmen Olivier Delaître and Fabrice Santoro were No. 7; and Sébastien Lareau and Alex O'Brien came at No. 8.

The first round saw half of the No. 9 to No. 16 seeds fall; and Lareau and O'Brien joining them.[12] Knowles and Nestor fell in the second round, and Delaître and Santoro went out in the third round. Apart from those casualties, however, all of the Top 8 made the quarterfinals. Also in the quarterfinals were Americans Richey Reneberg and Jonathan Stark, Gustavo Kuerten and Nicolás Lapentti; and tenth seeds Yevgeny Kafelnikov and Daniel Vacek.

Kuerten and Lapentti withdrew from the quarterfinals due to Lapentti's unexpected run to the semifinals of the singles competition. As such, Björkman and Rafter (who would've been their opponents) got an effective bye to the semifinals of the doubles. First seeds Bhupathi and Paes joined them, after triumphing over Reneberg and Stark; second seeds Woodbridge and Woodforde followed, defeating Kafelnikov and Vacek; and fourth seeds Ferreira and Leach also went through, defeating Galbraith and Haarhuis.

Bhupathi and Paes easily defeated Ferreira and Leach, 7–6(7–1), 6–3, 7–6(7–5) to end up in the final, where they were joined by Björkman and Rafter; who came back from two sets down to defeat the Woodies, 3–6, 4–6, 6–2, 6–2, 8–6. The final of the men's doubles ended up also goining to five sets after Bhupathi and Paes won a very close tiebreaker in the fourth (12–10). However, Björkman and Rafter took out the fifth set 6–4 to claim Björkman's second and Rafter's only Grand Slam doubles title.

Championship match result

Sweden Jonas Björkman / Australia Patrick Rafter defeated India Mahesh Bhupathi / India Leander Paes, 6–3, 4–6, 6–4, 6–7(10–12), 6–4

Women's Doubles

Anna Kournikova (left) and Martina Hingis (right) won their first Grand Slam as a team.

With none of the teams present having won a Grand Slam doubles title together, the competition was wide open. Lindsay Davenport and Natasha Zvereva were the first seeds, having lost in the finals of all the Grand Slams last year. Lisa Raymond and Rennae Stubbs followed them as the second seed, while last year's doubles star and defending champion Martina Hingis and her new doubles partner Anna Kournikova were the third seed. Veterans Larisa Neiland and Arantxa Sánchez Vicario teamed up to make the fourth seed, while Elena Likhovtseva and Ai Sugiyama came in at No. 5. Conchita Martínez and Patricia Tarabini; Mariaan de Swardt and Elena Tatarkova; and Irina Spîrlea and Caroline Vis were the rest of the top eight seeds. Hingis' former doubles partner and fellow defending champion Mirjana Lučić teamed up with Mary Pierce as the sixteenth seed.

The first round saw one major casualty in Martínez and Tarabini, who fell to wildcards Jelena Dokić and Åsa Carlsson.[13] The first round also saw a quick end to Lučić and Pierce, who fell in straight sets to Christina Singer and Helena Vildová. The second round saw the fall of Likhovtseva and Sugiyama, and Spîrlea and Vis. The only major casualty of the third round was de Swardt and Tatarkova.

All the top three seeds made it to the semifinals, and they were joined by the up-and-coming Williams sisters, who defeated Neiland and Sánchez Vicario en route. Davenport and Zvereva defeated the Williams sisters to reach the final, in what is their fifth consecutive Grand Slam final; and Davenport's fourth consecutive Australian Open final in doubles. They were joined by Hingis and Kournikova, in what is also Hingis' fifth consecutive Grand Slam doubles final and Kournikova's first. Hingis and Kournikova triumphed in straight sets, 7–5, 6–3, to make Hingis' fifth doubles Grand Slam win and the fifth doubles Grand Slam defeat of Davenport and Zvereva.

Championship match result

Switzerland Martina Hingis / Russia Anna Kournikova defeated United States Lindsay Davenport / Belarus Natasha Zvereva, 7–5, 6–3

Mixed Doubles

The seeds for the mixed doubles title were led by 1991 French Open finalists Caroline Vis and Paul Haarhuis. Anna Kournikova and Mark Knowles came second, while Rennae Stubbs and Jim Grabb and Mirjana Lučić and Mahesh Bhupathi followed.

In a massive surprise, all of the top three seeds fell in the first round, with No. 6 seeds Katrina Adams and Leander Paes and No. 8 seeds Lisa Raymond and Patrick Galbraith following. The second round saw no seeds progressing to the quarterfinals. Lučić and Bhupathi fell to Kimberly Po and Donald Johnson; No. 5 seeds Larisa Neiland and Rick Leach went down to Debbie Graham and Ellis Ferreira; while No. 7 seeds Elena Tatarkova and Cyril Suk were defeated by Mariaan de Swardt and David Adams.[14]

The semifinals had Manon Bollegraf and Pablo Albano, who defeated Vis and Haarhuis earlier, draw against wildcards Serena Williams and Max Mirnyi, who defeated Stubbs and Grabb. The other side had Graham and Ferreira drawn against de Swardt and Adams. Williams and Mirnyi easily defeated Bollegraf and Albano in straight sets, while de Swardt and Adams came back from a set down to defeat Graham and Ferreira. In the final, de Swardt and Adams triumphed after losing the second set to take the decider in a close tiebreak.

Championship match result

South Africa Mariaan de Swardt / South Africa David Adams defeated United States Serena Williams / Belarus Max Mirnyi, 6–4, 4–6, 7–6(7–5)

Juniors

Boys' Singles

Kristian Pless won both the singles and the doubles titles

Dane Kristian Pless headed the seeds of the Boys' Singles, with Jarkko Nieminen, Ladislav Chramosta, Éric Prodon and Jaroslav Levinský made up the rest of the Top 5.

All the seeds passed the first round without severe difficulty. The first upsets came in the second round Chramosta fell to American Levar Harper-Griffith, and fellow seeds David Martin, Mark Hilton and Alex Bogomolov, Jr. joining him.[15]

The quarterfinals consisted off Pless, 8th seed Jean-Christophe Faurel, Harper-Griffith, Francesco Aldi (who upset 7th seed Andy Roddick en route), Levinský, Prodon, Simone Amorico (who upset 6th seed Jürgen Melzer) and Mikhail Youzhny (who defeated Nieminen). Pless defeated Faurel, Aldi defeated Harper-Griffith, and Youzhny defeated Amorico all in two sets, while Levinský took three sets involving a lengthy third set to defeat Prodon, 3–6, 6–0, 9–7.

Pless only dropped two games to defeat Aldi and advance to the final. His opponent was Youzhny, who defeated Levinský, 7–6, 7–5. Pless defeated Youzhny, 6–4, 6–3, to capture the Boys' Singles title.

Championship match result

Denmark Kristian Pless defeated Russia Mikhail Youzhny, 6–4, 6–3

Girls' Singles

Virginie Razzano only dropped 25 games during the entire tournament.

The field for this year's Girls' Singles was headed by Nadia Petrova, who despite being the first seed, had to go through the qualifying. Slovenia's Tina Hergold was seeded second, and Wynne Prakusya was third, despite also having to go through qualifying. Greek Eleni Daniilidou and American Ansley Cargill made the rest of the Top 5.

The first round saw a quick end to Cargill, winning only three games against Italian qualifier Flavia Pennetta.[16] 7th seed Iveta Benešová also departed, along with 15th seed Györgyi Zsíros. Three further seeds were defeated in the second round: Czech 8th seed Dája Bedáňová, 11th seed Michelle Gerards, and 16th seed Aniela Mojzis.

Petrova, Hergold and Daniilidou all made the quarterfinals. Prakusya was upset in three sets by New Zealand's 12th seed Leanne Baker. 13th Virginie Razzano also made it the quarterfinals, as did 9th seed Katarína Bašternáková by defeating American 8th seed Laura Granville en route. Unseeded players Hannah Collin and Roberta Vinci also made a quarterfinal appearance.

Petrova and Hergold defeated Collin and Vinci to reach the semifinals in two sets. Bašternáková disposed of Baker in three to meet Hergold, while Razzano dropped the first set but won the next two to upset Daniilidou and meet Petrova. The semifinals saw Razzano stun Petrova by defeating the Russian in straight sets. Bašternáková was struggling against Hergold, but ended up winning in three sets to make a final appearance. Razzano ended up dominating Bašternáková in the final, only dropping two games to win.

Championship match result

France Virginie Razzano defeated Slovakia Katarína Bašternáková, 6–1, 6–1

Boys' Doubles

Americans Bo Hodge and David Martin were the first seeds. Czechs Ladislav Chramosta and Michal Navrátil came second, while Jürgen Melzer teamed up with the first seed in singles, Kristian Pless, as the third seeded team.

The first round saw an early exit to Hodge and Martin, falling to Canadians Philip Gubenco and Charles-Antoine Sévigny.[17] South African fifth seeds Andrew McDade and Dirk Stegmann, Norwegian fifth seeds Stian Boretti and Jørgen Vestli, and American sixth seeds Simone Amorico and Alex Bogomolov, Jr. also fell. The remaining seeds then proceeded through the quarterfinals without too much trouble.

Chramosta and Navrátil got a virtual bye through to the semifinals after their opponents, Maximilian Abel and Jaroslav Levinský, withdrew. Melzer and Pless passed easily to the semifinals, as did Italian fourth seeds Francesco Aldi and Stefano Mocci. Gubenco and Sévigny also advanced.

Melzer and Pless fought off a three-set contest from their Canadian opponents to win, 6–2, 4–6, 6–2. The other semifinal match saw Chramosta and Navrátil recover from losing the first set in a tiebreak, to win the second in another tiebreak and the third in a bagel. The first set of the final also ended up being a tiebreak, which went to the Czechs. However, Melzer and Pless came back, only dropping three games, to take the next two sets and the championships.

Championship match result

Austria Jürgen Melzer / Denmark Kristian Pless defeated Czech Republic Ladislav Chramosta / Czech Republic Michal Navrátil, 6–7, 6–3, 6–0

Girls' Doubles

Eleni Daniilidou won her first Junior Grand Slam title.

The American team of Ansley Cargill and Lindsay Dawaf led the field, with Dája Bedáňová and Aniela Mojzis following as the second seeds, and Slovakians Katarína Bašternáková and Zuzana Kučová coming in third.

The first round witnessed the defeat of the fourth seeded Czechs Dominika Luzarová and Iveta Benešová, as well as the defeat of the sixth, seventh and eighth seeds.[18] The second round saw one further upset, with Cargill and Dawaf falling to Eleni Daniilidou and Virginie Razzano. Despite winning the first set, 6–4, the Americans only won one game in the final two sets.

Bedáňová and Mojzis progressed through to the semifinals by defeating Aussies Monique Adamczak and Sarah Stone in three sets. No such success came, however, for Bašternáková and Kučová, as they fell in two sets to South African fifth seeds Natalie Grandin and Nicole Rencken. Daniilidou and Razzano also progressed, while the final spot in the semifinals was won by home hopes Melanie-Ann Clayton and Nicole Sewell.

Clayton and Sewell won the first set against Daniilidou and Razzano, but the Europeans prevailed, 3–6, 6–3, 6–4. The other semifinal match also went to three sets, but Grandin and Rencken ended up defeating Bedáňová and Mojzis, 6–4, 4–6, 6–4. The final was decisive, with Daniilidou and Razzano dominating Grandin and Rencken throughout, only dropping two games to win, 6–1, 6–1.

Championship match result

Greece Eleni Daniilidou / France Virginie Razzano defeated South Africa Natalie Grandin / South Africa Nicole Rencken, 6–1, 6–1

Singles seeds

Men's Singles

Sd Rk[3] Player Points
Points
defending
Points won[19] New points Status
2 3 Spain Àlex Corretja 3550 3530 Second round lost to Norway Christian Ruud
3 4 Australia Patrick Rafter 3269 3264 Third round lost to Sweden Thomas Enqvist
4 5 Spain Carlos Moyà 3178 3178 First round lost to Germany Nicolas Kiefer
5 6 United States Andre Agassi 2879 2845 Fourth round lost to United States Vincent Spadea
6 7 United Kingdom Tim Henman 2608 2608 Third round lost to Switzerland Marc Rosset
7 11 Slovakia Karol Kučera 2498 2261 Quarterfinals lost to Ecuador Nicolás Lapentti
8 8 United Kingdom Greg Rusedski 2568 2568 Second round lost to United States Paul Goldstein (Q)
9 9 Netherlands Richard Krajicek 2548 2575 Third round lost to South Africa Wayne Ferreira
10 10 Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov 2515 3419 Champion, won in the final against Sweden Thomas Enqvist
12 14 Spain Albert Costa 1817 1817 First round lost to Czech Republic Martin Damm
13 15 France Cédric Pioline 1800 1678 First round lost to Australia Lleyton Hewitt (WC)
14 16 Australia Mark Philippoussis 1762 1898 Fourth round lost to Sweden Thomas Enqvist
15 13 United States Todd Martin 1944 2152 Quarterfinals lost to Russia Yevgeny Kafelnikov [10]
16 17 Sweden Thomas Johansson 1761 1761 First round lost to Ecuador Nicolás Lapentti

Withdrawn players

Rank Player Points Points defending Points won New points Withdrew due to
1 United States Pete Sampras
3915
171
0
3744
back injury
2 Chile Marcelo Ríos
3564
595
0
2969
hamstring injury
12 Croatia Goran Ivanišević
2082
0
0
2082
shoulder injury

Women's Singles

Sd Rk Player Points
Points
defending
Points won[20] New points Status
1 1 United States Lindsay Davenport 5,951 396 380 5,935 Semifinals lost to France Amélie Mauresmo
2 2 Switzerland Martina Hingis 5,565 846 828 5,547 Champion, won in the final against France Amélie Mauresmo
3 3 Czech Republic Jana Novotná 3,734 0 90 3,823 Third round lost to Spain María Sánchez Lorenzo
4 5 Spain Arantxa Sánchez Vicario 3,221 200 46 3,067 Second round lost to Austria Barbara Schett
5 6 United States Venus Williams 3,034 216 196 3,014 Quarterfinals lost to United States Lindsay Davenport [1]
6 4 United States Monica Seles 3,226 0 430 3,656 Semifinals lost to Switzerland Martina Hingis [2]
7 7 France Mary Pierce 2,558 208 232 2,582 Quarterfinals lost to Switzerland Martina Hingis [2]
8 9 Switzerland Patty Schnyder 2,369 142 30 2,257 Second round lost to France Amélie Mauresmo
9 10 Spain Conchita Martínez 2,325 644 68 1,749 Third round lost to France Émilie Loit
10 8 Germany Steffi Graf 2,447 0 204 2,651 Quarterfinals lost to United States Monica Seles [6]
11 12 Belgium Dominique Van Roost 2,086 56 166 2,196 Quarterfinals lost to France Amélie Mauresmo
12 13 Russia Anna Kournikova 1,971 76 100 1,995 Fourth round lost to France Mary Pierce [7]
13 14 Romania Irina Spîrlea 1,926 2 2 1,926 First round lost to Germany Anke Huber
14 15 France Sandrine Testud 1,885 190 140 1,835 Fourth round lost to United States Monica Seles [6]
15 17 Belarus Natasha Zvereva 1,658 110 56 1,604 Third round lost to United States Chanda Rubin
16 16 South Africa Amanda Coetzer 1,786 134 126 1,778 Fourth round lost to Switzerland Martina Hingis [2]

Withdrawn players

Rank Player Points Points defending Points won New points Withdrew due to
11 France Nathalie Tauziat[21]
2,195
0
0
2,195

Wildcard entries

Men's Singles Wildcard entries

  1. Australia Wayne Arthurs
  2. Australia Mark Draper
  3. Australia Lleyton Hewitt
  4. Australia Toby Mitchell
  5. Australia Joseph Sirianni
  6. Australia Sandon Stolle
  7. Japan Takao Suzuki
  8. Australia Michael Tebbutt

Women's Singles Wildcard entries

  1. Australia Catherine Barclay
  2. Australia Jelena Dokić
  3. Australia Evie Dominikovic
  4. Australia Annabel Ellwood
  5. Australia Rachel McQuillan
  6. Australia Alicia Molik
  7. South Korea Park Sung-hee
  8. Australia Cindy Watson

Men's Doubles Wildcard entries

  1. Australia Grant Doyle / Australia Ben Ellwood
  2. Australia Scott Draper / Australia Lleyton Hewitt
  3. Australia Paul Hanley / Australia Nathan Healey
  4. Australia Toby Mitchell / Australia Andrew Painter
  5. Australia Dejan Petrovic / Australia Grant Silcock

Women's Doubles Wildcard entries

  1. Sweden Åsa Carlsson / Australia Jelena Dokić
  2. Australia Evie Dominikovic / Australia Cindy Watson
  3. Australia Amanda Grahame / Australia Bryanne Stewart
  4. United States Meilen Tu / Germany Marlene Weingärtner

Mixed Doubles Wildcard entries

  1. Australia Jelena Dokić / Australia Michael Tebbutt
  2. Australia Lisa McShea / Australia Todd Woodbridge
  3. United States Serena Williams / Belarus Max Mirnyi

Qualifiers entries

Men's Singles Qualifiers entries

  1. Germany Rainer Schüttler
  2. Belarus Vladimir Voltchkov
  3. United States Paul Goldstein
  4. South Africa Justin Bower
  5. Germany Edwin Kempes
  6. Spain Javier Sánchez
  7. Germany Lars Burgsmüller
  8. France Stéphane Huet
  9. United States Cecil Mamiit
  10. Sweden Fredrik Jonsson
  11. Brazil Márcio Carlsson
  12. Russia Andrei Cherkasov
  13. South Africa Marcos Ondruska
  14. Austria Markus Hipfl
  15. United States David Caldwell
  16. Czech Republic Petr Luxa

Men's Lucky Losers entries

  1. Germany Bernd Karbacher
  2. Spain Óscar Serrano

Women's Singles Qualifiers entries

  1. Russia Nadia Petrova
  2. United States Jill Craybas
  3. Canada Maureen Drake
  4. Czech Republic Lenka Němečková
  5. United States Erika de Lone
  6. Slovenia Tina Križan
  7. Czech Republic Sandra Kleinová
  8. Russia Elena Dementieva

Prize money

Event W F SF QF 4R 3R 2R 1R
Singles [22] Men A$722,000 A$361,000 A$180,000 A$92,500 A$49,500 A$28,250 A$17,250 A$11,125
Women A$679,000 A$339,500 A$169,000 A$87,000 A$46,500 A$26,750 A$16,250 A$10,400

Total prize money for the event was A$11,008,700.

References

External links


Preceded by
1998 US Open
Grand Slams Succeeded by
1999 French Open
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