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USTA defends roofless courts
THE US Tennis Association defended its decision to carry on staging the US Open without the benefit of a covered court even as rain on Sunday postponed the men's final for the third year in a row.
The rain forced world No. 1 Rafael Nadal, seeking to become the seventh man to complete a career grand slam, and Serbian third seed Novak Djokovic to wait until on Monday to contest the last grand slam final of the year.
Both the Australian Open and Wimbledon championships have retractable roofs to deal with dodgy weather and French Open officials have discussed the possibility. "It's technically complex and financially challenging," USTA spokesman Chris Widmaier said. "At a cost of more than US$150 million, do you spend that on a roof or continue to fund grassroots tennis programs in this country?"
Widmaier said US$100 million had been spent on improvements at the Flushing Meadows complex in the last five years, with the biggest expense being a new indoor training center.
He also said money from the US Open was funneled into player development, grants and scholarships and to improving tennis facilities around the country.
Widmaier said USTA president Lucy Garvin is heading a committee that will be make recommendations to the tennis association on future improvements to the National Tennis Center complex and some options being looked at included covering smaller courts at less expense.
The tournament's second court, Louis Armstrong Stadium, seats 10,500 compared to 23,771 at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Four-time US Open winner John McEnroe said last year he had lobbied USTA officials from the start to put a roof over Arthur Ashe Stadium. "It seemed like a no-brainer but people at the USTA decided they wanted to build the biggest (stadium)," McEnroe said about the Ashe center court. "But at the same price they could've had a slightly smaller stadium and had a roof."
The rain forced world No. 1 Rafael Nadal, seeking to become the seventh man to complete a career grand slam, and Serbian third seed Novak Djokovic to wait until on Monday to contest the last grand slam final of the year.
Both the Australian Open and Wimbledon championships have retractable roofs to deal with dodgy weather and French Open officials have discussed the possibility. "It's technically complex and financially challenging," USTA spokesman Chris Widmaier said. "At a cost of more than US$150 million, do you spend that on a roof or continue to fund grassroots tennis programs in this country?"
Widmaier said US$100 million had been spent on improvements at the Flushing Meadows complex in the last five years, with the biggest expense being a new indoor training center.
He also said money from the US Open was funneled into player development, grants and scholarships and to improving tennis facilities around the country.
Widmaier said USTA president Lucy Garvin is heading a committee that will be make recommendations to the tennis association on future improvements to the National Tennis Center complex and some options being looked at included covering smaller courts at less expense.
The tournament's second court, Louis Armstrong Stadium, seats 10,500 compared to 23,771 at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Four-time US Open winner John McEnroe said last year he had lobbied USTA officials from the start to put a roof over Arthur Ashe Stadium. "It seemed like a no-brainer but people at the USTA decided they wanted to build the biggest (stadium)," McEnroe said about the Ashe center court. "But at the same price they could've had a slightly smaller stadium and had a roof."
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