Arthur Ashe Stadium
5pm BST start (12pm ET)
Not before 12am BST (7pm ET)
Louis Armstrong Stadium
4pm BST start (11am ET)
T. Machac vs S. Korda [16]
K. Pliskova vs J. Paolini [5]
S. Kenin vs J. Pegula [6]
Not before 12am BST (7pm ET)
Grandstand
4pm BST start (11am ET)
Y. Putintseva [30] vs X. Wang
M. Andreeva [21] vs A. Krueger
A. de Minaur [10] vs O. Virtanen
Not before 10pm BST (5pm ET)
Stadium 17
4pm BST start (11am ET)
J. Thompson vs H. Hurkacz [7]
B. Haddad Maia [22] vs S. Sorribes Tormo
A. Fils [24] vs G. Diallo
E. Rybakina [4] vs J. Ponchet
Court 5
4pm BST start (11am ET)
A. Bondar vs A. Kalinskaya [15]
K. Boulter [31] vs J. Bouzas Maneiro
F. Diaz Acosta vs J. Draper
M. Navone vs D. Evans
Court 10
4pm BST start (11am ET)
Court 11
4pm BST start (11am ET)
M. Arnaldi [30] vs R. Safiullin
T. Kokkinakis vs N. Borges
E. Cocciaretto vs A. Pavlyuchenkova [25]
Court 12
4pm BST start (11am ET)
M. Bellucci vs C. O’Connell
V. Lepchenko vs A. Potapova
T. Schoolkate vs J. Mensik
Court 13
4pm BST start (11am ET)
Court 7
4pm BST start (11am ET)
Sky Sports has the broadcasting rights to show the US Open live from Flushing Meadows.
Gigi Salmon is presenting the coverage alongside the likes of Tim Henman, Laura Robson, Karthi Gnanasegaram and Jonathan Overend.
ESPN have the broadcasting rights to show the tournament.
The US Open started on Monday, August 26, and finishes on Sunday, September 8.
The women’s final takes place on September 7 at 9pm. The men’s final is the following day, at 7pm.
The home of the US Open is the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York.
The US Open total prize pool is $75 million (£58.3m), up 15 per cent on 2023.
The men’s and women’s singles champions will each take home £2.8m and the runners-up will earn £1.4m.
Prize money for progression through the earlier rounds is as follows: first round (£77,813); second round (£108,937); third round (£167,296); round of 16 (£252,890); quarter-finals (£412,405); semi-finals (£778,123).
Emma Raducanu was knocked out by Sofia Kenin in a 6-1, 3-6, 6-4 defeat on the Grandstand court.
It looked like it could be a short outing as Kenin rattled through the first set, but Raducanu made a match of it by sending it to three sets.
A costly service game midway through the decider proved costly as the former champion headed home.
Having played just one tournament since Wimbledon and skipping the Olympics to focus on her preparation for the US Open, she will be desperately disappointed to fall at the first hurdle and questions remain over the direction of her career.
British number one Jack Draper put his recent controversy behind him by strutting into the second round of the US Open in style.
Draper came into the tournament under a black cloud after events in Cincinnati, where he was accused of cheating and lying during a controversial match point against Felix Auger-Aliassime.
The 22-year-old, who was attacked on social media by players past and present, admitted he thought about it “non-stop” coming into Flushing Meadows but showed a clear mind as he dismantled an injured Zhizhen Zhang in the first round.
He was winning 6-3, 6-0, 4-0 when the Chinese, who fell over and hurt his left knee in practice, retired after suffering in the sweltering heat.
Jan Choinski lost to Roberto Carbelles Baena on Monday
Harriet Dart won her first-round match on Monday
Daniel Evans beat Karen Khachanov on Tuesday
Katie Boulter beat Aliaksandra Sasnovich in three sets on Tuesday
Jack Draper beat Zhang Zhizhen on Tuesday
Emma Raducanu lost to Sofia Kenin on Tuesday
Last year, Novak Djokovic equalled Margaret Court’s record of 24 major titles with a brilliant performance over Daniil Medvedev.
In the women’s final, Coco Gauff stormed back from a set down to beat Aryna Sabalenka and claim her first grand slam title.
Men’s winner
Carlos Alcaraz 2/1
Jannik Sinner 7/2
Novak Djokovic 9/4
Alexander Zverev 8/1
Women’s winner
Iga Swiatek 4/1
Aryna Sabalenka 21/10
Elena Rybakina 11/1
Coco Gauff 10/1
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