Kim Clijsters defeated Caroline Wozniacki in the final, 7–5, 6–3 to win the women's singles tennis title at the 2009 US Open. It was her second US Open title and second major singles title overall. Clijsters was the first unseeded player and wild card to win the title, and the first mother to win a major since Evonne Goolagong in 1980. Following her win, she appeared at world No. 19 in the rankings. It was only Clijsters' third tournament since giving birth and coming out of retirement, and has been described as one of the most stunning championship runs in tennis history.[1]
Serena Williams was the defending champion, but was defeated in the semifinals by Clijsters. A foot fault was called for Williams at the end of the second set, producing two match points for Clijsters. Williams argued the call and was given a point penalty for intimidating a line judge, ending the match (having already had a warning for racquet abuse earlier in the match).[2]
Svetlana Kuznetsova's loss in the fourth round guaranteed a first time major finalist from the top half of the draw. Wozniacki was the first Danish woman to reach a major final, and the first Scandinavian woman to reach the final since Molla Bjurstedt Mallory in 1918.[3]
This marked the final major appearance of two-time major champion Amélie Mauresmo, who lost to Aleksandra Wozniak in the second round. This was also the final major singles appearance of Ai Sugiyama, who made a record 62nd consecutive major singles appearance, losing in the first round to Samantha Stosur.
Seeds
Click on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.
Qualifying
Draw
Key
Finals
Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4
Bottom half
Section 5
Section 6
Section 7
Section 8
Championship match statistics
Category |
Clijsters |
Wozniacki
|
1st serve % |
53/85 (62%) |
43/63 (68%)
|
1st serve points won |
33 of 53 = 62% |
23 of 43 = 53%
|
2nd serve points won |
15 of 32 = 47% |
6 of 20 = 30%
|
Total service points won |
48 of 85 = 56.47% |
29 of 63 = 46.03%
|
Aces |
3 |
0
|
Double faults |
2 |
3
|
Winners |
36 |
10
|
Unforced errors |
34 |
21
|
Net points won |
11 of 15 = 73% |
9 of 15 = 60%
|
Break points converted |
5 of 8 = 63% |
3 of 12 = 25%
|
Return points won |
34 of 63 = 54% |
37 of 85 = 44%
|
Total points won |
82 |
66
|
Source
|
References
External links
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Grand Slam events | |
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WTA Premier tournaments |
- Sydney (S, D)
- Paris (S, D)
- Dubai (S, D)
- Indian Wells (S, D)
- Miami (S, D)
- Charleston (S, D)
- Stuttgart (S, D)
- Rome (S, D)
- Madrid (S, D)
- Warsaw (S, D)
- Eastbourne (S, D)
- Stanford (S, D)
- Los Angeles (S, D)
- Cincinnati (S, D)
- Toronto (S, D)
- New Haven (S, D)
- Tokyo (S, D)
- Beijing (S, D)
- Moscow (S, D)
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WTA International tournaments |
- Brisbane (S, D)
- Auckland (S, D)
- Hobart (S, D)
- Pattaya City (S, D)
- Memphis (S, D)
- Bogotá (S, D)
- Acapulco (S, D)
- Monterrey (S, D)
- Marbella (S, D)
- Ponte Vedra Beach (S, D)
- Barcelona (S, D)
- Fes (S, D)
- Estoril (S, D)
- Strasbourg (S, D)
- Birmingham (S, D)
- 's-Hertogenbosch (S, D)
- Budapest (S, D)
- Båstad (S, D)
- Palermo (S, D)
- Prague (S, D)
- Portorož (S, D)
- Bad Gastein (S, D)
- İstanbul (S, D)
- Guangzhou (S, D)
- Quebec City (S, D)
- Seoul (S, D)
- Tashkent (S, D)
- Linz (S, D)
- Osaka (S, D)
- Luxembourg City (S, D)
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Team events | |
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- Bold denotes the mandatory events, and the year-end championships
- S = Singles draw, D = Doubles draw, X = Mixed Doubles draw
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