2003 Australian Open

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2003 Australian Open
Date 13 January – 26 January
Edition 91st
Category Grand Slam (ITF)
Surface Hardcourt (Rebound Ace)
Location Melbourne, Australia
Venue Melbourne Park
Champions
Men's Singles
United States Andre Agassi
Women's Singles
United States Serena Williams
Men's Doubles
France Michaël Llodra / France Fabrice Santoro
Women's Doubles
United States Serena Williams / United States Venus Williams
Mixed Doubles
United States Martina Navratilova / India Leander Paes
Boys' Singles
Cyprus Marcos Baghdatis
Girls' Singles
Czech Republic Barbora Strýcová
Boys' Doubles
United States Scott Oudsema / United States Phillip Simmonds
Girls' Doubles
Australia Casey Dellacqua / Australia Adriana Szili

The 2003 Australian Open was a tennis tournament held in 2003. It was the first Grand Slam event of the 2003 ATP Tour and the 2003 WTA Tour. It was the 91st edition of the event.

Thomas Johansson could not defend his 2002 title due to an injury which would rule him out for all of 2003. Jennifer Capriati was unsuccessful in her title defence, being defeated in the first round by German Marlene Weingärtner. Andre Agassi won his fourth Australian Open and final Grand Slam title, defeating Rainer Schüttler in a lopsided final. Serena Williams defeated her sister Venus in the final in three sets, to win her fourth consecutive Grand Slam title to hold all four Grand Slam titles at once.

Seniors

Men's Singles

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United States Andre Agassi defeated Germany Rainer Schüttler, 6–2, 6–2, 6–1

  • It was Agassi's 8th (and last) career Grand Slam title, and his 4th Australian Open title (an Open Era record until it was broken by Novak Djokovic in 2015).

Women's Singles

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United States Serena Williams[1] defeated United States Venus Williams, 7–6(7–4), 3–6, 6–4

  • It was Serena's 5th career Grand Slam title, her 4th in a row, and her 1st Australian Open title. this also marks Serena claiming a Career Grand Slam and the Serena Slam

Men's Doubles

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France Michaël Llodra / France Fabrice Santoro defeated The Bahamas Mark Knowles / Canada Daniel Nestor, 6–4, 3–6, 6–3

Women's Doubles

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United States Serena Williams / United States Venus Williams defeated Spain Virginia Ruano Pascual / Argentina Paola Suárez, 4–6, 6–4, 6–3

Mixed Doubles

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United States Martina Navratilova / India Leander Paes defeated Greece Eleni Daniilidou / Australia Todd Woodbridge, 6–4, 7–5

Juniors

Boys' Singles

Cyprus Marcos Baghdatis[2] def. Romania Florin Mergea, 6–4, 6–4

Girls' Singles

Czech Republic Barbora Strýcová defeated Ukraine Viktoriya Kutuzova, 0–6, 6–2, 6–2

Boys' Doubles

United States Scott Oudsema / United States Phillip Simmonds defeated Romania Florin Mergea / Romania Horia Tecău, 6–4, 6–4

Girls' Doubles

Australia Casey Dellacqua / Australia Adriana Szili defeated Czech Republic Petra Cetkovská / Czech Republic Barbora Strýcová, 6–3, 4–4, ret.

Seeds

References

  1. Serena completed the "Serena Slam", winning all four Grand Slam tournaments in a row.
  2. Baghdatis reached the 2006 men's singles final, but lost to Roger Federer.

External links


Preceded by Grand Slams Succeeded by
2003 French Open