US Open 2019: Live Updates After Friday Matches



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How to watch: ESPN; streaming on ESPN + and ESPN3.

How to go there: Take Metro Line 7 or Long Island Rail Road towards Mets-Willets Point.

Friday's scores: Men | Women

Serena Williams was disappointed with her performance in her three-set win over Caty McNally, 17, in the second round. She seems to take her disappointment on Karolina Muchova.

Muchova, 23, ranked 44th, stayed close to the first six games. But while she was serving 3-3, Muchova was struggling to get her first serve and Williams took the opportunity to claim the break. She struggled against a break point in the next game to take a 5-3 lead, then broke Muchova out of love to take the set, 6-3.

Alex de Minaur of Australia won the biggest victory of his career by beating No. 7 Kei Nishikori 6-2, 6-4, 2-6, 6-3 in the podium.

De Minaur, aged 20, passes for the first time in the fourth round of a major and will face the winner of the match of the third round between the Bulgarians Grigor Dimitrov. Kamil Majchrzak from Poland.

De Minaur won his first ATP Tour tournament earlier this year in Sydney, Australia, his hometown, when he was still 19 years old. He then won the Atlanta tournament in July, but has won 2 to 3 games since, before reaching the American Open.

He beat Pierre-Hugues Herbert in the first round and Cristian Garin in the second. Ranked # 38 in the world, de Minaur was 0-11 against top-ranked opponents before beating Nishikori, who had reached the fourth round in his previous six Grand Slam tournaments. But Nishikori made 60 non-forced mistakes and won only 53 of the 121 points of the baseline.

De Minaur was born in Australia to Uruguayan and Spanish parents and lived there five years before the family moved to Spain. He returned to Australia as a teenager and represents Australia in the international game.

Roger Federer only needed 80 minutes on Friday to change the story of his troubles early in the game. He had played poorly in the first few games of his first two games and did not seem to have an answer to the question of why he had trouble with qualified Sumit Nagal and Damir Dzumhur.

The answer he gave Friday in court was more decisive. Federer crushed Dan Evans, 6-2, 6-2, 6-1, in 1 hour and 20 minutes of almost flawless tennis. He won 80% points in his first serve, committed a double fault and scored 48 winners, 87 points earned.

Evans played the following days and that may have played a role in the imbalance of the match. His second-round match against Lucas Pouille was postponed Wednesday due to the rain and it took him 3 hours 10 minutes to beat Pouille on Thursday. (Federer played under the roof on Wednesday afternoon.)

Evans said that he was tired and stiff since the day before and that he understood the challenge of planning, but complained of being asked to play the first game the next day.

"I thought it was pretty hard to be the first to play yesterday and be brutally honest," he said. "So it was a little disappointing."

Evans, ranked No. 58, is one of 22 singles players who had to play two consecutive days. He was asked if he had asked the tournament officials to play at least later on Friday.

"Do you think that a guy who has my rankings has a say?" He replied.

Federer's opponent in the fourth round will be the winner of the third round match between Belgium's David Goffin n ° 15 and Spain's Pablo Carreño Busta.

The two women enter this match with great confidence, an important factor to enter a night game at Arthur Ashe Stadium (19h, ESPN2).

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