• Get the EA Sports PGA 14 Package
    Get the EA Sports PGA 14 Package
  • Give the Gift of SI
    Give the Gift of SI
Posted: Friday August 26, 2011 2:17PM ; Updated: Friday August 26, 2011 6:02PM

U.S. Open Roundtable: Picks, predictions and wild happenings

Story Highlights

If she can beat Victoria Azarenka, Serena Williams is the women's favorite

Robin Soderling's nagging wrist injury will be the No. 6 seed's downfall

The men's side is up for the taking as top seeds battle injuries and age

By SI.com Staff

Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
With strong play in the summer swing and a favorable draw, Serena Williams is a U.S. Open favorite.
With strong play in the summer swing and a favorable draw, Serena Williams is a U.S. Open favorite.
Matt Cohen/ZUMAPRESS
2011 U.S. Open
Day 15
Day 14
Day 13
Day 12
SI Photos
Previous Coverage

SI.com's tennis experts take a look into the crystal ball ahead of the 2011 U.S. Open, bringing you picks and predictions for what to expect in Flushing.

Dark horse to watch

Bruce Jenkins: Gael Monfils, on the assumption that everyone's a dark horse beyond the top four. He's got a pretty clear path to the quarterfinals if he can get past Tomas Berdych (and he will), and that would set up a potential quarterfinal against Novak Djokovic. If Djokovic's shoulder problems are significant, Monfils could use his astounding all-court movement to win that one.

Venus Williams has one big problem, very early: Sabine Lisicki in the second round. If she gets through that, I see the unseeded Venus beating Vera Zvonareva in the fourth round and getting to the quarters.

Jon Wertheim: Alex Bogomolov was a teaching pro two years ago, but the 28-year-old American is quietly on to the fringes of the top 40, beating Andy Murray and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga along the way.

Shuai Peng. The Chinese veteran has found her game again, and sits in a favorable spot in the draw to make a deep run.

Courtney Nguyen: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. If you beat Roger Federer in a five-set match, beat him again a month-and-a-half later, and then find yourself in Fed's quarter at the U.S. Open, I'm going to tag you as my dark horse. Tsonga loves the quick hard courts and the New York crowd's energy (give him night sessions please!) will certainly inspire him. An ailing arm forced him to retire to Novak Djokovic in the Montreal final and he took a straight set loss to Alex Bogomolov Jr. last week in Cincy. Should his body hold up, the Frenchman has the firepower to get it done.

Jelena Jankovic. No one seems to love the stage as much as Serena Williams. No one that is, except for Jelena Jankovic. The former world No. 1 has been teetering on the cusp of irrelevance for much of the last year, watching her ranking slip as low as 16. But in her run to the Cincinnati final, where she outplayed Maria Sharapova for most of the match, Jankovic seems to have rediscovered her game and her confidence. The Smiling Serb has been to the finals here before, and she's one of the few players who raises her game against Serena. She'll need to, as they are in the same quarter, but if she serves well and remembers that she has one of the most effective backhand-down-the-lines in the game, don't count her out.

Richard Deitsch: Juan Martin del Potro. Gilles Simon doesn't scare anyone, and a not-in-form Robin Soderling is ripe for the taking, so the draw sets up nicely for Del Potro, the 2009 champion. Plus, a Delpo-Murray clash in the quarters sounds delicious, no?

I'm all-in on the Agnieszka Radwanska bandwagon, a gritty, scramble-for-every-point Murray clone. The plucky Pole has become a tough out, including a semis appearance in Toronto in which she took out Vera Zvonareva and Andrea Petkovic.

Bryan Armen Graham: Andy Roddick turns 29 on Sunday. He's barely over .500 this season. His body and game are betraying him. An unbecoming implosion earlier this month in Cincy left him out of the top 20. But he's a fan favorite in New York and managed to avoid Djokovic and Federer in the draw. Look for him to invoke the spirit of 2003 and give Nadal a stiff challenge in the quarters.

Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova has charted steady progress since winning the U.S. Open girls' title five years ago. Count on the 20-year-old Russian to improve on last year's run to the fourth round -- and maybe even crash the semis.

C.W. Sesno: Fernando Verdasco's game suits up well to the hardcourts, and he's made runs to at least the quarters in Flushing the past two years. In Cincinnati, Rafael Nadal needed three tiebreakers and more than three-and-a-half hours to survive his compatriot, so the fight is still there. Unfortunately, the hard-hitting baseliner faces a tough draw with potential third- and fourth-round matchups against Tsonga and Mardy Fish, respectively.

At the French Open, Sabine Lisicki blew a match point in the second set and fell in a heartbreaker to Vera Zvonareva. Since then, she's won Birmingham and made deep runs in Wimbledon (losing in the semis to Maria Sharapova) and Stanford, where she was rolled by eventual champion Serena Williams. If the 21-year-old can pick up her first career win against potential fourth-round foe Zvonareva, she should make the semis where Sharapova likely awaits.

Crashing early

Jenkins: Robin Soderling. Alex Bogomolov, the late blooming Russian-turned-American, is playing well enough to win this second-rounder.

Victoria Azarenka. The dubious seeding system creates a major casualty, much too early, as Azarenka loses to Serena in the third round.

Wertheim: Robin Soderling: The Swede is suffering from a wrist injury that will bother him. If this weren't a Slam, it's unlikely he'd be playing.

Caroline Wozniacki: Pick your reason -- tension with dad, the excitement of a new romance, insecurity with her game, lack of full comfort with her new racket -- the elusive first major feels a long way off right now.

Nguyen: Robin Soderling. I had to do a double-take when I saw him seeded sixth. He spent two years striking fear into the heart of Federer and Nadal fans and started the season on fire, only to be hobbled by injury since the spring. He did not play any lead-up tournaments to the Open, so without any proof of his match-fitness, General Sod may find himself sputtering to grind out best of five matches.

Petra Kvitova. The young Czech has obviously had a phenomenal year, winning titles on all four surfaces (yes, indoor counts as a "surface") and of course, her crowning glory at Wimbledon in July. But the charmingly shy 20-year-old has won only one match since, and has admitted she suffers from asthma in the heat and humidity. With little match play before the Open, I just don't see her getting out of a quarter that includes Maria Sharapova, Peng Shuai, Agnieszka Radwanska, and Lucie Safarova.

Deitsch: Robin Soderling last played on a hard court in February and the Open will be his first tournament in six weeks because of a wrist injury. He's the sixth seed, but a very shaky one.

Everyone loves the flamboyant Francesca Schiavone, but her summer (losses to Lucie Safarova and Jelena Jankovic) portend an early arrivederci.

Graham: Sixth-seeded Robin Soderling is fearless with a weapons-grade forehand, but he's been dogged by a wrist injury and won't make it past the first weekend.

Caroline Wozniacki may be the least-fancied top seed since, er, Dinara Safina. Not even home-court advantage will help the 21-year-old Dane salvage a bumpy summer that's seen her muddied coaching situation take the forefront.

Sesno: Since March, Andy Roddick has been terrible. He's lost in his first match in four of five Masters 1000 events (Miami, Madrid, Rome, Cincinnati), missed the French and crashed out early in Wimbledon. To say Roddick has struggled on the big stage is an understatement, and the only reason for second-guessing putting his inevitable flameout here is whether we can even consider Roddick a top player.

With an over-packed schedule and poor play in the hard-court swing, Caroline Wozniacki isn't ready to capture her first Slam. Don't be shocked if she falls to Daniela Hantuchova or Svetlana Kuznetsova in the fourth round.

 
SI.com
Hot Topics: Brian Urlacher NBA Draft 2013 Spurs Mike Trout Sergio Garcia Charles Woodson NHL Playoffs
TM & © 2013 Time Inc. A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines, your California privacy rights, and ad choices.
SI CoverRead All ArticlesBuy Cover Reprint