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NYTimes
New York Times
22 Aug 2024
David Waldstein


NextImg:The U.S. Open Is Free This Week. Yes, Really.

Long lines of limousines stretching out at the V.I.P. entrance. A-list celebrities in luxury boxes flashing on the giant video screens to fans who pay $4,000 for a fifth-row seat and sip $23 Honey Deuce cocktails. It’s the United States Open, one of the glitziest, most expensive and most popular sporting events on the calendar, and it begins on Monday.

For many people the cost is prohibitive.

But there is a way to see great, professional tennis up close for free at the U.S. Open, and it has already begun. In the week before the main draw, several days of high-level, competitive professional tennis are on display on the grounds of the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing, Queens, all for free. Anyone can walk in without a ticket.

ImageA group of smiling people wearing baseball caps smile for a photo in front of a tablet device with rows of fans in the background.
Taking a selfie at a photo booth during “Fan Week.”Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
Image
The qualifying matches are not held in the big stadiums in the complex, and spectators sometimes can get within a few feet of high-pressure, elite tennis.Credit...Jeenah Moon for The New York Times

This pre-tournament tournament, where players battle to qualify for the last 16 spots in the Open, has been free to spectators at least since the tournament moved to Flushing Meadows in 1978. But the event has grown steadily since 2017, when “Fan Week” was officially introduced, with music, children’s events and clinics, and all the food concessions were opened for the first time during qualification rounds.

“I’ve been coming for 15 years and it’s bigger than ever,” said Lissette Molina-Gurevich, an architect from Maspeth, Queens. “I think it’s actually worth paying for, but don’t tell anyone I said that.”


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