Venus Williams vs Bethanie Mattek-Sands live streaming tv US Open Grand Slams live on your pc

US OPEN Grand Slams






Tennis; the 4 Grand Slams: Australian Open / Roland Garros / Wimbledon / US Open
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US Open
Women's Singles - 2nd Round
Bethanie Mattek-Sands(USA) vs Venus Williams(USA)
Stadium:Arthur Ashe

Match scheduled:
02-09-2009 from 23:00 until 04:00
Day 3 - Second Round :: Grand Slam US Open 2009 - Flushing Meadows :: New York, USA






Complete Schedule of Play: The Schedule. Most channels showing the Centre Court or Court 1. We will try to keep the US Open channels as up to date as possible, as those show the most various coverage | Also be aware not all channels are showing tennis non stop. Some channels might have interruptions!












Venus Ebony Starr Williams (born June 17, 1980) is an American professional tennis player. She has been ranked World No. 1 by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) on three separate occasions; as of August 24, she is ranked World No.3. She is the reigning Australian Open and Wimbledon doubles champion and has won 18 Grand Slam titles: seven in women's singles, nine in women's doubles and two in mixed doubles. In addition, she has won three Olympic gold medals, one in women's singles and two in women's doubles.In 2005 Tennis Magazine ranked her as the 25th-best player in 40 years








Williams reached US Open finals at the age of 17, becoming the first woman since 1978 to reach US Open final on debut and was first unseeded female US Open finalist since 1958. After her breakthrough, Williams breached the top ten on the WTA world rankings for the first time in 1998 when she won Lipton Championships in Miami. Between 2002 and 2001, Williams won four of six Grand Slam she entered. Her 35-match winning streak remains longest of the millennium. She became the World No. 1 for the first time in February 2002.







Williams suffered an abdominal injury in mid-2003 which prevented her from playing. Upon her return in 2004, she experienced inconsistent results. In 2005, she won her first Grand Slam title in four years at Wimbledon, but since then she suffered from wrist injury and only played six events in 2006. Her world rankings suffered as a result, the nadir being World No. 54 in February 2006. However, Williams eventually won another Grand Slam title at the Wimbledon in 2007, becoming the lowest-seeded and lowest-ranked Wimbledon champion in history. Williams returned to the top ten later that year and has since competed in every Grand Slam event. She returned to the top three for the first time in six years in May 2009.