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The rules

The last 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals will be best of three sets, but first to four games not six. If a game goes to deuce, the winners of the next point take it – there’s no advantage. If a match is level at a set apiece, a 10-point match tiebreak will settle it.

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Breaking: Danielle Collins and Christian Harris replace Sinner/Siniakova.

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On which point, the reason for the TBD below is that Jannik Sinner, who retired ill when 5-0 down to Carlos Alcaraz in the Cincinnati final, has pulled out.

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I can’t lie, I’m buzzing that we’ve got two extra days of banging tennis. This competition should just feature the best mixed doubles pairings, not the best singles players who can be arsed.

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Email! “I agree, its money-fuelled tokenism and could cause the end of doubles as we know it at the major tournaments, says Andrew Benton. “Or, it might be the start of a doubles revival, from which the specialists will benefit particularly – at least people will be watching these matches as they feature the rich and famous, and who knows where that extra interest and investment could lead. Well, probably nowhere. But it’s a bit like the Hundred.”

I disagree it’s like the Hundred as that isn’t taking a major tournament away from those who play the event best. I also don’t believe doubles needs gimmicks – it just needs to be marketed and respected properly. Henry Patten was really good on this when I interviewed him in May.

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The winners – we’ll know who they are tomorrow – will earn $1m, fives times more than went to last year’s champions. According to BBC, appearance fees are north of $50,000, or in other words, the players involved are competing to get paid and to prepare for their singles campaigns, not because they’re motivated to win a grand slam.

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I’ve not the slightest clue how the seeding works, but it’s worth noting that Errani/Vavassori, included as a sop to sporting merit – they’re the defending champions – have not been so honoured.

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Ashe

Naomi Osaka/Gaël Monfils v Caty McNally/Lorenzo Musetti (4pm BST)

Iga Swiatek/Casper Ruud (3) v Madison Keys/Francis Tiafoe (not before 5pm BST)

Winners meet in quarter-final

Jessica Pegula/Jack Draper (1) v Emma Raducanu/Carlos Alcaraz (not before 7pm BST)

Olga Danilovic/Novak Djokovic v Mirra Andreeva/Daniil Medvedev

Winners meet in quarter-final

**

Armstrong

Sara Errani/Andrea Vavassori v Elena Rybakina/Taylor Fritz (2)

Venus Williams/Reilly Opelka v Karolina Muchová v Andrey Rublev

Winners meet in quarter-final

Taylor Townsend/Ben Shelton v Amanda Anisimova/Holger Rune (not before 5.30pm BST)

TBD v Belinda Bencic/Alexander Zverev

Winners meet in quarter-final

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We’re all friends here so we can be honest with each other: I’m not exactly at one with what we’re about to enjoy.

Why? Because doubles tennis is a specific skill, nurtured and developed by players relying on it – and a system that’s operated for decades – to make a living. So confiscating a huge competition from them, to hand money to suits and superstars – who do not need it and are, individually and as pairs, less good at the actual sport – doesn’t sit right with me.

On the other hand and just as they want us to say, take a look at that lineup! Such is sport, such is the world, such is life; let’s make the best of it, I guess.

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