The Australian and French Open represent the first two legs of the yearly grand slam-followed by Wimbledon, and the U.S. Open. Both tournaments require the players to be in almost perfect physical condition due to the their difficult playing conditions (heat, long matches). Otherwise, they are complete opposites. The Australian is played on a synthetic rubberlike surface underneath a blazing sun. On the fast surface, a big serve can keep you out of the sun with quick points and matches. The French is played on red clay in late spring. The surface raises the height of the ball bounce, and slows its pace significantly. This requires the players to strategically engage in long points and games.
Australian French US (The Championships) Wimbledon
Wimbledon, U.S. Open, French Open, Australian Open are the (4) Majors in Tennis
U.S. Open, French Open, Australian Open, Wimbleton
australian open, french open, wimbledon, us open.
Wimbledon, the US, Australian and French Opens are considered the most prestigeous.
no there are 4. Wimbledon, US open, French open and the Australian open
Yes there are lots of Australian Tennis Players.
The 4 grand slam tourneys in tennis are the Australian Open, in January, the French Open in May, Wimbledon, which is in London and takes place in late June/ early July, and in August you have the US Open
Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open
Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and US Open.
Australian open, french open, Wimbledon, us open
The differences are that a tennis ball is green and furry, and a cricket ball is red and tough.