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・ List of Australian ministries
・ List of Australian mobile virtual network operators
・ List of Australian motor racing series
・ List of Australian music television shows
・ List of Australian national handball team games
・ List of Australian national soccer team captains
・ List of Australian National University people
・ List of Australian Nobel laureates
・ List of Australian novelists
・ List of Australian ODI batsmen who have scored over 2500 ODI runs
・ List of Australian ODI bowlers who have taken over 100 ODI wickets
・ List of Australian of the Year Award recipients
・ List of Australian Olympic medallists in swimming
・ List of Australian Open champions
・ List of Australian Open men's doubles champions
List of Australian Open men's singles champions
・ List of Australian Open mixed doubles champions
・ List of Australian Open singles finalists during the open era
・ List of Australian Open women's doubles champions
・ List of Australian Open women's singles champions
・ List of Australian organisations with royal patronage
・ List of Australian Paralympic cycling medalists
・ List of Australian Paralympic medallists
・ List of Australian Paralympic sailing medalists
・ List of Australian Paralympic shooting medalists
・ List of Australian Paralympic wheelchair tennis medalists
・ List of Australian penal colonies
・ List of Australian place names changed from German names
・ List of Australian place names of Aboriginal origin
・ List of Australian plant species authored by Ferdinand von Mueller


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List of Australian Open men's singles champions : ウィキペディア英語版
List of Australian Open men's singles champions

The Australian Open is an annual tennis tournament created in 1905 and played on outdoor hardcourts at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia. The Australian Open is played over a two-week period beginning in mid-January and has been chronologically the first of the four Grand Slam tournaments each year since 1987. The event was not held from 1916 to 1918 because of World War I, from 1940 to 1945 because of World War II and in 1986. The timing of the Australian Open has changed several times. In 1977, the date of the final moved from January to December, which resulted in having two Australian Opens in 1977; there was a January edition and a December edition that year. The originally planned December 1986 edition was moved forward to January 1987, resulting in no Australian Open in 1986.
==History==
Christchurch and Hastings, New Zealand, and Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, Sydney and Melbourne, Australia, have hosted the men's singles event. The event switched cities every year before it settled in 1972 in Melbourne. The event was held at the Kooyong Stadium before moving to Melbourne Park in 1988.〔
The Australian Open court surface changed once, from grass courts to hardcourts in 1988.〔 Mats Wilander was the only tennis player to win the event on grass and on Rebound Ace surfaces, which he won twice on grass and once on the Rebound Ace. Roger Federer is the only player to have won on both the Rebound Ace and Plexicushion tennis surfaces.
The men's singles rules have undergone several changes since the first edition. This event has always been contested in a knockout format, and all matches have been best-of-five sets except in 1970, 1973, and 1974, when the first round was best-of-three sets, and in 1982, when the third and fourth round were best-of-three sets.〔 Since 1905, all sets have been decided in the advantage format. The lingering death best-of-twelve points tie-break was introduced in 1971 and has been used for the first four sets since then, except from 1980 to 1982, when the tie-break was also played in fifth sets.〔
The champion receives a miniature replica of the silver-gilt Norman Brookes Challenge Cup, named after the 1911 champion and former Lawn Tennis Association of Australia (LTAA) president, and modeled after the Warwick Vase. In 2010, the winner received prize money of A$2,100,000.
In the Australasian Championships, James Anderson holds the records for most titles with three (1922, 1924–1925), and the most consecutive titles with two (1924–1925). In the Australian Championships, Roy Emerson holds the records for most titles with six (1961, 1963–1967) and most consecutive titles with five (1963–1967).〔 The inclusion of professional tennis players in 1969 marked the competition's entry into the Open Era, in which Novak Djokovic holds the records for most titles with five (2008, 2011–2013, 2015). The Open Era record for most consecutive titles is three by Djokovic (2011–2013).〔 This event was won without losing a set during the Open Era by Rosewall in 1971 and Federer in 2007.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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