Nadal faces tough road to U.S. Open title

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – World number one Rafael  Nadal  faces the daunting prospect of possibly having to beat Roger  Federer and Andy Murray to win the U.S. Open for the first time  and complete his collection of grand slam titles.

The Spaniard will launch his championship campaign against  unseeded Russian Teymuraz Gabashvili but was given no favours  during Thursday’s official draw at Flushing Meadows.

If results go according to the rankings, the top seed will  face the in-form Briton Murray in the semi-finals then Federer  in the final, if the Swiss master successfully navigates his  own tricky path to reach a seventh consecutive New York final.

Federer, seeded second, opens against Argentina’s Brian  Dabul before a possible third round clash with former U.S. Open  champion Lleyton Hewitt and a quarter-final showdown with  Sweden’s Robin Soderling, the man he beat to win the French  Open last year ahead complete his career grand slam.

If Federer survives that, he could then meet Serbia’s third  seed Djokovic, the 2008 Australian Open champion, in the  semi-finals of the two-week tournament starting Monday.

“The first four are of course the biggest favourites,”  Djokovic told Reuters. “But you also have (Andy) Roddick,  Soderling, (Tomas) Berdych, these guys have all played  extremely well and have played finals of grand slams.”

Last year’s men’s champion, Argentine Juan Martin Del  Potro, is unable to defend his title because of injury.

The women’s draw, weakened by the absence of injured world  number one Serena Williams and former champion Justine Henin,  is looming as one of the most open in years with at least a  dozen players looming as genuine contenders.

Last year’s runner-up Caroline Wozniacki was promoted to  top seed after the withdrawal of Williams while the defending  champion Kim Clijsters was elevated to second seed, in the  bottom half of the draw.

Clijsters completed a fairytale return to professional  tennis last year after taking time out to start a family and  then claiming her second U.S. Open title.

Her previous win was in 2005 but injury prevented her from  defending her crown in 2006 and the Belgian said she was  looking forward to finally returning to the courts as the  reigning champion.

“This is a new experience for me,” she told Reuters. “Now  that I’m a little bit older and I’ve been away for a little bit  I feel a little bit more experienced and I can look back and my  wins and losses and wins from the past in a completely  different way.”

Clijsters will start her title defence against Hungarian  Greta Arn but also has a draw littered with obstacles as she  could meet Australia’s French Open finalist Samantha Stosur in  the quarter-finals and Venus Williams in the semi-finals.

Williams, a two-times U.S. Open champion, was drawn to play  Italian Roberta Vinci first up and is in the same quarter of  the draw as Italy’s French Open champion Francesca Schiavone,  who plays Japan’s Ayumi Morita in the first round.

Denmark’s Wozniacki, coming off a win at this week’s  rain-delayed Montreal Cup, will begin her bid for a first grand  slam title against American wildcard Chelsey Gullickson.

But Wozniacki faces a tantalising fourth-round showdown  with Maria Sharapova, who joins Svetlana Kuznetsova as former  Russian U.S. Open champions in the same quarter.

Serbia’s Jelena Jankovic looms as a possible semi-final  opponent in the top half of a draw that is notable for the  absence of the imposing figure of Serena Williams.